PART I
AN INTRODUCTION TO VALUE INVESTING
Chapter 1
Value Investing
Definitions, Distinctions, Results, Risks, and Principles
What Value Investing Is
Value investing in the manner initially defined by Benjamin Graham and
David Dodd rests on three key characteristics of financial markets:
1. The prices of financial securities are subject to significant and
capricious movements. Mr. Market, Graham's famous personification
of the impersonal forces that determine the price of securities at any
moment, shows up every day to buy or sell any financial asset. He is a
strange fellow, subject to all sorts of unpredictable mood swings that
affect the price at which he is willing to do business.
2. Despite these gyrations in the market prices of financial assets, many
of them do have underlying or fundamental economic values that are
relatively stable and that can be measured with reasonable accuracy by
a diligent and disciplined investor. In other words, the intrinsic value
of the security is one thing; the current price at which it is trading is
something else. Though value and price may, on any given day, be
identical, they often diverge.
3. A strategy of buying securities only when their market prices are
significantly below the calculated intrinsic value will produce superior
returns in the long run. Graham referred to this gap between value and
price as `the margin of safety'; ideally, the gap should amount to about
Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond by Bruce C. Greenwald