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Value Investing - Reddit
I know it was a meme stock a few years ago, but it’s down a ridiculous amount. I’m very new to value investing and looking at financials so I was hoping someone could share their thoughts with me. I used a valuation calculator and it thought it was ~85% undervalued ($3.28 rn, …
Value Investing - Reddit
Investing in the stock market can take on many different forms, with prevailing sentiment leaning towards passive or index investing. We seek to make a distinction between other forms of investing and value investing - i.e. fundamental, bottom-up investing that places the most importance on intrinsic value, rather than technical indicators or ...
Recommendations on how to learn value investing?
Aug 25, 2023 · Since you have obviously no trouble studying finance, start with the text book by the dean of value investing, BennyG’s intelligent investor. Unlike other books, the bulk of this book is to imbue the philosophy of value investing and gives the right frame of mind on how to approach the stock market.
A Guide To Value Investing For Novice Investors : r/ValueInvesting
Jul 23, 2021 · Thanks a lot to everyone for the good insights on value investing. I‘m reading now „the little book of value investing“ from Browne. It seems to be that one should have a stock screening to select stocks with low P/B, P/E ratio (and other ratios) to start with. This is your STEP 1! The book says, one should subscribe to Bloomberg for it.
How To Be a Successful Deep Value Investor (some tips I've learned)
Jul 30, 2023 · Which is true, but the difference is in deep value investing you’re buying the company below liquidation value, so even if no turnaround ever happens, you’re downside is limited because the stock can only go so low before an activist investor starts buying up shares to force management to pay a special dividend to realize some of the value ...
How to learn : r/ValueInvesting - Reddit
Apr 7, 2023 · Value investing = buying companies you view as undervalued. If you think a company is undervalued, there has to be some fundamental thesis behind that belief, e.g., you think company will grow profitability/cash flow above market expectations or you think the market is not appropriately valuing expected performance.
Where do value investors hang out? : r/ValueInvesting - Reddit
I love getting on calls with other value investors, learning about how they approach value investing and how they differ ever so slightly: their goals, philosophies, processes/systems, and the tools they use (I tend to avoid talking about specific securities). I am always looking to be a better value investor and understand what I can improve on.
Anyone been value investing for 20+ years? : r/ValueInvesting
Oct 30, 2022 · I actively began investing in companies at this time. I read a book called rule 1 investing which is what I use to value companies. I would put 25-50% of my cash into one stock at a time and then move on to the next. By the next 2 years I had around 400k and sold off everything. Bought land and built a house.
Value investing - does it really work? : r/investing - Reddit
Aug 18, 2011 · value investing is a philosophy. TA is one tool P.S. Read William O'Neill's book and watch how much he loves charts, then come back and try to tell me that the #1 single most successful hedge fund manager in the history of the world didn't become wealthy using TA.
Thoughts on Value Investors Club? : r/ValueInvesting - Reddit
Apr 25, 2022 · I started off investing about 2 years ago and I already found a really good value play there that already paid out. A view that site as a free learning opportunity and if you try to write up an analysis about a company you actually can try out the soundness of your process.