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Says Bill Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management about The Art of Value Investing: "I learned the investment business largely from the work and thinking of other investors. The Art of Value Investing is a thoughtfully organized compilation of some of the best investment insights I have ever read. Read this book with care. It will be one of the highest-return investments you will ever make." Based on interviews with the world's most-successful value investors, The Art of Value Investing offers a comprehensive set of answers to the questions every equity money manager should have thought…mehr
Says Bill Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management about The Art of Value Investing: "I learned the investment business largely from the work and thinking of other investors. The Art of Value Investing is a thoughtfully organized compilation of some of the best investment insights I have ever read. Read this book with care. It will be one of the highest-return investments you will ever make." Based on interviews with the world's most-successful value investors, The Art of Value Investing offers a comprehensive set of answers to the questions every equity money manager should have thought through clearly before holding himself or herself out as a worthy steward of other people's money. What market inefficiencies will I try to exploit? How will I generate ideas? What will be my geographic focus? What analytical edge will I hope to have? What valuation methodologies will I use? What time horizon will I typically employ? How many stocks will I own? How specifically will I decide to buy or sell? Will I hedge, and how? How will I keep my emotions from getting the best of me? Who should read The Art of Value Investing? It is as vital a resource for the just starting out investor as for the sophisticated professional one. The former will find a comprehensive guidebook for defining a sound investment strategy from A-to-Z; the latter will find all aspects of his or her existing practice challenged or reconfirmed by the provocative thinking of their most-successful peers. It also is a must read for any investor - institutional or individual - charged with choosing the best managers for the money they are allocating to equities. Choosing the right managers requires knowing all the right questions to ask as well as the answers worthy of respect and attention - both of which are delivered in The Art of Value Investing.
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JOHN HEINS is the cofounder and President of Value Investor Media, Inc., a media company founded in 2004 to provide investing ideas and insight to sophisticated professional and individual investors, and Editor-in-Chief of Value Investor Insight and SuperInvestor Insight. Previously, Mr. Heins was President and Chief Executive Officer of Gruner + Jahr USA Publishing, Bertelsmann AG's U.S. magazine subsidiary, Senior Vice President and General Manager of America Online's Personal Finance business, and a reporter and staff writer for Forbes magazine. He graduated magna cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School with a bachelor's degree in Economics and also holds an MBA from Stanford University's Graduate School of Business. WHITNEY TILSON is the cofounder of hedge funds Kase Capital and T2 Partners, the Tilson Mutual Funds, Value Investor Media, Inc. and the Value Investing Congress. He coauthored the book, More Mortgage Meltdown: 6 Ways to Profit in These Bad Times, is a CNBC Contributor, has written for Forbes, the Financial Times, Kiplinger's, the Motley Fool and TheStreet.com, and was one of the authors of Poor Charlie's Almanack, the definitive book on Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chairman Charlie Munger. He was one of five investors included in SmartMoney's 2006 "Power 30," and was named by Institutional Investor in 2007 as one of "20 Rising Stars." Previously, Mr. Tilson was a founding member of Teach for America and the Initiative for a Competitive Inner City, and was a consultant at The Boston Consulting Group. He received an MBA with High Distinction from the Harvard Business School and graduated magna cum laude from Harvard College with a bachelor's degree in Government.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1 Chapter 1 "All Sensible Investing Is Value Investing" 5 What It Means to Be a Value Investor 6 Does Quality Matter? 13 The Value of Growth 19 The Value Mindset 25 Part One Field of Play 33 Chapter 2 Circle of Competence 35 The Right Size 36 Industry Preference 45 Where in the World? 57 Chapter 3 Deficient Market Hypothesis 65 The Human Element 66 It's a Matter of Time 74 Chapter 4 Fertile Ground 81 In Search of Uncertainty 82 Special Situations 86 Operating Turnarounds 93 Chapter 5 Generating Ideas 99 Behind the Screen 99 Follow the Lead 106 Reliable Sources 111 Part Two Building the Case 115 Chapter 6 Cutting Through the Noise 117 Second-Level Thinking 118 Macro versus Micro 120 Business First 127 What Quality Means 131 Crunching the Numbers 135 What Could Go Wrong? 139 From the Top 147 How Important Is Management? 147 Handicapping the Jockeys 149 Red Flags 157 Catalysts 164 Getting It Done 169 Organizing Principles 174 Chapter 7 Getting to Yes 183 Cash (Flow) Is King 184 Multiple Angles 190 The Informed Buyer 192 Model Behavior 194 Playing the Odds 199 Theories of Relativity 202 Pulling the Trigger 206 Part Three Active Management 213 Chapter 8 The Portfolio 215 Concentration versus Diversification 215 The Size That Fits 222 Cognizance of Correlation 227 Chapter 9 Playing the Hand 233 Trading Mentality 233 Dealing with Adversity 239 Taking a Stand 248 Attracting Activists' Attention 251 Chapter 10 Guarding Against Risk 257 Margin of Safety 258 Building a Position 261 Cash Management 263 Midas Touch 267 Hedging Bets 268 To Short or Not to Short? 268 Value Destroyers 271 Portfolio Hedging 276 Is Shorting Inherently Evil? 277 Chapter 11 Making the Sale 281 Why to Sell 282 Selling by the Numbers 286 Getting the Timing Right 290 Sale Process 293 Part four Of Sound Mind 297 Chapter 12 Of Sound Mind 299 Competitive Spirit 300 Independent Thought 303 Perpetual Student 306 To Err Is Human 309 Be Ever So Humble 312 The Final Word 315 About the Authors 317 Index 319
Introduction 1 Chapter 1 "All Sensible Investing Is Value Investing" 5 What It Means to Be a Value Investor 6 Does Quality Matter? 13 The Value of Growth 19 The Value Mindset 25 Part One Field of Play 33 Chapter 2 Circle of Competence 35 The Right Size 36 Industry Preference 45 Where in the World? 57 Chapter 3 Deficient Market Hypothesis 65 The Human Element 66 It's a Matter of Time 74 Chapter 4 Fertile Ground 81 In Search of Uncertainty 82 Special Situations 86 Operating Turnarounds 93 Chapter 5 Generating Ideas 99 Behind the Screen 99 Follow the Lead 106 Reliable Sources 111 Part Two Building the Case 115 Chapter 6 Cutting Through the Noise 117 Second-Level Thinking 118 Macro versus Micro 120 Business First 127 What Quality Means 131 Crunching the Numbers 135 What Could Go Wrong? 139 From the Top 147 How Important Is Management? 147 Handicapping the Jockeys 149 Red Flags 157 Catalysts 164 Getting It Done 169 Organizing Principles 174 Chapter 7 Getting to Yes 183 Cash (Flow) Is King 184 Multiple Angles 190 The Informed Buyer 192 Model Behavior 194 Playing the Odds 199 Theories of Relativity 202 Pulling the Trigger 206 Part Three Active Management 213 Chapter 8 The Portfolio 215 Concentration versus Diversification 215 The Size That Fits 222 Cognizance of Correlation 227 Chapter 9 Playing the Hand 233 Trading Mentality 233 Dealing with Adversity 239 Taking a Stand 248 Attracting Activists' Attention 251 Chapter 10 Guarding Against Risk 257 Margin of Safety 258 Building a Position 261 Cash Management 263 Midas Touch 267 Hedging Bets 268 To Short or Not to Short? 268 Value Destroyers 271 Portfolio Hedging 276 Is Shorting Inherently Evil? 277 Chapter 11 Making the Sale 281 Why to Sell 282 Selling by the Numbers 286 Getting the Timing Right 290 Sale Process 293 Part four Of Sound Mind 297 Chapter 12 Of Sound Mind 299 Competitive Spirit 300 Independent Thought 303 Perpetual Student 306 To Err Is Human 309 Be Ever So Humble 312 The Final Word 315 About the Authors 317 Index 319
Rezensionen
"John Heins and Whitney Tilson, co-founders of the Value Investor Insight newsletter, have done a thorough job of explaining how to look for stocks that are trading at significant discounts to what they are worth -- the concept known as the value style of investing....the authors present a clear framework for ferreting out undervalued companies." --The New York Times
"[The Art of Value Investing] is packed with invaluable insights and is relevant to both the novice and the experienced investor. ...This book provides a valuable contribution to the industry literature on value investing. It is well written, well organized, and quite enjoyable. The Art of Value Investing should be read by all investors who are seriously interested in enhancing their understanding of this important field." --CFA Institute Book Review
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