Thursday, January 4, 2007

Bad Day for the Funds, Good Day for Stocks

The portfolio finished the day up 0.13% ($320.12) pulled up by my microcap holdings. The price of oil plummeted today so obviously the energy fund dropped (2.11%) in addition to many of my other funds which have a high correlation to oil.

MRVC led my stock holdings higher posting a 7.32% along with JOB 4.73% and COH up 2.69%. Tomorrow i will run some of my screens to see if any opportunities have presented themselves over the past few weeks. I hope to devote more capital towards microcaps to benefit from the January effect.

No comments:

IV Calc

Warren Buffett Intrinsic Value Formula (?)
HomeCalculatorGlossarySearchBooks

 

Buffett's Value Formula (?)

Warren Buffett hasn't exactly published his formula for what he calls the intrinsic value of a company, but he has dropped a number of hints. He apparently multiplies estimated future earnings by a confidence margin between zero and a hundred percent (a bird in the bush being worth 0.5 birds in the hand, and all that; bush birds are the earnings you hope for, and hand birds are the earnings you're confident will materialize). He then compares these probable earnings with something he has total confidence in, by using a U.S. treasury yield as his discount rate. In calculator form it looks like this:

 

Earnings
Earnings per share (last 12 months): $
Growth Assumptions
Earnings are expected to grow at a rate of % annually
for the next years,
before leveling off to an annual growth rate of % thereafter.
Confidence Margin
How confident are you that these expected future earnings will really materialize?   %
Discount Rate
Best available return that you have 100% confidence in (like a Treasury bond):   %
 
Results
Stock Value per share: $

 

       This calculator doesn't use fancier math than the original one did. Its advantage is that it forces you to be explicit about your earnings expectations. It also automatically provides you with a hard-headed investment strategy: always invest in government bonds, unless you can find something else you are confident will yield more cash.

One other hint that Buffett has dropped over the years is that he can estimate value in his head in about five seconds; so whatever he does he keeps it simple, slugger.

 

next

home  |  article  |  glossary  |  calculator  |  about us  |  books

Article Contents
Valuation Intro
A Little Theory
DCF Calculator
P/E Ratio
P/S Ratio
PEG Ratio
Graham Formula
Dividend Discount
Buffett Formula (?)
CAPM Calculator
Books & Links

Also See
Valuation Formula