Monday, October 20, 2008

"Questions for Value Investors" From Felix Salmon

Felix Salmon asks another interesting question:

"If I had to sum it all up in one big question, it would be this: "What exactly are you saying beyond calling a bottom?". I might have some faith in the ability of value investors to find cheap stocks, but I have no faith at all in the ability of value investors to time the market. And a lot of what these investors are saying seems, at its core, to apply to the market generally more than it does to value stocks in particular."

Here's my comment:

Posted: Oct 20 2008 6:48pm ET
Theoretically, you buy a stock that's undervalued, although one might wonder why it is and you're the only one who has noticed it. You sell it one day when it's properly valued. Putting it this way, it almost sounds like a tautology.

My guess is, as you say, these investors had the good fortune to hold some of these investments for a long time, and they went up over time with the market.

By the way, in the sense that you buy any stock one day and later sell it for a profit, it was obviously undervalued. Otherwise, you would simply lose money or break even. Unless undervalued means something besides being able to sell a stock for a profit.

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