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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Different Angle On Betting Dow Value,
By A Customer
This review is from: Trouncing the Dow: A Value-Based Method for Making Huge Profits in the Stock Market (Hardcover)
The 1990's have brought a striking popularity in books that promise outsize returns based on simple formulas. The most obvious example of the genre is the Dow Dogs strategy. Made popular by Michael O'Higgins and Jim O'Shaughnessy, among others, underperformance in recent years has done little to dampen investor enthusiasm.Kenneth Lee's Trouncing The Dow offers a new twist on betting the undervalued Dow stocks theory. Employing a methodology he dubs benchmark investing, Lee seeks to establish price ranges using historical return on equity and price/book value figures. Once established these price ranges are used to establish concrete reference points the investor can use to consistently focus on undervalued stocks. The book has tables of the calculations from 1973-96, allowing those so inclined to compare current valuations with past Dow results under most market conditions. The process also forces the reader to dig into a company's fundamentals and get a feel for how it has been priced in the past. The appeal here is obvious. A concise method for divining value on a select group of non-volatile stocks where information is readily available. (Lee suggests using The Value Line Investment Survey). The mechanical process eliminates emotion from the equation, allowing the reader to use history as a guide when uncertainty has gripped the market. The fact that Lee stresses low turnover, eschews market timing, and adheres to popular value tenets puts the ideas here on the same wavelength as studies produced recently in books by Jeremy Siegel and Jim O'Shaughnessy. Personally however, when I see strategies based on Dow stocks I tend to want to see computer studies based on similar stocks. I want to see large samples. They give the picture texture and background, they help point out any possible flaws or reasons for concern. Back testing has its limitations. Early on Lee states he originally developed the formula employing the Value Line universe on a computer. In fact, the current configuration of Value Line's electronic product makes Lee's process relatively easy to implement on a broad scale. To include summaries of the results of that data would have added considerable weight to his argument. It seems to me that the real question here is whether anomalies pointed out here and popularized by O'Higgins and others will continue to outperform. Indeed, many of the ideas here overlap with popular titles of the last few years. Is the Wall Street establishment so short-term focused that long-term value plays based on simple rules offer an easy short cut? Though many would like to deny it, there is enough efficiency in the United States equity markets to make outperformance a relatively difficult task. Though the idea of "beating the experts" without complex strategies makes a cute media story, it continues to be a tall order. In Trouncing The Dow, Lee makes the case it can be done. The book is a quick read and offers a formula that anyone can employ to make up his or her own mind.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book,
By Wall Street Student (Small Town, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Trouncing the Dow: A Value-Based Method for Making Huge Profits in the Stock Market (Hardcover)
Reading TTD, after reading other books on 'Value Investing' I actually found a strategy that I could use. I have been a student of finance over 30 years and have read other books, and this book gave me 'the tools' to evaluate a companies a companies potential. I can't say that this book will teach you everything, but it does a very good job of teaching you the basics. Though 'value investing' is not in favor for the current times, I do believe it is the most sensible approach to evaluate a company, and over the long term will prove to be a better approach then chasing the 'whats hot on wall street' method. If you are a conservative invester, read this book. If you are an aggressive investor, looking for returns of 30% or more(every year), good luck.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Every Serious Investor Should Read This Book,
By A Customer
This review is from: Trouncing the Dow: A Value-Based Method for Making Huge Profits in the Stock Market (Hardcover)
Despite the gimmicky title that kept me from buying it when it first came out last year, I now consider Trouncing the Dow to be one of the best investment books ever written for the serious long-term investor. I'd put it right up there with classics like The Intelligent Investor, Stocks for the Long Run, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, One up on Wall Street, The Warren Buffett Way, Reminisces of a Stock Operator, Supermoney, and Against the Gods.
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