Guest notorious546 Posted October 27, 2016 Share Posted October 27, 2016 hi all, i recently listened to a podcast with michael maubossin and patrick o'shaunessy. at one point they were discussing valuation and patrick brought up the point that if you rank stocks by P/E, lets say quartile the lower P/E multiples tend to outperform. This point is well documented in many pieces like tweedy browne's what works in investing. often on the forum there is discussion of people saying X company has an P/E of 40x-50x therefore it is a sell and the same commentary on Y company has a P/E of 5-10x therefore is a buy. the second group of people say that multiples having nothing to do with intrinsic value and that just we should just arrive at a firm view on instrinsic value and buy at a discount for it? In sum two options i guess here to choose, which one and why? 1) multiples (historic data) 2) discount to IV (unclear data) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KCLarkin Posted October 27, 2016 Share Posted October 27, 2016 Personally, I think it is just a quirk that low PE stocks tend to outperform. There are many reasons why a stock has a low PE: - High debt load - Melting Ice Cube - Cyclical at cyclical peaks - Low quality earnings - High capital intensity - Low growth - Low ROE - Volatile earnings - Frauds On the other hand, low PE stocks also include out-of-favor, low-expectations, reversion-to-the-mean, margin-of-safety "cigar butts". High PE stocks include over-valued, fads, promotional IPOs, momentum, go-go stocks etc. But High PE stocks also include cyclical companies at cyclical bottoms, cash-rich companies, wide-moats, high ROIC, J-Curves, consumer staples etc. In the end, these things have tended to balance out in a way that favours low PE stocks, quantitatively. But it is absolutely true that SBUX at 15x is a better investment than OUTR at 10x. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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