The latest from the Value Investing and Search for Value Seminar

The seminar ran over five days with 30 other participants and was led by Dr George Athanassakos with the assistance of a number of graduates from Ivey Business School who acted as tutors during our breakout sessions.

The three and half days of lectures were followed by one and a half days of practical exercises in small break out groups where we applied what we learnt to real companies.

Here is a six-point summary of how to establish an intrinsic valuation of a company.

  1. Look at the strategic position
    • is the industry sector attractive is it growing, facing headwinds, or mature?
    • Where does the company sit in the sector?
    • Who are the other players in the sector?
    • Barriers to entry or other competition
  2. Profitability of the company
    • Operating margins
    • Revenue
    • How long can profitability be passed on to shareholders or will it be competed away
  3. Financial strength
    • Balance sheet strength
    • Level of Debt
    • What is the capital allocation?
  4. Management
    • History of asset allocation and capital management
    • Are they good operators
    • Analyse both quantitatively and qualitatively the performance of management
  5. Any catalyst that will cause the stock to be re-rated – upwards
  6. Valuation of the stock
    • Is the stock undervalued
    • Beware of Value traps

While we did spend a lot of time working on valuation methods and processes you can see from the above that the quantitative element of a valuation is the end of result of a lot of qualitative analysis.

A value investor must form their own researched opinion of a company’s value and not just pull out financial ratios from its published accounts.

The core learning for me from the value investing and search for value seminar consolidated something I already practice however I did gain some new methods to utilise. The most thorough method of analysing whether to invest in a company is to; study, read, research and understand a company and its industry and then analyse, understand and make your own adjustment of figures in the financial statements to arrive at an appropriate “intrinsic valuation” to assess whether a business is worth purchasing.

Posted in Value investing.