Happy Friday everyone! The first 100 people to go to www.blinkist.com/theplainbagel will get unlimited access for 1 week to try out Blinkist. You'll also get 25% off if you want the full membership.
The market trend can turn around very quickly. In fact, the indexes often switch from a bear market to a bull market when the news is at its worst and the mood of investors is at its lowest point. I read an article of people that grossed profits up to $150k during this crash, what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist?
In particular, amid inflation, investors should exercise caution when it comes to their exposure and new purchases. It is only feasible to get such high yields during a recession with the guidance of a qualified specialist or reliable counsel.
On my end I've been in touch with a financial analyst ever since I started my business. Knowing today's culture The challenge is knowing when to purchase or sell when investing in trending stocks, which is pretty simple. On my portfolio, which has grown over $900k in a little over a year, my adviser chooses entry and exit orders.
Interesting, Mind if I ask you recommend this particular professional you use their service? honestly right now i have quite a lot of marketing problems.
Sonya Lee Mitchell is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. By looking her up online, you can quickly verify her level of experience. She is well knowledgeable about financial markets
‘Sonya Lee Mitchell’ is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
I can't stress how underrated this channel is. You get entertainment and knowledge at the same time. Thank you for putting great content out there (and all without flaunting your investing account, imagine that).
I heard Buffet say at a Q&A that he did not consider the value/growth distinction worthwhile: "pick the stock that'll generate the most money for you over time". Something like that
There is this video in youtube of Warren Buffet going through top 10 mistakes investors make or similar where he says the same. Brilliant stuff. I always thought the guy to be more of a meme and a buffoon (like our own Björn Wahlroos here in Finland), but I was completely wrong. Really smart and wise professional to listen to.
yeah i think the market today has redwfined growth stocks as high speculative stocks which are usually tech stocks. It doesnt make sense to distinguish value and growth as any value investor would want a company to grow
The reason behind Warren Buffet opinion is that growth is one of the components of a valuation, so a company that is growing is also more valuable and it doesn't make sense to think in growth as something opposite to value.
Correct. These are not opposing categories. "Growth investors" are still value investors if they are valuing companies and looking for those that are priced under the value.
Pretty much. There’s actually different sub categories of value investing, the two most popular are deep value, and growth value. Deep value is the cigarette butt strategy that Warren learned from Benjamin Graham. Where you pick up a soggy disgusting cigarette butt off the ground for one free puff. You essentially buy shitty companies that’s equity is worth way more than their entire market cap, that also pays a stable dividend. It’s like getting one free puff from that disgusting cigarette butt. The most popular is growth value and is also the most common one Warren and Charlie use now. This is where you calculate all future cash flow, and discount it normally at long term bond rates. You’re looking for a business that generates cash that far exceeds the market cap. It doesn’t actually matter if it is a growth business, it’s all about future cash flow. Even if they use that extra cash to pay out a dividend or do share buyback instead of reinvesting the money into the business to grow it, it still puts that money in your pocket.
@@shreyvaghela3963, I'm not invested in either of these, but I think including Tesla is not correct. Tesla are much more than a vehicle EV maker, thus their stick isn't hype. If it were only the cars, you would have a *somewhat* valide point.
I think there are multiple different types of value investing. The most successful one is generally value growth investing, where you focus on both growth and value. What better way to buy a growth stock than to be able to evaluate it like a value investor, then compare the valuation to industry competitors of similar sizes. If you're a small cap growth value investor, there's some crazy opportunities. Growth is important, but so it the underlying value of that growth business. You don't want to over pay. To me, the most successful value investing is buying great companies at a fair price, not buying bad companies at a great price.
This is so valuable ... I am an old person who has five years to make money. If you have twenty years ... still valuable but you have some time to make a few mistakes.
This is the greatest explanation I have ever heard about this topic. Richard Coffin did an outstanding job with this presentation. It could not have been improved upon in my opinion.
Do both. Have your dividend stocks paying out those tasty divi's while waiting for your growth stocks to grow. example ideal portfolio out of the bottom of the 2020 crash would be DIA, SPY, CVX, ABBV, O, SPG, AAPL, TSLA, ETSY, PINS. You got 2 index funds, 3 dividend aristocrats (CVX, ABBV, O) a risky dividend in SPG, best of breed company AAPL that pays a divi but is not an aristocrat. The hottest growth stock in Tesla and Etsy and Pins got like a 700% gain.
My approach is simple, I buy a broad market ETF owning a sector/commodity/country when they are cheap (52 week lows, or 5 year lows) and keep buying the dip when it goes lower until a reversal to intrinsic value occurs and hold for decades. Sometimes value is cheaper, sometimes growth, sometimes microcap. "Price is what you pay, value is what you get" -Warren Buffet
Growth can definitely work out well for an investor after enough research/luck. If you put up $10k at Amazons IPO you’d have about $18 million today. The most important thing however is to do your research and hold your positions over a long term period.
"we were always committed to the quantitative approach. We wanted to make sure that we were getting ample value for our money in concrete, demonstrable terms. We were not willing to accept the prospects and promises of the future as compensation for a lack of value in hand" -The intelligent investor
The beginning of this video has the same energy as the "Get rich" ads that came before it LOL we all know the best investments were Enron 2001 are blockbuster 2010
These are very valuable info for anybody who wants to get rich. Unfortunately, most people who will watch this video will not really be able to apply the principles. We may not want to admit, but as Warren Buffett once said, investing is like any other profession-- it requires a certain level of expertise. No surprise that some people are losing a lot of money in the bear market, while others are making hundreds of thousands in profit. I just don't know how they do it. I have about $109k now to put in the market.
Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. I know someone who made over $350k in this recession influenced market, but to the best of my knowledge, it was through a financial advisor.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
Carol Vivian Constable is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
My strategy is to watch other retail traders, try to guess their bad decisions (which is easy believe me) and then hold on to their profits 1 timeframe before they do! You know what I’m talking about
Value is riskier investment with higher expected returns then growth, at least according to Fama and French definition and research (3factor model and so on).
You're funny! I'm glad you didn't ridicule either group and pick a side. A lot of other channels like to look down on growth stocks as immature children or value stocks as 'dinosaurs'. At the end of the day, all of us want better returns regardless of how we get there
I think a big factor of where people have success depends on psychology. Reckless investors are more likely to bet on growth stocks, neglecting due diligence, falling for fallacies and losing money. But a careful investor who does their due diligence and doesn't gamble will do extremely well on growth stocks because they figure out which ones are not traps.
Great video! YOu should do a similar video comparing the Dividend and Growth approach. I hear that you should "Just focus on growth stocks then sell them later down the road and buy Dividend Stocks," but then you'll miss out on the snowball effect if you don't start early enough. So I feel it'd help a lot of people to decide.
I really don't understand what is growth investing. For me it sounds mostly as speculative investing, just buying something that has being going up regardless of its fundamentals.
So in my 401k I hold 70% large-cap growth and 30% small-cap growth. I've always done very well for the last 20 years. November 17th 2020 I transfer 50% of my large-cap growth to a mid cap value fund. And 50% of my small-cap growth to a small-cap value fund. I'm thinking after this pandemic and things start getting back to normal with interest rates Rising along with the 10-year yield, value funds May outperform.. I hope I'm right.
That Plain Bagel ain't so plain anymore. You toasted that intro with those X-Men style effects. Very good video I got scared half way through lol. Good to know you mentioned hybrid investing because thats my route and has paid off. I was waiting for Drake to hop on that beat you had up there in Canada.
GARP investing has actually become very profitable. In the last 10 years the SPGP ETF has gotten 17.26% of annual returns and in the last year a whopping 60.94%!
Thanks for a great channel. I've learned a lot from you. Thank you. I've noticed a number of shares have tanked after unbundling, acquiring acquisitions or selling off part of their business. Eg here in South Africa after RMH unbundled First Rand Bank to focus on its property interests, they unbundled their shareholders and share price too - even though it's quite a solid company. What should one watch as a shareholder when companies do major moves such as this? A vid on this would be great. Tnx.
I do a bit of both, but not at the same time. Eg I have mostly indexes, then some individual value stocks like banks etc, then some growth in tech. It’s just about putting in what you’re comfortable with across each type :) (eg 80% value, 20% growth)
I'm going with a blend of growth via an ETF that tracks the S&P500 and small cap value ETFs. And then getting a few value based and solid picks like Ally and Unilever. And Target's rare miss recently made it a good long term pick up in my opinion, also made Williams Sonoma a good pick up indirectly even though they are definitely growing. And the timing worked out conveniently since it was just before Sonoma's earnings and they did really well.
I want to correct your claim that value stocks are more stable- historically value has a higher standard deviation than growth. It is considered part of the Fama french 3 factor model and is a risk factor for which you can expect higher returns. This past year has been a significant exception, as volatility in inflation and interest rate expectations has had an impact on valuations based on the discount rate used in DCF analysis.
I admittedly haven't seen the actual paper, but the way people talk about it my impression was that they were looking at small cap value stocks and the risk come primarily from being small cap while value weeds out a lot of the poor performers among small caps in order to capture the risk premium in returns. My impression was not that the risk came value.
I also believe in both strategies, with companies like IBM, Coca-Cola, Intel and AT&T that I hold for the long term and some growth ones like Lemonade and Rocket Companies that I might be selling in 12 months. It is good to see all oportunities and find the best risk/reward investment
If someone talks about growth and value investment as separate things, he/she doesn't understand the investment at all... Growth is a component of value.
Sure, but growth and value investing are different things, and likewise many analysts and professionals use style boxes to identify stocks as being either growth or value picks, so I wouldn't say someone doesn't understand the concepts just because they identify something as being one or the other. www.investopedia.com/terms/s/stylebox.asp
@@MustafaDeniztr Sure I'm not saying I disagree with Buffett, it's certainly foolish to assume you can't have one without the other, but like he says himself it's a common dichotomy used on Wall Street...I wouldn't say someone doesn't understand investments just because they use that classification.
@@jakel8627 The guiding principle of business value creation is a refreshingly simple construct: companies that grow and earn a return on capital that exceeds their cost of capital create value. Articulated as early as 1890 by Alfred Marshall,1 This is the first paragraph from the book Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies (Wiley Finance) Growth is one of the drivers of value creation. Value investing is not buying something low multiples. If you search "value premium" on Wikipedia you will see that Bogle is arguing there is no value premium because that Fama-French study is period dependent...
Growth: for young investor who want to be rich in the future and ready to take risks. Value: for old and rich people looking to make passive income from their wealth and not loose their money.
Wow you're ignorant. Traditionally investors with shorter time horizons invest in bonds to reduce risk. If you watched the video, value stocks have trailed the market in the recent decade. If you buy value stocks you need a 20 year time horizon.
House has gone up in value 33% in 3 years. Not to mention saved another 2,000 a month in rent because it’s paid for. That take it up 40%, . That’s is growth and value.. if the market drops 33% still save 2000 a month.. also because I moved out of city proper, there is no water and sewer bill.. that saving pays all heating, cooling, any any other electric cost... Real Estate paid for is kink in any market.
I love how you explain the topic so well and easy to understand. It is much appreciated. Thank you! I'm recommending your channel to my family and friends for sure.
The Answer: Momentum Investing. Currently, growth investing's returns are more correlated with momentum investing's than value investing's returns (0.94 vs 0.82). So the answer based on the given choices: growth investing. That being said, buying a growth stock because a stock is growth or likewise, buying a value stock because a stock is cheap is extremely dumb. Just buy a stock that you'll think will do well. Growth and value are meaningless identifiers.
Something to keep in mind, just because there are very little companies at fair prices doesn't mean they never will. The market is 50/50 and you have to look at market crashes as a black Friday deal. Mute the news and stop taking advice from people who constantly tell you to sell or take your money out of the market
Value has higher returns longterm with higher volatility at the worse times. Growth has lower long term returns but have lower volatility at bad times. This is you own a broad part of the market not individual stocks, but risk premiums are based on owning all the market. So you have it the other way around if you use index funds value is riskyer with higher returns.
in 2020, it's damn near impossible for me to spot a value pit versus just covid losses. That being said, I'm just going to keep doing what I'm doing, and hope that the market restabilizes.
Happy Friday everyone! The first 100 people to go to www.blinkist.com/theplainbagel will get unlimited access for 1 week to try out Blinkist. You'll also get 25% off if you want the full membership.
Also, first
@@ThePlainBagel Then I am second :)
@@ThePlainBagel well someone was in a mood filming this video 👀
@@mrpmj00 Wells Fargo Lol
@@ThePlainBagel, HAHAHAHAHAAAAA nice
The market trend can turn around very quickly. In fact, the indexes often switch from a bear market to a bull market when the news is at its worst and the mood of investors is at its lowest point. I read an article of people that grossed profits up to $150k during this crash, what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist?
In particular, amid inflation, investors should exercise caution when it comes to their exposure and new purchases. It is only feasible to get such high yields during a recession with the guidance of a qualified specialist or reliable counsel.
On my end I've been in touch with a financial analyst ever since I started my business. Knowing today's culture The challenge is knowing when to purchase or sell when investing in trending stocks, which is pretty simple. On my portfolio, which has grown over $900k in a little over a year, my adviser chooses entry and exit orders.
Interesting, Mind if I ask you recommend this particular professional you use their service? honestly right now i have quite a lot of marketing problems.
Sonya Lee Mitchell is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. By looking her up online, you can quickly verify her level of experience. She is well knowledgeable about financial markets
‘Sonya Lee Mitchell’ is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
I can't stress how underrated this channel is. You get entertainment and knowledge at the same time. Thank you for putting great content out there (and all without flaunting your investing account, imagine that).
Do you mean to say that this is a... value channel?
Maybe some of us want to see his portfolio though.
Don’t stress bro
❗❕
@@ccc3 definitely value channel, at the current subcriber count id say its a strong subcribe because it is very undervalued right now
I heard Buffet say at a Q&A that he did not consider the value/growth distinction worthwhile: "pick the stock that'll generate the most money for you over time". Something like that
There is this video in youtube of Warren Buffet going through top 10 mistakes investors make or similar where he says the same. Brilliant stuff.
I always thought the guy to be more of a meme and a buffoon (like our own Björn Wahlroos here in Finland), but I was completely wrong. Really smart and wise professional to listen to.
yeah i think the market today has redwfined growth stocks as high speculative stocks which are usually tech stocks. It doesnt make sense to distinguish value and growth as any value investor would want a company to grow
The reason behind Warren Buffet opinion is that growth is one of the components of a valuation, so a company that is growing is also more valuable and it doesn't make sense to think in growth as something opposite to value.
Correct. These are not opposing categories. "Growth investors" are still value investors if they are valuing companies and looking for those that are priced under the value.
Pretty much. There’s actually different sub categories of value investing, the two most popular are deep value, and growth value. Deep value is the cigarette butt strategy that Warren learned from Benjamin Graham. Where you pick up a soggy disgusting cigarette butt off the ground for one free puff. You essentially buy shitty companies that’s equity is worth way more than their entire market cap, that also pays a stable dividend. It’s like getting one free puff from that disgusting cigarette butt.
The most popular is growth value and is also the most common one Warren and Charlie use now. This is where you calculate all future cash flow, and discount it normally at long term bond rates. You’re looking for a business that generates cash that far exceeds the market cap. It doesn’t actually matter if it is a growth business, it’s all about future cash flow. Even if they use that extra cash to pay out a dividend or do share buyback instead of reinvesting the money into the business to grow it, it still puts that money in your pocket.
If you buy good companies at a fair price, you're basically getting value and growth together. So why choose one, when you can choose both?
People like to think of strategies like they're sports teams. They need to understand that you can mix and balance strategies to fit your goals.
I was gonna thinking the same thing 🤔🤔
@@GTOYMPodcast True!
Name one stock at fair value.?
@@robertmccully2792 best one I can think of is $ALLY. FV is $26, currently trading at 25.70 at time of comment.
Growth investing often becomes hype investing
very true. especially lately
Yeah it's called tesla, bitcoin etc
@@shreyvaghela3963, I'm not invested in either of these, but I think including Tesla is not correct. Tesla are much more than a vehicle EV maker, thus their stick isn't hype. If it were only the cars, you would have a *somewhat* valide point.
@@mr.c6674 lmao😂😂
People have been hyping up NIO, NIO is the new Tesla.
When he said “You couldn’t find great value if you were in the grocery aisle at a Walmart,” I felt that.
same
Trading without professional guidance is like gambling your money.
I tried trading on my own but it only left mee chasing shadows.
Taking advantage of forex trading can be a lucrative move as we all know how rewarding it could bee over time.
Please how does this work?
Which broker?
Which platform?
Forex and bitcoin trading is the best thing that ever happened to me last year 2019,I see bigger profits this year 2020 too.
I think there are multiple different types of value investing. The most successful one is generally value growth investing, where you focus on both growth and value. What better way to buy a growth stock than to be able to evaluate it like a value investor, then compare the valuation to industry competitors of similar sizes. If you're a small cap growth value investor, there's some crazy opportunities. Growth is important, but so it the underlying value of that growth business. You don't want to over pay. To me, the most successful value investing is buying great companies at a fair price, not buying bad companies at a great price.
This is so valuable ... I am an old person who has five years to make money. If you have twenty years ... still valuable but you have some time to make a few mistakes.
If god lets me i have at least 40 years till retirement
This is the greatest explanation I have ever heard about this topic. Richard Coffin did an outstanding job with this presentation. It could not have been improved upon in my opinion.
Big value stocks will tend to also have dividends versus growth. INTC is a good example of value right now with the result still out
Well about Intel....
Do both. Have your dividend stocks paying out those tasty divi's while waiting for your growth stocks to grow. example ideal portfolio out of the bottom of the 2020 crash would be DIA, SPY, CVX, ABBV, O, SPG, AAPL, TSLA, ETSY, PINS. You got 2 index funds, 3 dividend aristocrats (CVX, ABBV, O) a risky dividend in SPG, best of breed company AAPL that pays a divi but is not an aristocrat. The hottest growth stock in Tesla and Etsy and Pins got like a 700% gain.
This is pure GOLD !! Thank you so much for explaining a complex issue in such a simple way , Much respect
My approach is simple, I buy a broad market ETF owning a sector/commodity/country when they are cheap (52 week lows, or 5 year lows) and keep buying the dip when it goes lower until a reversal to intrinsic value occurs and hold for decades. Sometimes value is cheaper, sometimes growth, sometimes microcap. "Price is what you pay, value is what you get" -Warren Buffet
That intro was gold! Please make more roasts at the start of your intro.
Growth can definitely work out well for an investor after enough research/luck. If you put up $10k at Amazons IPO you’d have about $18 million today. The most important thing however is to do your research and hold your positions over a long term period.
This channel is a breath of fresh air
Being a younger guy I love Growth Stocks! But once I get closer to retirement I'd definitely move the needle towards value investing!
Best investment/finance channel out there
As usual the “best” is to do both
I think if you beat inflation then your beating most people that put their money in savings accounts
@x a penny saved is a penny earned
"we were always committed to the quantitative approach. We wanted to make sure that we were getting ample value for our money in concrete, demonstrable terms. We were not willing to accept the prospects and promises of the future as compensation for a lack of value in hand"
-The intelligent investor
Yes!!
🌟 EXCELLENT video presentation. Thank you!🌟
The intro is one of the best I’ve ever seen
My noob Feb 21 portfolio:
Spotify
Intel
Sony
Tsmc ( paid growth premium)
Wal-Mart
Pepsi (for dividend)
Apple
Looking to buy Google and Amazon later
Amazing explanation! Thank you👏
Good explanation of the P/E ratio!
Hahahahahaha that intro though..., you made my day hahahahh
Great video. Very informative as usual. Intro is hilarious. Keep up the good work.
Blessing this channel with views and subscribers .
The beginning of this video has the same energy as the "Get rich" ads that came before it LOL
we all know the best investments were Enron 2001 are blockbuster 2010
agreed
Filthy boomer, shoulda done hertz, luckin coffee, wirecard.
was it from mathew lepre
@@meh4062 I have never heard of those and I am younger than you
These are very valuable info for anybody who wants to get rich. Unfortunately, most people who will watch this video will not really be able to apply the principles. We may not want to admit, but as Warren Buffett once said, investing is like any other profession-- it requires a certain level of expertise. No surprise that some people are losing a lot of money in the bear market, while others are making hundreds of thousands in profit. I just don't know how they do it. I have about $109k now to put in the market.
Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. I know someone who made over $350k in this recession influenced market, but to the best of my knowledge, it was through a financial advisor.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
Carol Vivian Constable is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search for her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
This needs to be updated. Growth Vs Value Vs Meme Investing :D
Please do more such intros. They're amazing. The rap, take down style bit
^^ This.
as warren buffett said, growth is just part of the equation for finding value.
Is that why he is continually wrong on tech stocks?
wym wrong? lol?
"Buy high sell low"
-Warren Buffet
You really do have the best intros in the game, plz never stop
My strategy is to watch other retail traders, try to guess their bad decisions (which is easy believe me) and then hold on to their profits 1 timeframe before they do!
You know what I’m talking about
Value is riskier investment with higher expected returns then growth, at least according to Fama and French definition and research (3factor model and so on).
Value includes growth.
exactly!
You're funny! I'm glad you didn't ridicule either group and pick a side. A lot of other channels like to look down on growth stocks as immature children or value stocks as 'dinosaurs'. At the end of the day, all of us want better returns regardless of how we get there
I think a big factor of where people have success depends on psychology. Reckless investors are more likely to bet on growth stocks, neglecting due diligence, falling for fallacies and losing money. But a careful investor who does their due diligence and doesn't gamble will do extremely well on growth stocks because they figure out which ones are not traps.
Just in case you didn't catch the double pun, "Great Value" is Walmart's retail brand, in addition to being a place where great value is found.
Solid video, as always. Thanks for just telling us the deets so we can think for ourselves versus telling us what we should think.
Great video! YOu should do a similar video comparing the Dividend and Growth approach. I hear that you should "Just focus on growth stocks then sell them later down the road and buy Dividend Stocks," but then you'll miss out on the snowball effect if you don't start early enough. So I feel it'd help a lot of people to decide.
this is my favorite channel while studying for my CFA =)
I love your explanations of the financial market. Please keep it up. I learnt so much, because from your videos, ;0. Greetings from germany.
Richard saying: "I feel sorry for you son", is the hardest thing i've heard all week. What a G✌🏾
Own both and buy the dip when one outperforms the other
I'm fine with the growth/value blend fund of VOO.
I really don't understand what is growth investing. For me it sounds mostly as speculative investing, just buying something that has being going up regardless of its fundamentals.
I just want more roast reels from you. You're really good and got those mannerisms down 100% Like a 500k subscriber celebration
This is a great and super helpful overview! Thank you!
So in my 401k I hold 70% large-cap growth and 30% small-cap growth. I've always done very well for the last 20 years. November 17th 2020 I transfer 50% of my large-cap growth to a mid cap value fund. And 50% of my small-cap growth to a small-cap value fund. I'm thinking after this pandemic and things start getting back to normal with interest rates Rising along with the 10-year yield, value funds May outperform.. I hope I'm right.
You killed it, spot on. GREAT decision! Look at the markets now 🙂
That Plain Bagel ain't so plain anymore. You toasted that intro with those X-Men style effects. Very good video I got scared half way through lol. Good to know you mentioned hybrid investing because thats my route and has paid off. I was waiting for Drake to hop on that beat you had up there in Canada.
I am momentum,growth and value investor
Just commenting for the algorithm. Also dope intro man. Laughed my ass off.
4:06 That's Keith Gill's investment philosophy
Your intros are genuinely funny bro.
Sickest intro yet
GARP investing has actually become very profitable. In the last 10 years the SPGP ETF has gotten 17.26% of annual returns and in the last year a whopping 60.94%!
Thanks for a great channel. I've learned a lot from you. Thank you.
I've noticed a number of shares have tanked after unbundling, acquiring acquisitions or selling off part of their business.
Eg here in South Africa after RMH unbundled First Rand Bank to focus on its property interests, they unbundled their shareholders and share price too - even though it's quite a solid company.
What should one watch as a shareholder when companies do major moves such as this? A vid on this would be great. Tnx.
I like to do a combination of both
I do a bit of both, but not at the same time. Eg I have mostly indexes, then some individual value stocks like banks etc, then some growth in tech. It’s just about putting in what you’re comfortable with across each type :) (eg 80% value, 20% growth)
I'm going with a blend of growth via an ETF that tracks the S&P500 and small cap value ETFs. And then getting a few value based and solid picks like Ally and Unilever. And Target's rare miss recently made it a good long term pick up in my opinion, also made Williams Sonoma a good pick up indirectly even though they are definitely growing. And the timing worked out conveniently since it was just before Sonoma's earnings and they did really well.
hi bro can u make a video on how to read a real income statement and balance sheet? your explanations about cash flow statement was great
I'm with you bro these walnut dopes probably have never even heard of a DCF!!!
Compound investing with monthly contributions
I want to correct your claim that value stocks are more stable- historically value has a higher standard deviation than growth. It is considered part of the Fama french 3 factor model and is a risk factor for which you can expect higher returns.
This past year has been a significant exception, as volatility in inflation and interest rate expectations has had an impact on valuations based on the discount rate used in DCF analysis.
I admittedly haven't seen the actual paper, but the way people talk about it my impression was that they were looking at small cap value stocks and the risk come primarily from being small cap while value weeds out a lot of the poor performers among small caps in order to capture the risk premium in returns. My impression was not that the risk came value.
Wow, this guy is actually cooler than I thought, okay. Couldn't find great value in a wal-mart. I'm d e a d.
great video!
Thanks for the video.
Research BLQC
Its a good candidate for growth and value investing.
This was awesome! I have been pretty shaky on the exact ideas of value vs growth investing but this made lots of things click together :D Thanks!
All investing is value investing
I also believe in both strategies, with companies like IBM, Coca-Cola, Intel and AT&T that I hold for the long term and some growth ones like Lemonade and Rocket Companies that I might be selling in 12 months. It is good to see all oportunities and find the best risk/reward investment
After the growth bubble popped it’s clear to see what makes the most sense. All that hyped up shit like twilio and lemonade fucking tanked
If someone talks about growth and value investment as separate things, he/she doesn't understand the investment at all... Growth is a component of value.
Sure, but growth and value investing are different things, and likewise many analysts and professionals use style boxes to identify stocks as being either growth or value picks, so I wouldn't say someone doesn't understand the concepts just because they identify something as being one or the other.
www.investopedia.com/terms/s/stylebox.asp
@@ThePlainBagel ruclips.net/video/PeUid7U-b4I/видео.html
@@MustafaDeniztr Sure I'm not saying I disagree with Buffett, it's certainly foolish to assume you can't have one without the other, but like he says himself it's a common dichotomy used on Wall Street...I wouldn't say someone doesn't understand investments just because they use that classification.
You sound very confused. Of course they're seperate things, the value premium is heavily documented in acedemic literature.
@@jakel8627 The guiding principle of business value creation is a refreshingly simple construct: companies that grow and earn a return on capital that exceeds their cost
of capital create value. Articulated as early as 1890 by Alfred Marshall,1
This is the first paragraph from the book Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies (Wiley Finance)
Growth is one of the drivers of value creation. Value investing is not buying something low multiples. If you search "value premium" on Wikipedia you will see that Bogle is arguing there is no value premium because that Fama-French study is period dependent...
Growth: for young investor who want to be rich in the future and ready to take risks.
Value: for old and rich people looking to make passive income from their wealth and not loose their money.
Wow you're ignorant.
Traditionally investors with shorter time horizons invest in bonds to reduce risk. If you watched the video, value stocks have trailed the market in the recent decade. If you buy value stocks you need a 20 year time horizon.
@@jakel8627 that's exactly what I said dumb dumb
Another great video
Subbed for the intro liked for the content!!!!
"You wouldn't know great value, even if you were in a Walmart."
Smooth. Smooth.
I might need to borrow that one day.
Borrow? We need a patent on it!
@Neil Peters Gee, I had no clue!
House has gone up in value 33% in 3 years. Not to mention saved another 2,000 a month in rent because it’s paid for. That take it up 40%, . That’s is growth and value.. if the market drops 33% still save 2000 a month.. also because I moved out of city proper, there is no water and sewer bill.. that saving pays all heating, cooling, any any other electric cost... Real Estate paid for is kink in any market.
LOL that opener was hard.
I love how you explain the topic so well and easy to understand. It is much appreciated.
Thank you!
I'm recommending your channel to my family and friends for sure.
Macro investing master race
LOL that anime glass thing was awesome, sub for that man.
Millionaires often take a shower every day, if you take a shower everyday you too are on the right track to being rich
My strategy, growth when government, federal reserve and media are all behaving…so now I am tilted 10 percent more towards value !
"Markets have become too optimistic and a reversal is just around the corner" - You don't say
That intro had me dead 😂
Don't forget to add $BFI, I feel like the fundamentals and stock itself can see $25-$30 soon. With the Debt:Income Ratio, Etc.
The Answer: Momentum Investing. Currently, growth investing's returns are more correlated with momentum investing's than value investing's returns (0.94 vs 0.82). So the answer based on the given choices: growth investing. That being said, buying a growth stock because a stock is growth or likewise, buying a value stock because a stock is cheap is extremely dumb. Just buy a stock that you'll think will do well. Growth and value are meaningless identifiers.
Thanks for sharing. A Teenager’s Guide on how to Invest Like Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger is a good investing book for teens.
Great style of this video, mate. Keep it up 💪💪
Something to keep in mind, just because there are very little companies at fair prices doesn't mean they never will. The market is 50/50 and you have to look at market crashes as a black Friday deal. Mute the news and stop taking advice from people who constantly tell you to sell or take your money out of the market
All intelligent investing is value investment .
Value investing had a super 2022.
Value has higher returns longterm with higher volatility at the worse times. Growth has lower long term returns but have lower volatility at bad times. This is you own a broad part of the market not individual stocks, but risk premiums are based on owning all the market. So you have it the other way around if you use index funds value is riskyer with higher returns.
I almost thought, and kind of wish, that this entire video would be a rap 🤣.
I'll show YOU growth
Excellent mannn
Keep uploading the good stuff learning lot from u.
in 2020, it's damn near impossible for me to spot a value pit versus just covid losses. That being said, I'm just going to keep doing what I'm doing, and hope that the market restabilizes.