Description

Book Synopsis
Provides a modern analytical framework for assessing a company''s true value

Written by a true value investor known for his ability to buy undervalued companies and re-sell them at a substantial profit, Value Investing provides an analytical framework that evaluates the impact of real events-including restructuring, regulations, mergers and acquisitions, and other important factors-on a company''s value.

Well-known for his success with distressed corporations and value investing, author Martin Whitman wages a controversial attack on the modern financial practice of focusing on price movements and short-term trading. In Value Investing, Whitman identifies fundamental factors affecting the value of companies and entire markets from the ground up and takes value investing one step further by demonstrating how industry movement and public policy decisions can lead to greater returns. He also highlights the shortcomings of all the popularly applied analytical techniques.

Trade Review
"The book has a lot and I recommend it. It is remarkably well written for a book on finance and, perhaps most importantly, easily comprehensible."(Investment Adviser, 22 January 2001)

Table of Contents
DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO THE INVESTMENT PROCESS.

What is Value Investing?

Academic Finance: Efficient Market Hypothesis and Efficient Portfolio Theory.

Graham and Dodd Fundamentalism.

Broker-Dealer Research Departments and Conventional Money Managers.

REAL-WORLD CONSIDERATIONS.

Corporate Valuation.

The Substantive Characteristics of Securties.

Capital Structure.

Promoters' and Professionals' Compensations.

Uses and Limitations of Financial Accounting.

Uses and Limitations of Narrative Disclosures.

Semantics Counts.

RESOURCE CONVERSION.

A Simplified Example.

Acquiring Securities in Bulk.

Restructuring Troubled Companies.

Other Resource Conversion Topics.

Epilogue: The Values of Value Investing.

Index.

Value Investing A Balanced Approach 84 Frontiers

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    A Paperback / softback by Martin J. Whitman

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      View other formats and editions of Value Investing A Balanced Approach 84 Frontiers by Martin J. Whitman

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 17/10/2000
      ISBN13: 9780471398103, 978-0471398103
      ISBN10: 0471398101

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Provides a modern analytical framework for assessing a company''s true value

      Written by a true value investor known for his ability to buy undervalued companies and re-sell them at a substantial profit, Value Investing provides an analytical framework that evaluates the impact of real events-including restructuring, regulations, mergers and acquisitions, and other important factors-on a company''s value.

      Well-known for his success with distressed corporations and value investing, author Martin Whitman wages a controversial attack on the modern financial practice of focusing on price movements and short-term trading. In Value Investing, Whitman identifies fundamental factors affecting the value of companies and entire markets from the ground up and takes value investing one step further by demonstrating how industry movement and public policy decisions can lead to greater returns. He also highlights the shortcomings of all the popularly applied analytical techniques.

      Trade Review
      "The book has a lot and I recommend it. It is remarkably well written for a book on finance and, perhaps most importantly, easily comprehensible."(Investment Adviser, 22 January 2001)

      Table of Contents
      DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO THE INVESTMENT PROCESS.

      What is Value Investing?

      Academic Finance: Efficient Market Hypothesis and Efficient Portfolio Theory.

      Graham and Dodd Fundamentalism.

      Broker-Dealer Research Departments and Conventional Money Managers.

      REAL-WORLD CONSIDERATIONS.

      Corporate Valuation.

      The Substantive Characteristics of Securties.

      Capital Structure.

      Promoters' and Professionals' Compensations.

      Uses and Limitations of Financial Accounting.

      Uses and Limitations of Narrative Disclosures.

      Semantics Counts.

      RESOURCE CONVERSION.

      A Simplified Example.

      Acquiring Securities in Bulk.

      Restructuring Troubled Companies.

      Other Resource Conversion Topics.

      Epilogue: The Values of Value Investing.

      Index.

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