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Dreman D. — Contrarian Investment Strategies in the Next Generation
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Íàçâàíèå: Contrarian Investment Strategies in the Next Generation
Àâòîð: Dreman D.
Àííîòàöèÿ: All stock-market investors embrace the motto "Buy low, sell high." Few act accordingly, however, for to do so would require that we go against the crowd, buying stocks that are out of favor and selling Wall Street's darlings. Powerful psychological forces prevent us from pursuing a contrarian investment strategy, although it consistently beats the market, according to David Dreman, a seasoned money manager and long-time columnist for Forbes magazine. One of the Street's best-known and most articulate contrarians, Dreman has updated his 1982 investment classic, Contrarian Investment Strategies, using recent research on investor psychology. His revised book combines proven techniques for selecting undervalued stocks with fresh insights on how to defy, and thereby profit from, the popular fears or enthusiasms of the moment.
Dreman pays only cursory attention to a company's business fundamentals in deciding whether to invest in it. Instead he looks for stocks trading at below-market multiples of per-share earnings, cash flow, book value, or dividend yield. Historically, Dreman claims, stocks that are cheap by any of these measures have tended to outperform the market average, although this is disputed by those who believe the stock market is efficient and therefore impossible to beat except by accident. Dreman devotes many pages to debunking their research. He offers a new refinement of his low-price strategy, which involves picking the cheapest stocks within industries, to create a diversified, contrarian portfolio.
Contrarian Investment Strategies: The Next Generation is full of practical and provocative advice, but some of its most interesting passages delve into the abstruse findings of cognitive psychology. This research has proven that we are woefully inadequate as intuitive statisticians. Interpreting data to make predictions about the probability of future events, we consistently make the same mistakes. For example, we exaggerate the likelihood that current trends will continue, even when they are historically exceptional. (Logic dictates that trends are more likely to regress toward the mean.) This fallacy explains why most Wall Street insiders were gloomiest about stocks in 1981, after six years of falling prices, just before the beginning of the greatest bull market ever. Is today's widespread optimism among investors a reason for caution? Dreman thinks so.
It seems our brains are hard-wired to underperform the market. That's why few investors can keep to a contrarian approach. Dreman recommends buying stocks when prices fall, the worse the panic the better. But that requires overriding powerful instincts.
Besides reflecting Dreman's wide reading in finance, psychology, and history, his book also displays his sometimes windy and self-important writing style. At 464 pages, the book is not a quick read. But its intellectual depth and thoroughly tested advice make many other investment books look paltry and superficial by comparison. Serious, independent investors will find it rewarding.
ßçûê:
Ðóáðèêà: Ýêîíîìèêà è ôèíàíñû /
Ñòàòóñ ïðåäìåòíîãî óêàçàòåëÿ: Ãîòîâ óêàçàòåëü ñ íîìåðàìè ñòðàíèö
ed2k: ed2k stats
Ãîä èçäàíèÿ: 1998
Êîëè÷åñòâî ñòðàíèö: 464
Äîáàâëåíà â êàòàëîã: 12.11.2006
Îïåðàöèè: Ïîëîæèòü íà ïîëêó |
Ñêîïèðîâàòü ññûëêó äëÿ ôîðóìà | Ñêîïèðîâàòü ID
Ïðåäìåòíûé óêàçàòåëü
Earnings: forecasts of 23 52 53—56 76 77—79 87 88 90—102 108—109 111—114 115 298
Earnings: growth rates for 76 88 99—103 141—145 172—177 181—186 191 248—257 294
Earnings: indicators of 248—255
Earnings: management of 104
Earnings: momentum of 57—59 92—93 101
Earnings: near-term 88 90
Earnings: of IPOs 332 366 368
Earnings: per share 77 78 101
Earnings: price vs. see price-to-earnings ratio (P/E)
Earnings: quarterly 91—92 120 121—123 124 126 132 133 200 246 389—390 439n
Earnings: recovery of 267 268 271—275
Earnings: reports of 104 131 389—390
Earnings: stock prices and 88 93 94 101 108 117—136 385—394
Earnings: surprises in see surprises earnings
Earnings: volatility of 95—96 102—104
Eastwood, Clint 69—70
Economic activity: forecasts of 72 76 79 97 101 104 223—224
Economic activity: impact of 142 217—218 292—294 315 368
Economic activity: statistics on 223—224
Economics, modern 298 377—379
Education of a Speculator, The (Niederhoffer) 217
Edwards, Benjamin P. 337
Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) 34—37 59—64 373—398
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), "semi-strong form" of 59—61 383—384 385 386
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), "strong form" of 61
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), "weak form" of 61
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), anomalies of 37 383—385 395
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), as academic theory 34—37 59—64 347 372 373 376 394 396—397
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), as hypothesis 34—37 377 394—397
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), as progress 373—374
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), contrarian strategy vs. 140 150 151—153 154 178 374 376 384 385 396
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), correlations and 380—381
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), efficiency principle in 34—35 87 376—377 381—383 386 388 395 446n
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), failure of 374 375—377 394—397
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), influence of 22—23 30 34—35 63—64 373—375
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), information analysis in 381—382 385—394
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), investor psychology and 35 36 150 248 347—348 352 364 370 372 375—377 379 393—394
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), modern economics and 377—379
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), modern portfolio theory (MPT) and 62—64 374 375 395 399 404
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), performance and 35—36 382—385 374 394 446n
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), probabilities and 36—37
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), rationality and 375—379 384
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), reliability of 22—23 30 35—37
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), risk and 145—149 151 153 297—303 383 384 395 396
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), small capitalization stocks and 317 318 322 396
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), statistical analysis of 34 35 61—62 374 379 380—383 392 394
Efficient market hypothesis (EMH), volatility and 380—381
Einstein, Albert 71 146 377
Electric Boat Company 319—320
Eli Lilly & Co. 176—177 186
Elliot, George 69
Energy industry 265 363
Entrepreneurs 114—115
Equity funds 57 58
Errors, investment 214—237
Errors, investment, anchoring in 233—234
Errors, investment, case rate vs. base rate in 225—226 229—230 232—233 236 237
Errors, investment, cognitive biases in 19 21 216—237 348 372
Errors, investment, decision-making and 19 38 214—215 216 218 234—235 344
Errors, investment, false analogies in 216—221
Errors, investment, hindsight bias in 234 269 341 343
Errors, investment, inputs vs. outputs in 230—240 439n
Errors, investment, judgment and 215—216
Errors, investment, law of small numbers in 221—224 235
Errors, investment, logical fallacies in 214—215
Errors, investment, market fashions and 234—235
Errors, investment, probabilities and 215—216 218—219 222 224—226 232 236
Errors, investment, rationalism vs. 214
Errors, investment, recent and salient events and 231—233 235
Errors, investment, regression to the mean in 227—230 235 439n
Errors, investment, representativeness heuristic in 216—221 222
Errors, investment, rules for 221 224 229—230 231 236—237
Errors, investment, simplification in 215—216
Errors, investment, statistical 215—216 222—223 227 228
Errors, investment, variables in 218—219
Evans Products 321
event triggers 130—134 135 247 261
experts 67—73 see financial
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (Mackay) 354—355
Exxon 91 349
Fama, Eugene 46 61 62 151 152 300—301 317 327 376 381 383 385 386 390
Farrell, Robert 56
Federal Accounting Standards Board (FASB) 50
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddy Mac) 268
Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) 118 268
Federal Reserve Bank 73 223 287 378
Festinger, Leon 358 361
Financial Analysts Journal 91 147n 150
Financial Statement Analysis (Fridson) 171n
Financial statements 171 244
Financing, interim 351—352
First Call 90 403
First Chicago 267
First Chicago NBD 277—278
First Fidelity Bank 269 276
Fischhoff, Baruch 109
Fisher, Irving 284 292
Fisher, Lawrence 386
Fleet Financial 183 184 186
Florida Land Bubble 353 355
Forbes 147 150 156 174 179—180 204 217 219 262 322n 328 329 341 342 364 396
Forbes Annual Mutual Funds Survey 156 342
Ford Motor Company 71 74 178—181 186
Ford, Henry 74
forecasts 67—87
Forecasts, "illusion of validity" in 109
Forecasts, charts in 42—43 45 84 217
Forecasts, comparative 110—111 113
Forecasts, consensus 91—93 94 97 100 119—120
Forecasts, contrarian strategy vs. 139 140—141
Forecasts, decision-making based on 74 79—80 84 113 115—116
Forecasts, distribution of 94—95
Forecasts, earnings surprises and 90 94 97 112 117 118 119—120 125 127 128—129 135 136 139 140—141 391—392 432n
Forecasts, historical 68—73
Forecasts, in expansions vs. recessions 96 97—99
Forecasts, inaccuracy of 16 23 40—41 67—68 74—75 78—79 81—82 84—87 91—102 104 108—109 111 114—119 124 135 147 375
Forecasts, industry 194 199
Forecasts, information processing for 74 75—84
Forecasts, inherent difficulty of 73—74 115—116 159 172
Forecasts, inside vs. outside view of 109—111 113
Forecasts, long-term 91—93
Forecasts, of earnings 23 52 53—56 76 77—79 87 88 90—102 108—109 111—114 115 298
Forecasts, of economic activity 72 76 79 97 101 104 223—224
Forecasts, overconfidence and 81—83 114—116
Forecasts, past record of 99—100
Forecasts, probabilities and 80—81 82 111—114
Forecasts, quarterly 91—92
Forecasts, revision of 90 98
Forecasts, rules for 96 102 124 136
Forecasts, timing and 240—241
Foreign markets 205—210 213 239
Forsyth, Frederick 69
Fortune 61 153 300 318 319 320 322
Francis, Jennifer 98
Franco-Prussian War 238
Frank Russell 153
Fraud 334—337 342—343
French, Kenneth 152—153 300—301 376
Fridson, Martin S. 171n
Friedman, Milton 375
Full Employment Act (1946) 289
Fundamental analysis 48—56 57 59 61 74 150 170—171 371 373 397
Gable, Clark 69
Galbraith, John Kenneth 241
Galen Health Care 174—175 186
Galileo Galilei 396
Galton, Francis 227
Gambling stocks 340 369n
Garzarelli, Elaine 56 221—222
Gates, Bill 54
Genentech 362
General Dynamics 319
General Electric (GE) 181
General Motors (GM) 180 349 403
Germany 206—207 210 293 315 319—320
Germany Fund 210
Gintel, Robert M. 335
Girsky, Stephen 89
Glaxo 194
Glossary 411—419
Gold 242 247 280—283 288 291 294
Goldsmith, Barry R. 336
Goldsmith, Frederick N. 45
Gone With the Wind 69
Graham, Benjamin 49—56 144—145 156 157 163 172 183 231 244 256 295 298 305—306
Granger, Clive 46
Granville, Joseph 41 45
Great Bull Market 15 49 228
Great Crash—1929, The (Galbraith) 241
Great Depression 49 71—72 216—219 234 239 243 262 284 288 305n 319 324 329 354
Greenspan, Alan 73 223
Gross domestic product (GDP) 31 223 289—290
Gross national product (GNP) 72
Growth analysis 49 53—55 57—59 101 145
Growth at a reasonable price (GARP) 177 178 245 246
Grubman, Jack 89—90
Gulf War 117 181 219—220 262 263 264—265 289
Halligan, Ted 342 343
Hambrecht & Quist 364 367
Handicappers 80—81 82
Harvard Economic Society 71—72
Hastings, Reed 366—367
Hayes, Rutherford B. 71
Health management organizations (HMOs) 174—175 231 365
Health-care industry 20 174—175 178 231 365
Herzog, Heine & Gedult 337
Hewlett-Packard 78 245 246
Hickman report 243
Hindsight bias 234 269 341 343
Hoffman, Donna 367
Holly, Buddy 70
Hopkins, Sheila V. 287
Horse racing 80—81 82
Hulbert Financial Digest 45 222
Hulbert Service 41
Humana 174
Huxley, Thomas 327
I/B/E/S 90 98
Ibbotson, Roger 228 317 325—327
IBM 54—55 220 279 340 368
Index funds 63 193 198—199 204—205 209
Indexes, stock 63n 339—341
Industrial Revolution 29
Industries 193—213
Industries in bear markets 200—201
Industries in bull markets 202
Industries in foreign markets 205—210
Industries, "best" vs. "worst" stocks in 193 194 196 200
Industries, buy-and-hold strategy for 196 197 201—202
Industries, capital appreciation and 195 196
Industries, commissions and 196
Industries, contrarian strategy for 193—213
Industries, dividends for 194—203
Industries, earnings by 95—96 100 101 199—200
Industries, export of 289
Industries, financial information on 202—203
Industries, forecasts for 194 199
Industries, investor psychology and 193 199 200 203 210 213
Industries, low P/E strategy for 193 194—203 211—213
Industries, market performance for 158 193 198 200—201 202 203
Industries, portfolios for 170 196 197 199—202 276
Industries, price-to-book value ratio (P/BV) for 194—203 211
Industries, price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF) for 194—203
Industries, price-to-dividend ratio (P/D) for 194—203
Industries, rules for 197 211
Industries, sell targets in 210—213
Industries, transaction costs and 196
Inflation: bonds and 273—274 280—290 291 292 294 295 304 305—315
Inflation: classic 287—288
Inflation: deficits and 288—289
Inflation: hyper- 279 292—294 315
Inflation: interest rates and 56
Inflation: rate of 53 72 241 287—289 292—294
Inflation: real estate and 351
Inflation: returns and 280—290 291 292 295
Inflation: risk and 297 305—315
Inflation: stocks and 280—290 291 292—294 295 304 305—315
Information: complexity of 79—84 87 91—92 107—108 111 113 116 381—382 385—394
Information: configural processing of 76—77 107
Information: decision-making and 76—77
Information: forecasts and 74 75—84
Information: incremental 79—80
Information: long-term 222 226 228—230 232—233
Information: revolution in 29 91
Information: sequential processing of 76 77
Information: simplification of 215—216
Information: unreliable 225—226
Initial public offerings (IPOs) 20 93 118 158 209 226 239 326—327 332—333 342 362—372 385
Institutional investor 53 88—89 105 234—235
Insurance industry 30 194 265 277 304 326 351 353 354
Intel 43 93 245 355 402
Intelligent Investor, The (Graham) 144—145
Interest rates: analysis of 56 79
Interest rates: bonds and 168 234 240
Interest rates: inflation and 56
Interest rates: trends in 72 73 77 223
International Monetary Fund 72 206
Internet 54 55 326 365—368
Intrinsic value theory 101
Intuit, Inc. 335 367
Investment: "margin of safety" in 49 172 275 295
Investment: academic research on 24 34—37 46 48 59 63 64 150
Investment: advisory services for 33 102 221—222
Investment: aggressive 294—296
Investment: contrarian see contrarian investment strategy
Investment: crisis see crisis investing
Investment: fixed-income 285 294 297
Investment: long-term 190—192 199 212 283 295 296 305—315
Investment: momentum 57—59 101
Investment: paradigm shift in 37—39
Investment: revolution in 285—286
Investment: speculation vs. 302 354 365 366 368—369 403
Investment: strategies for 40—64
Investment: success rate for 22 27—28
Investor's Alliance 203
Investors: competition of 60
Investors: institutional 84—89 101 104—105
Investors: optimism vs. pessimism of 17 20—21
Investors: psychology of see psychology investor
Investors: small 31 285 294 297
Iraq-Iran war 264—265
IRAS 187 310 323
Israel 110—111 227—228
J.P.Morgan 107—108
James I, King of England 316
Janney Montgomery Scott 105—106
Japan 72 207 208 240—241 242 293 315 353
Jensen, Michael 63 376 382 386 423n
John Hancock Special Equities Fund 366
Johnson & Johnson 131
Johnson, Lyndon B. 238
Journal of Finance 102 148 153
Judgmental heuristics 215—216
Junk bonds 51 237 243—245 257 297
Kahneman, Daniel 110—111 113 216 218 220 222 224 232
Kasparov, Gary 391 394
Keane, James R. 45
Keating, Charles 51
Keefe Bruyette's Index 183
Kemper — Dreman High Return Fund 18 174 205 269
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