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Dreman D. — Contrarian Investment Strategies in the Next Generation
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: en

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
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Ïðåäìåòíûé óêàçàòåëü
Kennedy, John F.      261
KeyCorp      132 183—185 186
Keynes, John Maynard      284 288 292 307 377—378
KGB      356
Kidder Peabody      106
King, Martin Luther, Jr.      261
Kipling, Rudyard      69
Knox, Frank      68
Kuhn, Thomas      395 396
Kwasniewski, Aleksander      40
L&F Rothschild, Underberg, Towbin      364
L.L.Knickerbocker      366
Labor      289—290
Laparoscopic surgery      130—131
Large numbers, law of      222
Le Bon, Gustave      356—357 361 362 365 370 371
Leading economic indicators      223
Lee, Robert E.      19
Lehman Brothers      89 93
Lerner, Eugene      221
Lesco-Data Processing      16
Leveraged buy-outs (LBOs)      275
Levis, Mario      363
Levitt, Arthur      334—335
Light-movement experiment      360—361
Limit orders      338 339
Lincoln Savings and Loan      51
Lincoln, Abraham      358
Lintner, John      299 400—401 404 424n
Lipper Analytical Services      18 31 57 156 204
Little, I.M.D.      103
Lives of the Most Famous English Poets (Winstanley)      69
London evacuation (1524)      354—355 356 357
Loughran, Tim      326 363 364
Lovallo, Dan      110
Lucas, Robert      378 379
Lufkin, Eric      98 119 155 194 248 330 432n
MacBeth, James      300
Mackay, Charles      354—355 357 361 362 365 370
Magellan Fund      384 402
Malkiel, Burton      31 102—103
Malleus Maleficarum—The Witches' Hammer      316
Management      54 78 79 106 131 142 174 179 181—182 183 199 266 267 269
Manet, Edouard      70
Market timing      41—42 44—45 47 56—57 58 398
Market-makers      326n 336—337 402
Markets: administered      289
Markets: competition in      141—142
Markets: share of      54 105 115
Markowitz, Harry      35 297 399—400 401 402 404 424n
Marshall, Alfred      377—378
Mathematics      347 378 392
Mavrodi, Sergei      349 350
Mayer, Louis B.      69
McClellan, George      19
McDonald's      54
McKinley, William      68
McWilliams, James      432n
Media, mass      22 264—265 343
Meehl, Paul      75 429n
Melville, Herman      69
Memorex      368
Merck      194
Mercury Finance      51
mergers      332 385 390—393
Merrill Lynch      89 93 106
Microsoft      53 54—55 91 279 334 349 355 403
Midsummer Night's Dream, A (Shakespeare)      70
Milken, Michael      51 244
Miller, Merton      35 327
Miller, Paul, Jr.      143—144
Milton, John      69
Mirless, James      379
Mississippi Bubble      355 358 365 370 371
MMM      348—351 355 356
Moby Dick (Melville)      69
Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT)      62—64 297 299 300 307 309—310 352 375 395 399—404 442n
Modigliani, Franco      35
Monet, Claude      70
Money managers: audits of      343 344
Money managers: commissions of      31 57 61
Money managers: earnings estimates by      99—100 101
Money managers: expertise of      31—32 48 228
Money managers: performance of      24 30—34 57 61 99—100 101 129 139 155 191 200 224 235 294 342—344 382—383 384 427n
Money managers: portfolio turnover for      167
Money managers: probabilities and      33—34 113
Money managers: selling by      211
Money supply      223 378
Monroe, Marilyn      69
Monte Carlo simulation      188—189
Moore, Arnold      46
Morgan Stanley      89 335
Morgan Stanley Index      206
Morgenstern, Oskar      46
Morningstar Mutual Fund Survey      31 57 156 204 207—208 301—302
Mortgages      268 305 352
Mossin, Jan      299 400—401 404 424n
Murphy, J.Michael      299
Mutual funds: aggressive      221 302 341—342 343 373
Mutual funds: assets of      30—31
Mutual funds: blue chip      221
Mutual funds: closed-end      205 206 207 209
Mutual funds: discounts of      203 205
Mutual funds: earnings estimates of      88 99—100 101 102
Mutual funds: expense ratio of      21
Mutual funds: financial analysis by      48 221—222
Mutual funds: for small capitalization stocks      63n 322 327—329 333 339 343
Mutual funds: junk bond      244 245
Mutual funds: performance of      24 59 61 156 221 382—383 384
Mutual funds: rankings of      18 31 156 204—205 207—208 301—303
Mutual funds: risk assessed by      62—63
Mutual funds: transaction costs of      57 62
Mutual funds: volatility of      297—298 301—302
Myers, Lawrence      379
Napoleon I, Emperor of France      29—30 39 238
NASDAQ      91 166n 170 239 315 326 333—339 344 363 401 402 443n—444n
National Association of Security Dealers (N.A.S.D.)      335 443n
National Student Marketing      16 84—85 371
NationsBank      106
Nature and Conditions of Panic, The (Quarantelli)      269
Neff, John      384
Netscape      54 118 365—366 367 368 369
New Contrarian Investment Strategy, The (Dreman)      17 85 91 99—100 369
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)      31 36 91 98 146—149 153 166n 170 209 318—321 338 363 385—389
New York Times      45 70 205 221 321 323n
NFL      380—381
Nicholson, Francis      142—143 144 151 432n 433
Niederhoffer, Victor      217
Nikkei average      240 241
Nippon Telephone      207
Nixon, Richard M.      114
Oak Technology      93
Ohio Casualty      194
Oil prices      219—220 265 290 340 363
Olson, Ken      71
Opinion, convergence of      359—361 370—371
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)      219 290
Overreaction, investor      238—257
Overreaction, investor, dynamics of      20—21 213 214—215 237 238—257 261—262 265 269—271 276—278
Overreaction, investor, financial ratios and      248—255
Overreaction, investor, for "best" vs. "worst" stocks      246—248 249 251—252 254—255
Overreaction, investor, historical analogies for      238
Overreaction, investor, hypothesis of      20—21 246—248 253 256
Overreaction, investor, on earning surprises      245—246 247 251
Overreaction, investor, on junk bonds      243—245 257
Overreaction, investor, pervasiveness of      239—243
Overreaction, investor, regression to the mean and      256—257
Overreaction, investor, rules on      256—257
Overreaction, investor, timing and      240—241
Owens-Corning Fiberglass      106
Paine Webber      89 105
Panics      22—23 217 257 265—266 267 269—271 303
Patel, Jay      104
Patents      68 73 142
Pension funds      30 31 53 63 90 294—295 310 351 352
Pepys, Samuel      70
Pharmaceutical industry      20 176—177 184 194 272—273 274 294 302
Phelan, John      36
Phelps, E.H.      287
Philbrick, Donna      96
Phlogiston theory      151 153
Picasso, Pablo      70 242
Picture of Dorian Gray, The (Wilde)      67
Pizarro, Francisco      35 59
PNC      266—267
Poincare, Jules Henri      46
Popper, Karl      394—395
portfolios      160—192
Portfolios, active management of      327
Portfolios, blue chip      165—166 170
Portfolios, buy-and-hold strategy for      162 163 166—168 196 197 201—202 263—264 279 306 391—392
Portfolios, capital appreciation in      161 162 164 166 169
Portfolios, commissions and      166 186
Portfolios, contrarian      85n 160—192
Portfolios, diversification of      60 85 170 200 209 244 268—269 275 276 278 352 403 434n
Portfolios, dividends and      161—162 167—169 173 176 178 179 181 183—185 187 188
Portfolios, earnings growth and      172 174 176 177 181 183 184 186 191
Portfolios, eclectic approach to      171—173 186
Portfolios, examples of      174—185
Portfolios, financial position and      171—173 174 181—182 183 185
Portfolios, financial ratios and      160—169 172 173 174—185 189
Portfolios, for crisis investing      263—264 268—269 275 276 278
Portfolios, for retirement      161 187
Portfolios, foreign      205—210 213
Portfolios, growth      294—296
Portfolios, in bear markets      160 162 166 169 186 191
Portfolios, in bull markets      166 186
Portfolios, indicators for      171—173 186
Portfolios, industry      170 196 197 199—202 276
Portfolios, investor psychology and      169 191—192 213
Portfolios, long-term investment and      190—192 305—315
Portfolios, low P/E approach to      160—163 164 166 167 173 174—178 179 181 184 186 187 188 189
Portfolios, performance of      85—87 143 146 149 160 163 164 166 169 171 186—192 303 374 399—404
Portfolios, price-to-book value ratio (P/BV) for      163—167 173 174 179 181 182—183 184 186 187 188
Portfolios, price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF) for      163—167 173 174 178—182 186 187 188
Portfolios, price-to-dividend ratio (P/D) for      167—169 173 179 183—185 188
Portfolios, probabilities and      187—192
Portfolios, reconstruction of      253—255
Portfolios, return on      62 159 161—165 186—192 211—212 278 400—401
Portfolios, risk and      170
Portfolios, rules for      165 167 169—170 171
Portfolios, security analysis for      170—171
Portfolios, sell discipline for      160 210—213
Portfolios, semivariance and      303
Portfolios, strategies for      160—169
Portfolios, taxes and      23 169 186
Portfolios, total value of      312
Portfolios, transaction costs and      166 168 186
Portfolios, turnover of      59 167 186
Portfolios, value investing and      164 175 178 191
Portfolios,"best" vs. "worst" stocks in      162 163—164 166 167 391—392
Prechter, Bob      56
Precious metals      241—242 247 280—283 288 291 294 315
Presley, Elvis      70
Presstek      239
Price-to-book value ratio (P/BV): crisis investing and      266—267 271 272 273 274 276
Price-to-book value ratio (P/BV): for industries      194—203 211
Price-to-book value ratio (P/BV): for portfolios      163—167 173 174 179 181 182—183 184 186 187 188
Price-to-book value ratio (P/BV): in contrarian strategy      52—53 140 141 151 152—157 158 239 296 434n
Price-to-book value ratio (P/BV): in earnings surprises      118 120 123 124—125 132—133 135
Price-to-book value ratio (P/BV): investor overreaction and      248—255
Price-to-book value ratio (P/BV): of small capitalization stocks      327 331—332
Price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF): crisis investing and      276
Price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF): for industries      194—203
Price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF): for portfolios      163—167 173 174 178—182 186 187 188
Price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF): in contrarian strategy      140 141 154—157 158 296 434n
Price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF): in earnings surprises      118 119 120 121 123 124—127 129—130 132 135
Price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF): investor overreaction and      248—255
Price-to-cash flow ratio (P/CF): of small capitalization stocks      331
Price-to-dividend ratio (P/D): for industries      194—203
Price-to-dividend ratio (P/D): for portfolios      167—169 173 179 183—185 188
Price-to-dividend ratio (P/D): in contrarian strategy      140 141 154 155 156 157 158
Price-to-dividend ratio (P/D): investor overreaction and      248—255
Price-to-dividend ratio (P/D): of small capitalization stocks      327 331
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E)      140—158
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), analysis of      52 54 55—56 140 141 146—149 153
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), contrarian strategy for      140—158 160—167 173—181 184—189 194—203
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), crisis investing and      268 271 272—274 276
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), for foreign investment      207 208 209 240
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), high      240 330 332 432n—433n
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), in earnings surprises      117—136 140 245—246
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), investor overreaction and      248—255
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), low      17 18 36 53 146—167 173—181 184—189 193 194—203 211—213 296 317—318 324—325 329—333 343 432n 434n 435n
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), multiples of      122—123 207 212 213 272 365 431n
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), returns and      145—149 150 153—157
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), risk and      145—149 151 153
Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), visibility and      141 142—145
Prices, consumer      53 142 223 287—290 294
Prices, stock: current      233
Prices, stock: determination of      17 34 46 59—60 228 354 359
Prices, stock: differentials in      129—130 134—135 161
Prices, stock: earnings and      88 93 94 101 108 117—136 385—394
Prices, stock: fraud and      336—337
Prices, stock: movements of      46 62 64 92 263 385—391 393 395 404
Prices, stock: premium      101
Prices, stock: probabilities and      27—30 40—41 46
Prices, stock: stock splits and      385—389 393
Prices, stock: value vs.      49 230—231 393—394 446n
Prices, stock: volume and      42
Probabilities      30 34—39 187—192 266 398
Probabilities, distribution of      257
Probabilities, forecasts and      80—81 82 111—114
Probabilities, investment errors and      215—216 218—219 222 224—226 232 236
Probabilities, investor psychology and      30 37—39
Probabilities, money managers and      33—34 113
Probabilities, normative      225
Probabilities, portfolios and      187—192
Probabilities, prior      224—226 236
Probabilities, risk and      307—315
Probabilities, stock prices and      27—30 40—41 46
Procter & Gamble      209
Products      54 78—79 142
Profits: corporate      50 51 256—257 278
Profits: indicators of      139 248—255
Profits: instant      354 359 370 372
Profits: margin of      77 141 142 176 199 248—255 256
Profits: near-term      77 78
Profits: taxation of      51 324
Prozac      176—177
Prudential Securities      105 106
Psychiatric patients      75—76 77 83
Psychologists, clinical      75—76 77 80 81 82 83 429n
Psychology and the Stock Market (Dreman)      24 39 146 369 398
Psychology, investor      347—372
Psychology, investor, "bubbles" and      265—269 348—372 393
Psychology, investor, analysis of      18—22 38 347—372
Psychology, investor, contrarian strategy and      18—19 158—159 397—398
Psychology, investor, crowd psychology and      348 354—361 362 372
Psychology, investor, earnings surprises and      118 135 136 139 245—246 247 251
Psychology, investor, efficient market hypothesis and      35 36 150 248 347—348 352 364 370 372 375—377 379 393—394
Psychology, investor, expert opinion and      358 366 367 368 370—371
Psychology, investor, group opinion and      359—361 370—372
Psychology, investor, industries and      193 199 200 203 210 213
Psychology, investor, IPOs and      362—372
Psychology, investor, irrational behavior and      348 351 356 362 369—372
Psychology, investor, panics and      22—23 217 257 265—266 267 269—271 303
Psychology, investor, perceptions and      359—361 370—371
Psychology, investor, portfolios and      169 191—192 213
Psychology, investor, price rises and      354 359
Psychology, investor, probabilities and      30 37—39
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