The seductive elegance of classical finance theory is powerful, yet value
investing requires that we reject both the precepts of modern portfolio theory (MPT) and
pretty much all of its tools and techniques.
In this important new book, the highly respected and controversial value
investor and behavioural analyst, James Montier explains how value investing is the only
tried and tested method of delivering sustainable long-term returns.
James shows you why everything you learnt at business school is wrong; how to think
properly about valuation and risk; how to avoid the dangers of growth investing; how to be
a contrarian; how to short stocks; how to avoid value traps; how to hedge ignorance using
cheap insurance. Crucially he also gives real time examples of the principles outlined in
the context of the 2008/09 financial crisis.
In this book James shares his tried and tested techniques and provides the latest and
most cutting edge tools you will need to deploy the value approach successfully.
It provides you with the tools to start thinking in a different fashion about the way
in which you invest, introducing the ways of over-riding the emotional distractions that
will bedevil the pursuit of a value approach and ultimately think and act differently from
the herd.
James Montier is a member of GMO's asset allocation team. Prior to
that he was global strategist for Société Générale and Dresdner Kleinwort. He has been
the top rated strategist in the annual extel survey for most of the last decade. He is
also the author of three other books – Behavioural Finance (2000, Wiley), Behavioural
Investing (2007, Wiley) and The Little Book of Behavioral Investing (Forthcoming, Wiley).
James is a regular speaker at both academic and practitioner conferences, and is regarded
as the leading authority on applying behavioural finance to investment. He is a visiting
fellow at the University of Durham and a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. He has been
described as a maverick, an iconoclast, an enfant terrible by the press.
Table of Contents
Preface
Foreword
PART I WHY EVERYTHING YOU LEARNED IN BUSINESS SCHOOL IS WRONG
1 Six Impossible Things before Breakfast, or, How EMH has Damaged our Industry
2 CAPM is Crap
3 Pseudoscience and Finance: The Tyranny of Numbers and the Fallacy of Safety
4 The Dangers of Diversification and Evils of the Relative Performance Derby
5 The Dangers of DCF
6 Is Value Really Riskier than Growth? Dream On
7 Deflation, Depressions and Value
PART II THE BEHAVIOURAL FOUNDATIONS OF VALUE INVESTING
8 Learn to Love Your Dogs, or, Overpaying for the Hope of Growth (Again!)
9 Placebos, Booze and Glamour Stocks
10 Tears before Bedtime
11 Clear and Present Danger: The Trinity of Risk
12 Maximum Pessimism, Profit Warnings and the Heat of the Moment
13 The Psychology of Bear Markets
14 The Behavioural Stumbling Blocks to Value Investing
PART III THE PHILOSOPHY OF VALUE INVESTING
15 The Tao of Investing: The Ten Tenets of My Investment Creed
16 Process not Outcomes: Gambling, Sport and Investment!
17 Beware of Action Man
18 The Bullish Bias and the Need for Scepticism. Or, Am I Clinically Depressed?
19 Keep it Simple, Stupid
20 Confused Contrarians and Dark Days for Deep Value
PART IV THE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
21 Going Global: Value Investing without Boundaries
22 Graham’s Net-Nets: Outdated or Outstanding?
PART V THE ‘DARK SIDE’ OF VALUE INVESTING: SHORT SELLING
23 Grimm’s Fairy Tales of Investing
24 Joining the Dark Side: Pirates, Spies and Short Sellers
25 Cooking the Books, or, More Sailing Under the Black Flag
26 Bad Business: Thoughts on Fundamental Shorting and Value Traps
PART VI REAL-TIME VALUE INVESTING
27 Overpaying for the Hope of Growth: The Case Against Emerging Markets
28 Financials: Opportunity or Value Trap?
29 Bonds: Speculation not Investment
30 Asset Fire Sales, Depression and Dividends
31 Cyclicals, Value Traps, Margins of Safety and Earnings Power
32 The Road to Revulsion and the Creation of Value
33 Revulsion and Valuation
34 Buy When it’s Cheap – If Not Then, When?
35 Roadmap to Inflation and Sources of Cheap Insurance
36 Value Investors versus Hard Core Bears: The Valuation Debate
References
Index
414 pages, Hardcover
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