HomeNewsBusinessMarketsThe lessons to be learnt from Benjamin Graham, the father of fundamentals-based investing

The lessons to be learnt from Benjamin Graham, the father of fundamentals-based investing

Graham’s most popular bets (christened as "net nets" by his followers) were where the market-cap of the company is less than the net liquid assets on the balance sheet.

September 11, 2021 / 13:00 IST
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"Buy not on optimism, but on arithmetic." – Benjamin Graham

While he is widely known as the "father of value investing", I think it's far more appropriate to call him the “father of fundamentals-based investing”. While it’s wordier and not as catchy, it’s an important distinction in a polarized world where “value investing” has become a bit pigeon-holed; probably driven by zealots and self-appointed purveyors of Ben Graham’s teachings.

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Most people would agree that probably the first thing that pops in your mind when you think of Graham is – “margin of safety”. The margin of safety is the concept of buying securities at a discount to its intrinsic value; simply put – can I buy a Rs 100 note for Rs 80 or lower. Investors usually butt heads on how to compute this intrinsic value.

Their primary method to compute intrinsic value is DCF of “discounted cash flow” analysis. Almost everything else is simply heuristics (PE, EV/EBITDA etc.) – derived metrics that have displaced the mother ship in popular media.