The Values of Value Investing

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The rise of the consulting industry, armed with cheap computing power and an abundance of stock-specific data, has harmed the industry, because according to them, a “value” investor is one who holds statistically cheap stocks and a “growth” investor is one who holds statistically expensive stocks. The truth is somewhere … well, actually it’s a lot more complex, and the consulting industry’s crude segmentations don’t capture it.

The values of value investing

The problem is that managers now feel that the composition of their portfolios has to fit in a specific “box.” I remember talking to a friend who runs a mutual fund that is considered to be a “growth” fund. We’d been discussing a stock, which was actually his idea, and then he said “I think you’ll make a lot of money on it… but we can’t buy it; it’s a value stock.”

I organize a conference every summer called VALUEx Vail. Vail is a quaint, beautiful, ritzy ski resort town tucked away in the gorgeous Rocky Mountains, about 100 miles from Denver.

One day I received an e-mail from a reader asking why I – a value investor – would have a conference in an expensive place like Vail. He suggested that as a true value investor I should hold the conference in a hotel somewhere by the airport where prices are much cheaper. His precise comment was, “I thought value investors were supposed to like cheap stuff.”

This e-mail challenged my value-investment-hood. It made me question my value investing “values.” Was that reader right? Was I straying from value investor traditions? Maybe I should rename the conference VALUEx Motel 6 and hold it at a $36-a-night, remote airport hotel?