Warren Buffett Stock Picks
World wide the Warren Buffett strategy is known for being very successful in stock picks. His value investment philosophy is from the Benjamin Graham school, and in 1965 he invested $10000 in Berkshire Hathaway. Today this investment is worth nearly $30 million! Had he taken the same amount of money and invested it in the “S & P 500″ it would have grown, however the same investment would only be worth around $500 000.
Looking at numbers like this is it not surprising that the Warren Buffett legend has also grown to mythical proportions. But how did he do it? By value investing, he like many other bargain hunters, looks for product that are undervalued, finds them and invest in their stocks. The majority of other buyers don’t see the investment value in these products, but Warren Buffett does.
Value investors are able to identify securities with unjustifiably low intrinsic worth. This intrinsic worth is predicted by analyzing the fundamentals of a company and this is not seen by the majority of buyers. Warren Buffett essentially trusts that the market will eventually favor the stock he invests in.
He is not concerned with facts such as supply and demand. This is normally what controls markets, but Warren Buffett is not looking for short term gains, he is looking for long term, return on investment. The quote that best describes the way he thinks is: “In the short term the market is a popularity contest; in the long term it is a weighing machine”.
Warren Buffett chooses stocks based on the overall potential of a company to make money as a long term prospect. Capital gain is not what he seeks and all the concerns he has are based on whether or not the company he targets is able to make money.
The relationship between a company’s level of excellence and it stock price is integral to any investment opportunity Warren Buffett looks at. He has a series of in-depth questions that he asks himself in order to asses an investment opportunity. He admires companies which avoid excessive debt, and it is relevant to him if a company has a product which is dependent upon commodities. There are also many other considerations, but anyone wanting to invest, would do well to take a page from the book of Warren Buffett.
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