Archive for the ‘David Dreman’ Category

David Dreman’s wit

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Quotes

“Psychology is probably the most important factor in the market – and one that is least understood.”

“I paraphrase Lord Rothschild: ‘The time to buy is when there’s blood on the streets.’”

“One of the big problems with growth investing is that we can’t estimate earnings very well. I really want to buy growth at value prices. I always look at trailing earnings when I judge stocks.”

“If you have good stocks and you really know them, you’ll make money if you’re patient over three years or more.”

David Dreman – Investment Style

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

It is reported that Dreman came to contrarian investing the hard way. In 1969, Dreman, a junior analyst at the time, was following the crowd as the shares of companies with negligible earnings skyrocketed. He is quoted as saying, “I invested in the stocks du jour and lost 75% of my net worth.” As a result of that painful lesson of following the herd, he became fascinated with how psychology affects investor behavior and became a contrarian investor. (For related reading, see Finding Profit In Troubled Stocks.)

In an interview for Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine in 2001he explained his approach: “I buy stocks when they are battered. I am strict with my discipline. I always buy stocks with low price-earnings ratios, low price-to-book value ratios and higher-than-average yield. Academic studies have shown that a strategy of buying out-of-favor stocks with low P/E, price-to-book and price-to-cash flow ratios outperforms the market pretty consistently over long periods of time.”