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Why don't value investors hold value stocks?

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Why don't value investors hold value stocks? I tracked the buying activity of Warren Buffett, Bill Ackman, Terry Smith, Mohnish Pabrai, and Seth Klarman, to see how much their portfolios overlap with value indices. I thought overlap would be high as these are the most well-known names in value investing. However, the results suggest otherwise. Does this mean these icons have moved on from value or are indices missing the mark? Admittedly, most would classify Ackman and Smith as more quality investors, looking for compounders rather than cigar butts. Regardless, I kept them in as a fun exercise. Afterall, both Smith and Ackman mostly follow the core tenet of value investing, buying companies for less or equal to than intrinsic worth.  Data and methodology I sourced the last 5 years of holdings from 13F’s, filtering for buying activity only. Sells were not considered as they can due to non-valuation factors, like redemptions or rebalancing, whereas buys are the cleanest signal of an ...

Beforepay: Fair Value Today, Credit-Rating Titan Tomorrow?

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KashKow Equity Reserach                                                                                      ASX: B4P October 11th 2025

Does the Magic Formula work on the ASX?

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Introduction I recently read Joel Greenblatt’s The Little Book that Still Beats the Market and was intrigued by the Magic Formula. It seemed far too simple to generate the returns it claimed yet there seemed to be an abundance of studies backing its success. After delving into some of the blogs/articles/papers on the formula, I was surprised by the lack of research on the formula's performance within Australia, especially given the maturity of the ASX. So, I decided to give it a fair crack and share the results. The Magic Formula Simply put, Greenblatt's formula recommends the following: Screen for companies with a market cap over $50 million and rank each company's earnings yield and return on capital. Combine the ranks to form a "cheapness to value” score (rank 1 = company with lowest yield rank +  ROC rank).  Pick the top 30 companies with the lowest score and hold them for a year. At the end of each year, sell any depreciated stocks before the 12-month mark to harv...