I find this blog post very helpfull. I have one question. In your post you mentioned: In the screener the criteria : price /book industry decile, price /earnings industry decile and price / sales industry decile should all be less than 3. The actual value criteria are straightforward. To be considered a value candidate, a company must be in the cheapest 20% of its industry by Price to Book, Price to Earnings and Price to Sales. I don’t understand the relation between a ratio less than 3 and in the cheapest 20%. What am I missing?
The only thing I personally don’t understand is the target price est. standard deviation; could you explain? Thank you — JB
Target price estimate standard deviation is a measure of the spread of analyst opinions on a company. The larger the number, the more the analysts disagree about the company’s prospects, as indicated by their differing 12 month target price for the company. Less predictable, less stable companies will generally have bigger standard deviation numbers.
This is so helpful to normal people building their savings. I appreciate the explanations of financial terms.
You screener is very good and comprehensive. But a stock price should be easily available to begin with because some of the stocks still could be the value stocks according to your screener, but way TOO expensive for some if not majority of your clients, your our humble servant is included. You are too knowledgeable in all interfaces and navigation. I’m software engineer and designed several UI for the scientific instrument. Any instrument should be intuitive and screened by real users (clients) but not creators. Today, I tried to go to your Blog, and it was way to long to navigate. Your overall Software Package is rteally interesting. But UI could be improved. Please, consider these words as very positive overall. Thanks, and Happy New Year.
Excellent post, Howard. Your Stock Rover program is outstanding. Thanks for the very clear and understandable explanation on value investing from your perspective. I’ve read many books on the subject and I think your very short treatment is one of the clearest and cleanest.