Each prospective club member must submit an on-line application that includes a favorite current investment recommendation. To assist you in this process, we have provided the guidelines below.
INVESTMENT IDEA- Should be about a 500 word (or more) explanation of your investment idea. The idea may be equity or bond based and either long or short. We prefer ideas whose operations are US based and follow US accounting standards. Value Investing does not necessarily require or imply that a stock must be selling at a low P/E or a low Price/Book ratio (although such opportunities may make fine investments). Excellent companies selling at a discount to their intrinsic value may also qualify as "value" investments irrespective of current P/E, Price/Book or similar ratios (e.g. the notion of value as articulated by Buffett).
Your idea should include the appropriate valuation criteria for the selected companythat may involve some of the following measures:
Price/Earnings | Total Enterprise Value ("TEV")/EBIT | Price/Book |
Forward P/E | TEV/(EBITDA-maintenance cap/ex) | Price/Free Cash Flow |
Price/Sales | Return on Equity and/or Assets | TEV/Sales |
In addition, if any of the following valuation criteria apply to your idea, please include analysis:
- Normalized earnings and/or free cash flow if different than current
- Future growth rates of sales, earnings and/or free cash flow
- Relative value to similar companies
- Private market value
- Break-up analysis
- Asset valuation
Heavy insider ownership, recent open market transactions, special option grants or other evidence of extraordinary management incentives should be noted.
Please focus on any special insights that you may have into the company or the particular situation. Detailed operating descriptions can easily be found in the 10-K so space should not be wasted with readily available information that is not central to the basic investment thesis.
CATALYST- should explain what action, event, situation or future realization will cause the market to recognize the value discrepancy that you observe. Examples could include an impending regulatory/legal change, expected sale/merger, spin-off, split-off, restructuring, large buyback, product introduction, management change, or other. Sometimes no catalyst is identifiable, but value discrepancy is too large to ignore.