Eddy Elfenbein: There's No Such Thing as Value

by , Crossing Wall Street

One of the foundations of investment analysis is the dichotomy between a stockā€™s price and its value; the idea that a stockā€™s price hops above and below its rightful value. But Iā€™ll let you in on a little secret: thereā€™s no such thing as value. Thereā€™s no magic value gnome hiding underneath each stock. Instead, thereā€™s only price.

Value is a fiction, but a highly useful one. Itā€™s an excellent way for us to think about a stock.

Telling us that a stock is below its value doesnā€™t tell us much. What if the stockā€™s value falls? Or what if the price/value gap grows wider? The price/value dichotomy is further complicated by the fact that price itself can impact value. For example, an elevated share price can make it easier for a company to raise money.

With any investment analysis, your constants are most likely highly contextual, and as a result, theyā€™ll do a poor job of predicting out-of-sample results. That doesnā€™t bother me so much, and itā€™s also why I donā€™t much care for price targets. For all their sophistication, valuation models arenā€™t reality. Theyā€™re merely a blurry and highly conditional image of reality.

The proper job of an analyst is to judge possible outcomes and their impact. Value is a tool, but it must always be seen within the context of if/then scenarios. Too often, modelers become enthralled by their model and donā€™t look at what the underlying message is. I always cringe whenever I see some perma-bear claim the S&P 500 is over-priced by a massive amount. The statement, by itself, is meaningless. I donā€™t know if heā€™s right, but I know for certain that his model has a wide error range.

This is a subtle message to convey. Investments analysts should have a proper respect for reality, and a proper suspicion of make-believe.

 

 

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