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    <title>The Manual of Ideas' Instablog</title>
    <description>Great ideas are the lifeblood of the investment business and the exclusive focus of The Manual of Ideas. Authored by investment and finance professionals who have grown up on the teachings of Ben Graham, Warren Buffett and Joel Greenblatt, and have studied under or worked with luminaries such as Yale Chief Investment Officer David Swensen and Economics Nobel Laureate James Tobin, MOI delivers timely, differentiated investment ideas. In a market flooded with data and opinion, we deliver clarity.</description>
    <author>
      <name>The Manual of Ideas</name>
    </author>
    <link>http://seekingalpha.com/author/the-manual-of-ideas/instablog</link>
    <item>
      <title>November issue of The Manual of Ideas is now available!</title>
      <link>http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/315877-the-manual-of-ideas/231065-november-issue-of-the-manual-of-ideas-is-now-available?source=feed</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">231065</guid>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<div><div><div><div><div><p><a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/group/exclusive-forum-for-paid-subscribers/page/access" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://api.ning.com/files/zltkwa9*ltAIJ0bsEeK2hi7mZ5NROTJZvNCnEWPpDi4FwXK9DlhLDW4eSEYAjGTmWqTDsEeiHKr4al7Z0BnYCU4tgB*TaO3Z/Document31.jpg?width=258" align="right" width="258"  /></a>The   major U.S. stock indices are roughly flat year-to-date as of this   writing, but it has not felt that way. The worldwide market turbulence   has carried echoes of 2008, and some companies&rsquo; stock prices have been   decimated. In this report, we look at twenty equities that have suffered   major price declines this year. The group includes former highfliers   that seemed destined to conquer the world only a few years ago but are   now headed for doom, at least according to short-sellers and some   analysts. Yet, many of the naysayers now that the stocks trade at   single-digit earnings multiples were cheerleaders when those equities   were selling for double-digit sales multiples or triple-digit earnings   multiples.</p> <p>One such company is <strong>First Solar</strong>  (Nasdaq: FSLR),  which we highlight as a top idea this month. First  Solar could seemingly  do no wrong before the downturn. The stock price  hit $300 per share, a  market value of $24 billion, in 2008, a year in  which the company had  sales of $1.2 billion and net income of $350  million. Revenue and income  roughly doubled by 2010 and should be not  too dissimilar in 2011, yet  the stock has been cut to under $50 per  share, a market value of $4  billion.</p> <p>First Solar&rsquo;s recently  revised EPS guidance of $6.50-7.50 in 2011  compares favorably to the  stock price. What&rsquo;s more the shares trade only  ~10% above tangible book  value, with no net debt on the balance sheet.  As a result, even if  profitability declines further while the industry  works through the  current glut of capacity, the downside should be  reasonably protected.</p> <p>The  key might be whether First Solar&rsquo;s &ldquo;thin film&rdquo; technology really  is  superior to traditional crystalline silicon solar technology, as the   company and analysts have long claimed. This appears to be the case, at   least for the time being. The company is focused on continuing to lower   cost toward grid parity. Achieving this goal will be crucial as   government incentives are phased out due to sovereign fiscal woes.</p> <p>The example of <strong>Netflix</strong>  (Nasdaq: NFLX; not profiled  in this issue) also reflects Wall Street&rsquo;s  ability to go from exuberance  to despondency in a short time. Value  investor Whitney Tilson sold  short Netflix in the past couple of years,  suffering big losses as the  shares continued their momentum-driven  rise. Tilson finally threw in the  towel when the stock catapulted to  over $200 per share. The subsequent  rally took Netflix to over $300 per  share in July of this year. One  earnings disappointment later, and  Netflix is back to under $80 per  share at the time of this writing.  Tilson now views the stock as cheap  enough to justify a long position.</p> <p>All  of the companies analyzed in this issue have fared terribly this  year  in terms of stock price performance, and investor sentiment  reflects  this fact. Investors generally sound smarter when they discuss  the poor  near-term business outlook as justification for passing on a  stock or  selling it short, often with little regard to the relationship  between  price and intrinsic value. On the other hand, it is much harder  to  sound smart when advocating the purchase of a company that trades at a   single-digit earnings multiple or a discount to tangible book value   while the fundamental outlook is cloudy. One is easily dismissed as   na&iuml;ve: &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know how bad things will get for the industry/company   due to overcapacity, price competition, regulation, etc?&rdquo; &mdash; &rdquo;Yes, but   the price more than compensates for these risks.&rdquo; This is a perfectly   fine answer, but the contrarian uttering it can be easily dismissed as   ignorant of the risks. Ultimately, however, the investor who accurately   assesses the gap between price and value should be vindicated. By the   time this occurs, the analysts and pundits will have moved on to another   smart-sounding theory, with no one typically calling them on their   previous blunders.</p>  <p><em>Table of contents:</em></p> <p><strong>The Manual of Ideas, November 2011</strong><br> <strong>&mdash; The Fear Issue</strong>&nbsp;(105 pages)<strong><br> </strong></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights six investment ideas<br> Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br> Exclusive Interview with Tom Gayner &mdash; Revisiting March '09 interview<br> 20 &quot;Fearful&quot; Investment Candidates &mdash; Analyzing large YTD price losers<br> Favorite Value-oriented Screens&nbsp;&mdash; Ideas for bargain-hunting investors<br> This Month's Top 10 Web Links&nbsp;&mdash; A selection of third-party resources<br> Extra: Valuation Scenarios &mdash; Test sensitivity to key assumptions</p>  <p><strong>Subscribers, <a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/group/exclusive-forum-for-paid-subscribers/page/access" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">enter the Exclusive Forum</a> to read the full report.</strong></p>  <p><strong>If you are not yet a subscriber, <a href="http://www.manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">claim your 30-day free trial</a>.</strong></p></div></div></div></div></div>]]>
      </content>
      <pubDate>Thu, 27 Oct 2011 16:18:13 -0400</pubDate>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<div><div><div><div><div><p><a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/group/exclusive-forum-for-paid-subscribers/page/access" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://api.ning.com/files/zltkwa9*ltAIJ0bsEeK2hi7mZ5NROTJZvNCnEWPpDi4FwXK9DlhLDW4eSEYAjGTmWqTDsEeiHKr4al7Z0BnYCU4tgB*TaO3Z/Document31.jpg?width=258" align="right" width="258"  /></a>The   major U.S. stock indices are roughly flat year-to-date as of this   writing, but it has not felt that way. The worldwide market turbulence   has carried echoes of 2008, and some companies&rsquo; stock prices have been   decimated. In this report, we look at twenty equities that have suffered   major price declines this year. The group includes former highfliers   that seemed destined to conquer the world only a few years ago but are   now headed for doom, at least according to short-sellers and some   analysts. Yet, many of the naysayers now that the stocks trade at   single-digit earnings multiples were cheerleaders when those equities   were selling for double-digit sales multiples or triple-digit earnings   multiples.</p> <p>One such company is <strong>First Solar</strong>  (Nasdaq: FSLR),  which we highlight as a top idea this month. First  Solar could seemingly  do no wrong before the downturn. The stock price  hit $300 per share, a  market value of $24 billion, in 2008, a year in  which the company had  sales of $1.2 billion and net income of $350  million. Revenue and income  roughly doubled by 2010 and should be not  too dissimilar in 2011, yet  the stock has been cut to under $50 per  share, a market value of $4  billion.</p> <p>First Solar&rsquo;s recently  revised EPS guidance of $6.50-7.50 in 2011  compares favorably to the  stock price. What&rsquo;s more the shares trade only  ~10% above tangible book  value, with no net debt on the balance sheet.  As a result, even if  profitability declines further while the industry  works through the  current glut of capacity, the downside should be  reasonably protected.</p> <p>The  key might be whether First Solar&rsquo;s &ldquo;thin film&rdquo; technology really  is  superior to traditional crystalline silicon solar technology, as the   company and analysts have long claimed. This appears to be the case, at   least for the time being. The company is focused on continuing to lower   cost toward grid parity. Achieving this goal will be crucial as   government incentives are phased out due to sovereign fiscal woes.</p> <p>The example of <strong>Netflix</strong>  (Nasdaq: NFLX; not profiled  in this issue) also reflects Wall Street&rsquo;s  ability to go from exuberance  to despondency in a short time. Value  investor Whitney Tilson sold  short Netflix in the past couple of years,  suffering big losses as the  shares continued their momentum-driven  rise. Tilson finally threw in the  towel when the stock catapulted to  over $200 per share. The subsequent  rally took Netflix to over $300 per  share in July of this year. One  earnings disappointment later, and  Netflix is back to under $80 per  share at the time of this writing.  Tilson now views the stock as cheap  enough to justify a long position.</p> <p>All  of the companies analyzed in this issue have fared terribly this  year  in terms of stock price performance, and investor sentiment  reflects  this fact. Investors generally sound smarter when they discuss  the poor  near-term business outlook as justification for passing on a  stock or  selling it short, often with little regard to the relationship  between  price and intrinsic value. On the other hand, it is much harder  to  sound smart when advocating the purchase of a company that trades at a   single-digit earnings multiple or a discount to tangible book value   while the fundamental outlook is cloudy. One is easily dismissed as   na&iuml;ve: &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know how bad things will get for the industry/company   due to overcapacity, price competition, regulation, etc?&rdquo; &mdash; &rdquo;Yes, but   the price more than compensates for these risks.&rdquo; This is a perfectly   fine answer, but the contrarian uttering it can be easily dismissed as   ignorant of the risks. Ultimately, however, the investor who accurately   assesses the gap between price and value should be vindicated. By the   time this occurs, the analysts and pundits will have moved on to another   smart-sounding theory, with no one typically calling them on their   previous blunders.</p>  <p><em>Table of contents:</em></p> <p><strong>The Manual of Ideas, November 2011</strong><br> <strong>&mdash; The Fear Issue</strong>&nbsp;(105 pages)<strong><br> </strong></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights six investment ideas<br> Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br> Exclusive Interview with Tom Gayner &mdash; Revisiting March '09 interview<br> 20 &quot;Fearful&quot; Investment Candidates &mdash; Analyzing large YTD price losers<br> Favorite Value-oriented Screens&nbsp;&mdash; Ideas for bargain-hunting investors<br> This Month's Top 10 Web Links&nbsp;&mdash; A selection of third-party resources<br> Extra: Valuation Scenarios &mdash; Test sensitivity to key assumptions</p>  <p><strong>Subscribers, <a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/group/exclusive-forum-for-paid-subscribers/page/access" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">enter the Exclusive Forum</a> to read the full report.</strong></p>  <p><strong>If you are not yet a subscriber, <a href="http://www.manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">claim your 30-day free trial</a>.</strong></p></div></div></div></div></div>]]>
      </description>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/fslr/instablogs">fslr</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/nflx/instablogs">nflx</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/hov/instablogs">hov</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/ire/instablogs">ire</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/snv/instablogs">snv</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/tag/long ideas">long ideas</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>New Issue Is Available Now!</title>
      <link>http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/315877-the-manual-of-ideas/221602-new-issue-is-available-now?source=feed</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">221602</guid>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<div><p><strong>The Manual of Ideas</strong> <strong>&mdash; The Model Portfolio Issue</strong><br>October 2011 (111 pages)</p> <p>Editorial Commentary&mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights six investment ideas<br> Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br> Exclusive Interview with Michael Mauboussin &mdash; On investment strategy<br> Exclusive Interview with James Montier &mdash; On overcoming biases<br> 9 Current Model Portfolio Holdings &mdash; Surveying some of our best ideas<br> 11 Potential Model Portfolio Holdings &mdash; Surveying promising candidates<br> Favorite Value-oriented Screens &mdash; Ideas for bargain-hunting investors<br> This Month's Top 10 Weblinks &mdash; A selection of third-party resources<br> Extra: Selected Valuation Scenarios &mdash; Test sensitivity to key assumptions</p> <p><strong><a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/group/exclusive-forum-for-paid-subscribers/page/access" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Read it now in the Exclusive Members Area</a> or <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">subscribe</a>.</strong></p></div>]]>
      </content>
      <pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2011 07:49:58 -0400</pubDate>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<div><p><strong>The Manual of Ideas</strong> <strong>&mdash; The Model Portfolio Issue</strong><br>October 2011 (111 pages)</p> <p>Editorial Commentary&mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights six investment ideas<br> Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br> Exclusive Interview with Michael Mauboussin &mdash; On investment strategy<br> Exclusive Interview with James Montier &mdash; On overcoming biases<br> 9 Current Model Portfolio Holdings &mdash; Surveying some of our best ideas<br> 11 Potential Model Portfolio Holdings &mdash; Surveying promising candidates<br> Favorite Value-oriented Screens &mdash; Ideas for bargain-hunting investors<br> This Month's Top 10 Weblinks &mdash; A selection of third-party resources<br> Extra: Selected Valuation Scenarios &mdash; Test sensitivity to key assumptions</p> <p><strong><a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/group/exclusive-forum-for-paid-subscribers/page/access" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Read it now in the Exclusive Members Area</a> or <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">subscribe</a>.</strong></p></div>]]>
      </description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Coming Soon: The Manual of Ideas: "The Superinvestor Issue"</title>
      <link>http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/315877-the-manual-of-ideas/210667-coming-soon-the-manual-of-ideas-the-superinvestor-issue?source=feed</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">210667</guid>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<div><div><p><a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110901_superinvestors_excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/images/moi_title_201109.jpg" align="right" width="317"  /></a>The  recent market turmoil carries with it echoes of 2008, but relying  too  heavily on analogies from the last market panic seems misguided.  Europe  and the U.S. must address serious sovereign debt issues, but the   financial system itself appears less vulnerable than in late 2008.</p><p>There   is now no doubt that Bernanke&rsquo;s Fed will do everything in its power to   alleviate the pain of market participants. The Fed is doing many  foolish  things and distorting capital allocation decisions, but one  thing is  clear: Given the central bank&rsquo;s ability to print dollars,  repayment of  U.S. government debt in nominal terms is not in doubt.  Neither is the  Fed&rsquo;s ability to flood the financial system with cheap  liquidity.</p><p>While  we are sympathetic to the cautious views of  superinvestors like George  Soros and Seth Klarman, we are equally  sympathetic to the view that  preferring an asset that is easily printed  in unlimited quantities is  foolish. Holding cash has little appeal to  us following the recent  market decline. We would much rather own cheap  blue-chip corporations  such as Cisco Systems (CSCO), Dell (DELL),  Goldman Sachs (GS),  Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Microsoft (MSFT), Pfizer  (PFE), and Sony (SNE),  to name a few. HP&rsquo;s Leo Apotheker deserves much  criticism for his recent  boneheaded allocation of capital (e.g., buying  Autonomy instead of HP  stock), but this does not mean investors should  miss out on the capital  appreciation HP shares will likely deliver  over several years. Never let  anger get in the way of profits.</p><p>Researching  this superinvestor  issue has been quite exciting for us because most  recent superinvestor  buys have traded down materially on little or no  news. For those who are  not paralyzed by macro concerns, this presents  an opportunity to  scrutinize investments favored by some of the  smartest value investors  around &mdash; and to buy at a discount.  Probabilistically speaking, this  doesn&rsquo;t sound like a losing  proposition.</p><p>We find the following three superinvestor holdings particularly noteworthy... [<a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">read more</a>]</p><p><em>Summary:</em></p> <p><strong>The Manual of Ideas, August 1, 2011 [<a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110901_superinvestors_excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">view excerpt</a>]</strong><br> <strong>&mdash; The Superinvestor Issue</strong> (176 pages)<strong><br></strong></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights three investments<br>MOI Model Portfolios &mdash; Tracking our favorite ideas in three portfolios<br>Exclusive Interview with Lisa Rapuano &mdash; On finding quality, cheaply<br>50+ Portfolios with Signal Value&nbsp;&mdash; Surveying ideas of top investors<br>  Screening 900+ Holdings of 50+ Superinvestors &mdash; Hunting for bargains<br> Profiling 20 Superinvestor Holdings&nbsp;&mdash; Analyzing superinvestor favorites<br> Value-oriented Stock Screens&nbsp;&mdash; Screens for bargain-hunting investors<br>  This Month's Top 10 Web Links&nbsp;&mdash; A selection of third-party resources</p> <p><strong>The new report is being mailed to members worldwide. Not a subscriber? <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Join now</a>.</strong></p></div></div>]]>
      </content>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Aug 2011 18:13:34 -0400</pubDate>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<div><div><p><a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110901_superinvestors_excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/images/moi_title_201109.jpg" align="right" width="317"  /></a>The  recent market turmoil carries with it echoes of 2008, but relying  too  heavily on analogies from the last market panic seems misguided.  Europe  and the U.S. must address serious sovereign debt issues, but the   financial system itself appears less vulnerable than in late 2008.</p><p>There   is now no doubt that Bernanke&rsquo;s Fed will do everything in its power to   alleviate the pain of market participants. The Fed is doing many  foolish  things and distorting capital allocation decisions, but one  thing is  clear: Given the central bank&rsquo;s ability to print dollars,  repayment of  U.S. government debt in nominal terms is not in doubt.  Neither is the  Fed&rsquo;s ability to flood the financial system with cheap  liquidity.</p><p>While  we are sympathetic to the cautious views of  superinvestors like George  Soros and Seth Klarman, we are equally  sympathetic to the view that  preferring an asset that is easily printed  in unlimited quantities is  foolish. Holding cash has little appeal to  us following the recent  market decline. We would much rather own cheap  blue-chip corporations  such as Cisco Systems (CSCO), Dell (DELL),  Goldman Sachs (GS),  Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Microsoft (MSFT), Pfizer  (PFE), and Sony (SNE),  to name a few. HP&rsquo;s Leo Apotheker deserves much  criticism for his recent  boneheaded allocation of capital (e.g., buying  Autonomy instead of HP  stock), but this does not mean investors should  miss out on the capital  appreciation HP shares will likely deliver  over several years. Never let  anger get in the way of profits.</p><p>Researching  this superinvestor  issue has been quite exciting for us because most  recent superinvestor  buys have traded down materially on little or no  news. For those who are  not paralyzed by macro concerns, this presents  an opportunity to  scrutinize investments favored by some of the  smartest value investors  around &mdash; and to buy at a discount.  Probabilistically speaking, this  doesn&rsquo;t sound like a losing  proposition.</p><p>We find the following three superinvestor holdings particularly noteworthy... [<a href="http://members.manualofideas.com/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">read more</a>]</p><p><em>Summary:</em></p> <p><strong>The Manual of Ideas, August 1, 2011 [<a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110901_superinvestors_excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">view excerpt</a>]</strong><br> <strong>&mdash; The Superinvestor Issue</strong> (176 pages)<strong><br></strong></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights three investments<br>MOI Model Portfolios &mdash; Tracking our favorite ideas in three portfolios<br>Exclusive Interview with Lisa Rapuano &mdash; On finding quality, cheaply<br>50+ Portfolios with Signal Value&nbsp;&mdash; Surveying ideas of top investors<br>  Screening 900+ Holdings of 50+ Superinvestors &mdash; Hunting for bargains<br> Profiling 20 Superinvestor Holdings&nbsp;&mdash; Analyzing superinvestor favorites<br> Value-oriented Stock Screens&nbsp;&mdash; Screens for bargain-hunting investors<br>  This Month's Top 10 Web Links&nbsp;&mdash; A selection of third-party resources</p> <p><strong>The new report is being mailed to members worldwide. Not a subscriber? <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Join now</a>.</strong></p></div></div>]]>
      </description>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/csco/instablogs">csco</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/dell/instablogs">dell</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/gs/instablogs">gs</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/hpq/instablogs">hpq</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/msft/instablogs">msft</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/pfe/instablogs">pfe</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/sne/instablogs">sne</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/bac/instablogs">bac</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/tag/long ideas">long ideas</category>
      <category type="symbol" link="http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/tag/fund holdings">fund holdings</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Sample The Manual of Ideas</title>
      <link>http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/315877-the-manual-of-ideas/205806-sample-the-manual-of-ideas?source=feed</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">205806</guid>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<table border="0" ><tr><td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi201102_superinvestor?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-1s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi201101_large-caps?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-2s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/the_manual_of_ideas_201010?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-3s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi201004_ben_graham_deep_value_investing?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-4s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi200811_magic_formula?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-5s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> </tr> <tr> <td><div>The Super-<br> investor Issue<br> <em>(Feb. 2011)</em></div></td> <td><div>Cheap <br>Large-Caps<br> <em>(Jan. 2011)</em></div></td> <td><div>Value in<br> Banks?<br> <em>(Oct. 2010)</em></div></td> <td><div>Graham-style <br>Deep Value<br> <em>(Apr. 2010)</em></div></td> <td><div>The &quot;Magic <br>Formula&quot; 100<br> <em>(Nov. 2008)</em></div></td> </tr>  </table>  <p><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi_brochure?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Review features</a> of <em>The Manual of Ideas</em>.</p><a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Request a subscription</a>.]]>
      </content>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2011 07:14:40 -0400</pubDate>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<table border="0" ><tr><td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi201102_superinvestor?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-1s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi201101_large-caps?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-2s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/the_manual_of_ideas_201010?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-3s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi201004_ben_graham_deep_value_investing?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-4s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> <td><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi200811_magic_formula?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/files/sample_moi_covers-5s.jpg?width=89" width="89"  /></a></td> </tr> <tr> <td><div>The Super-<br> investor Issue<br> <em>(Feb. 2011)</em></div></td> <td><div>Cheap <br>Large-Caps<br> <em>(Jan. 2011)</em></div></td> <td><div>Value in<br> Banks?<br> <em>(Oct. 2010)</em></div></td> <td><div>Graham-style <br>Deep Value<br> <em>(Apr. 2010)</em></div></td> <td><div>The &quot;Magic <br>Formula&quot; 100<br> <em>(Nov. 2008)</em></div></td> </tr>  </table>  <p><a href="http://issuu.com/manualofideas/docs/moi_brochure?viewMode=magazine&amp;mode=embed" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Review features</a> of <em>The Manual of Ideas</em>.</p><a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Request a subscription</a>.]]>
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      <title>Coming August 1st: The Manual of Ideas: Underappreciated Balance Sheet Values</title>
      <link>http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/315877-the-manual-of-ideas/199626-coming-august-1st-the-manual-of-ideas-underappreciated-balance-sheet-values?source=feed</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">199626</guid>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<div><div><div><p><a href="http://manualofideas.com/blog/2011/07/coming_august_1st_the_manual_o.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/images/moititle200108.jpg" align="right" width="317" height="403" /></a>This  month we focus on companies with large asset  value residing on their  balance sheets. We profile and analyze twenty  stocks trading at a  discount to tangible book value. While some of the  equities also trade  at a discount to net current asset value, i.e.,  qualify as Ben Graham  &ldquo;net nets,&rdquo; most of the ideas assume a  going-concern valuation scenario  rather than a liquidation scenario.  Above all, we look for firms with  understated balance sheet values as  well as significant earning power.</p> <p>Economists  Eugene Fama and Kenneth French have extensively studied  the  relationship between stock performance and book-to-market ratios.  Their  seminal paper covered the period from 1963-1990 and included  nearly  all stocks on the NYSE, Amex and Nasdaq stock markets. The stocks  were  divided into ten groups (deciles) based on book-to-market and were   re-ranked annually. The highest book-to-market stocks outperformed the   lowest book-to-market stocks by 21% to 8%, on average, with each   descending decile performing worse than the previous. Fama and French   also examined the beta of each decile and found that value stocks had   lower risk, while growth stocks had the highest risk. The study had a   profound impact in part because Fama was a long-time champion of the   capital asset pricing model.</p> <p>Several well-known value  investors achieved strong investment returns  during their careers by  following a strategy that involved buying  stocks trading at a discount  to their readily ascertainable asset  values. Ben Graham, Walter  Schloss, John Neff and Marty Whitman are just  a few names that come to  mind. Of course, we note that many of the most  successful investors,  including Warren Buffett and Joel Greenblatt, have migrated away from balance sheet values toward &ldquo;good&rdquo; businesses over time, producing even more impressive returns.</p> <p>A  &ldquo;holy grail&rdquo; of value investing might be uncovering opportunities  that  provide both asset protection on the balance sheet and own  businesses  with high returns on capital. This combination is virtually  impossible  to find unless a company has experienced a steep near-term  profit  decline. In such an instance, a firm may appear to be a  low-return  business when in fact normalized profitability implies  attractive  returns on capital. Another potential &ldquo;holy grail&rdquo; are  companies whose  balance sheet assets are partly non-core, i.e., not  actually employed  in the operating business.</p> <p><em>Summary:</em></p> <p><strong>The Manual of Ideas, August 1, 2011 [<a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110801_excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">view excerpt</a>]</strong><br> <strong>&mdash; Underappreciated Balance Sheet Values</strong> (117 pages)<strong><br> </strong></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights three investment ideas<br> Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br> Exclusive Interview with Mike Pruitt, Matt Miller and Joe Koster<br> Exclusive Interview with Paul Johnson &mdash; On selecting value investments<br> Screening for Underappreciated Asset Values &mdash; Balance sheet bargains<br> 20+ Investment Candidates &mdash; Companies with strong asset value<br> Favorite Value Screens &mdash; Screen results for bargain-hunting investors</p> <p><strong>The new report is being mailed to members worldwide. Not a subscriber? <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Join now</a>.</strong></p></div></div></div>]]>
      </content>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2011 18:31:06 -0400</pubDate>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<div><div><div><p><a href="http://manualofideas.com/blog/2011/07/coming_august_1st_the_manual_o.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img src="http://manualofideas.com/images/moititle200108.jpg" align="right" width="317" height="403" /></a>This  month we focus on companies with large asset  value residing on their  balance sheets. We profile and analyze twenty  stocks trading at a  discount to tangible book value. While some of the  equities also trade  at a discount to net current asset value, i.e.,  qualify as Ben Graham  &ldquo;net nets,&rdquo; most of the ideas assume a  going-concern valuation scenario  rather than a liquidation scenario.  Above all, we look for firms with  understated balance sheet values as  well as significant earning power.</p> <p>Economists  Eugene Fama and Kenneth French have extensively studied  the  relationship between stock performance and book-to-market ratios.  Their  seminal paper covered the period from 1963-1990 and included  nearly  all stocks on the NYSE, Amex and Nasdaq stock markets. The stocks  were  divided into ten groups (deciles) based on book-to-market and were   re-ranked annually. The highest book-to-market stocks outperformed the   lowest book-to-market stocks by 21% to 8%, on average, with each   descending decile performing worse than the previous. Fama and French   also examined the beta of each decile and found that value stocks had   lower risk, while growth stocks had the highest risk. The study had a   profound impact in part because Fama was a long-time champion of the   capital asset pricing model.</p> <p>Several well-known value  investors achieved strong investment returns  during their careers by  following a strategy that involved buying  stocks trading at a discount  to their readily ascertainable asset  values. Ben Graham, Walter  Schloss, John Neff and Marty Whitman are just  a few names that come to  mind. Of course, we note that many of the most  successful investors,  including Warren Buffett and Joel Greenblatt, have migrated away from balance sheet values toward &ldquo;good&rdquo; businesses over time, producing even more impressive returns.</p> <p>A  &ldquo;holy grail&rdquo; of value investing might be uncovering opportunities  that  provide both asset protection on the balance sheet and own  businesses  with high returns on capital. This combination is virtually  impossible  to find unless a company has experienced a steep near-term  profit  decline. In such an instance, a firm may appear to be a  low-return  business when in fact normalized profitability implies  attractive  returns on capital. Another potential &ldquo;holy grail&rdquo; are  companies whose  balance sheet assets are partly non-core, i.e., not  actually employed  in the operating business.</p> <p><em>Summary:</em></p> <p><strong>The Manual of Ideas, August 1, 2011 [<a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110801_excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">view excerpt</a>]</strong><br> <strong>&mdash; Underappreciated Balance Sheet Values</strong> (117 pages)<strong><br> </strong></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights three investment ideas<br> Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br> Exclusive Interview with Mike Pruitt, Matt Miller and Joe Koster<br> Exclusive Interview with Paul Johnson &mdash; On selecting value investments<br> Screening for Underappreciated Asset Values &mdash; Balance sheet bargains<br> 20+ Investment Candidates &mdash; Companies with strong asset value<br> Favorite Value Screens &mdash; Screen results for bargain-hunting investors</p> <p><strong>The new report is being mailed to members worldwide. Not a subscriber? <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Join now</a>.</strong></p></div></div></div>]]>
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      <title>Coming July 1: The Manual of Ideas: The "Magic Formula" Issue, featuring Exclusive Q&amp;A with Joel Greenblatt</title>
      <link>http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/315877-the-manual-of-ideas/191006-coming-july-1-the-manual-of-ideas-the-magic-formula-issue-featuring-exclusive-q-a-with-joel-greenblatt?source=feed</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">191006</guid>
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        <![CDATA[<div><p>This month <i>The Manual of Ideas</i>  focuses  on equity ideas that score highly based on the &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo;  stock  screening methodology, popularized in Joel Greenblatt&rsquo;s <i>The Little Book That Beats The Market</i>.   The &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo; looks for companies that are (i) &ldquo;cheap&rdquo; on the   basis of trailing operating income to enterprise value, and (ii) &ldquo;good&rdquo;   on the basis of trailing operating income to capital employed in the   business. The goal is to pay a low price for companies likely to   reinvest capital at high rates of return.</p> <p>The reason we keep coming back to the &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo; as a way of generating investment ideas is simple: It works.</p> <p>Inside,  we are pleased to bring you an exclusive Q&amp;A session with  the most  well-known advocate of &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo; investing, famed  investor Joel  Greenblatt.</p> <p>In a slight modification of Greenblatt&rsquo;s original  methodology, which  takes into account trailing operating income, we  consider companies that  rank highly based on one or more of the  following inputs: trailing  operating income, consensus EPS estimates  for the current fiscal year,  and consensus EPS estimates for next  fiscal year. Since EPS numbers,  unlike operating income numbers, do not  normalize for the effects of  leverage, our forward EPS-based  methodology only includes companies with  modest or no net financial  leverage.</p> <p><i>Summary:</i></p> <p><b>The Manual of Ideas, July 1, 2011 [<a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110701_magic-formula_secure-excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">view excerpt</a>]</b><br> <b>&mdash; The &quot;Magic Formula&quot; Issue</b> (120 pages)<b><br></b></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights three investment ideas<br>Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br>Exclusive Q&amp;A with Joel Greenblatt &mdash; Insight into the &quot;magic formula&quot;<br>Selected &quot;Magic Formula&quot; Screens &mdash; Identifying potential opportunities<br>For-Profit Education Stocks &mdash; 10 firms scoring high on &quot;magic formula&quot;<br>Other Investment Candidates &mdash; 10 other &quot;magic formula&quot; stocks<br>Exclusive Interview with Josh Tarasoff &mdash; On investing in great businesses<br>Exclusive Interview with Sahm Adrangi &mdash; On Chinese &quot;fraudcaps&quot; etc.<br>Extra: Fannie/Freddie Preferreds &mdash; Ori Eyal on choosing best risk-rewards<br>Value-oriented Stock Screens &mdash; Screen results for bargain-hunting investors</p> <p><b>The new report is being mailed to members worldwide. Not a subscriber? <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Join now</a>.</b></p></div>]]>
      </content>
      <pubDate>Tue, 28 Jun 2011 08:36:45 -0400</pubDate>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<div><p>This month <i>The Manual of Ideas</i>  focuses  on equity ideas that score highly based on the &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo;  stock  screening methodology, popularized in Joel Greenblatt&rsquo;s <i>The Little Book That Beats The Market</i>.   The &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo; looks for companies that are (i) &ldquo;cheap&rdquo; on the   basis of trailing operating income to enterprise value, and (ii) &ldquo;good&rdquo;   on the basis of trailing operating income to capital employed in the   business. The goal is to pay a low price for companies likely to   reinvest capital at high rates of return.</p> <p>The reason we keep coming back to the &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo; as a way of generating investment ideas is simple: It works.</p> <p>Inside,  we are pleased to bring you an exclusive Q&amp;A session with  the most  well-known advocate of &ldquo;magic formula&rdquo; investing, famed  investor Joel  Greenblatt.</p> <p>In a slight modification of Greenblatt&rsquo;s original  methodology, which  takes into account trailing operating income, we  consider companies that  rank highly based on one or more of the  following inputs: trailing  operating income, consensus EPS estimates  for the current fiscal year,  and consensus EPS estimates for next  fiscal year. Since EPS numbers,  unlike operating income numbers, do not  normalize for the effects of  leverage, our forward EPS-based  methodology only includes companies with  modest or no net financial  leverage.</p> <p><i>Summary:</i></p> <p><b>The Manual of Ideas, July 1, 2011 [<a href="http://manualofideas.com/files/content/moi20110701_magic-formula_secure-excerpt.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">view excerpt</a>]</b><br> <b>&mdash; The &quot;Magic Formula&quot; Issue</b> (120 pages)<b><br></b></p> <p>Editorial Commentary &mdash; John Mihaljevic highlights three investment ideas<br>Superinvestor Update &mdash; Tracking the portfolio moves of top investors<br>Exclusive Q&amp;A with Joel Greenblatt &mdash; Insight into the &quot;magic formula&quot;<br>Selected &quot;Magic Formula&quot; Screens &mdash; Identifying potential opportunities<br>For-Profit Education Stocks &mdash; 10 firms scoring high on &quot;magic formula&quot;<br>Other Investment Candidates &mdash; 10 other &quot;magic formula&quot; stocks<br>Exclusive Interview with Josh Tarasoff &mdash; On investing in great businesses<br>Exclusive Interview with Sahm Adrangi &mdash; On Chinese &quot;fraudcaps&quot; etc.<br>Extra: Fannie/Freddie Preferreds &mdash; Ori Eyal on choosing best risk-rewards<br>Value-oriented Stock Screens &mdash; Screen results for bargain-hunting investors</p> <p><b>The new report is being mailed to members worldwide. Not a subscriber? <a href="http://manualofideas.com/pmr.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Join now</a>.</b></p></div>]]>
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