Cheap stocks are available for those investors willing to accept the risks of which there are many, perhaps even more than usual under these kinds of circumstances. Higher and higher interest rates are weighing on balance sheets, income statements and everything else taught in Business School 101 — a factor evidently unanticipated a year ago by many chief executive officers of big publicly traded companies.
It’s funny: in America you can get an economics degree from a fine university and then go on to get an MBA as well, and then manage and fight your way to the top and yet, fail to realize that most of your “management” success is based on 18 straight years of low interest rates, not your extensive education nor your apparent but false business brilliance.
Also, Putin’s ugly invasion of Ukraine continues to depress the global economy, to put it mildly. (What kind of low rent thug keeps on hurting himself and others even though the history books already have him down as a brutal, inhumane loser whatever the eventual outcome is?)
This type of grim investment outlook offers value investors the opportunity to screen for equities now offering the kind of metrics most loved and admired by Benjamin Graham students, some of whom live and work in Omaha, Nebraska. Here are 5 examples of stocks that seem to offer the right kind of stuff for the hardcore value nut and which have growth investors recoiling at the very sight:
Avnet
Here’s the weekly price chart for Avnet:
Manulife
The weekly price chart for Manulife is here:
Radian Group
Here’s the Radian Group weekly price chart:
Silicon Motion Technology (NASDAQ
The Silicon Motion Technology weekly price chart looks like this:
Not investment advice. For educational purposes only.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/johnnavin/2022/12/26/4-low-pe-stocks-below-book-value-paying-dividends/