Against the Top Down Approach to Picking Stocks
by Geoff Gannon
Published on this site: February 10th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

If you have heard fund managers talk about the way they invest,
you know a great many employ a top down approach. First, they
decide how much of their portfolio to allocate to stocks and
how much to allocate to bonds. At this point, they may also
decide upon the relative mix of foreign and domestic securities.
Next, they decide upon the industries to invest in. It is
not until all these decisions have been made that they actually
get down to analyzing any particular securities. If you think
logically about this approach for a moment, you will recognize
how truly foolish it is.
A stock's earnings yield is the inverse of its P/E ratio.
So, a stock with a P/E ratio of 25 has an earnings yield of
4%, while a stock with a P/E ratio of 8 has an earnings yield
of 12.5%. In this way, a low P/E stock is comparable to a
high - yield bond.
Now, if these low P/E stocks had very unstable earnings or
carried a great deal of debt, the spread between the long
bond yield and the earnings yield of these stocks might be
justified. However, many low P/E stocks actually have more
stable earnings than their high multiple kin. Some do employ
a great deal of debt. Still, within recent memory, one could
find a stock with an earnings yield of 8 - 12%, a dividend
yield of 3- 5%, and literally no debt, despite some of the
lowest bond yields in half a century. This situation could
only come about if investors shopped for their bonds without also considering stocks. This
makes about as much sense as shopping for a van without also
considering a car or truck.
All investments are ultimately cash to cash operations. As
such, they should be judged by a single measure: the discounted
value of their future cash flows. For this reason, a top down
approach to investing is nonsensical. Starting your search
by first deciding upon the form of security or the industry
is like a general manager deciding upon a left handed or right
handed pitcher before evaluating each individual player. In
both cases, the choice is not merely hasty; it's false. Even
if pitching left handed is inherently more effective, the
general manager is not comparing apples and oranges; he's
comparing pitchers. Whatever inherent advantage or disadvantage
exists in a pitcher's handedness can be reduced to an ultimate
value (e.g., run value). For this reason, a pitcher's handedness
is merely one factor (among many) to be considered, not a
binding choice to be made.
The same is true of the form of security. It is neither more
necessary nor more logical for an investor to prefer all bonds
over all stocks (or all retailers over all banks) than it
is for a general manager to prefer all lefties over all righties.
You needn't determine whether stocks or bonds are attractive;
you need only determine whether a particular stock or bond
is attractive. Likewise, you needn't determine whether "the
market" is undervalued or overvalued; you need only determine
that a particular stock is undervalued.
Clearly, the most prudent approach to investing is to evaluate
each individual security in relation to all others, and only
to consider the form of security insofar as it affects each
individual evaluation. A top down approach to investing is
an unnecessary hindrance. Some very smart investors have imposed
it upon themselves and overcome it; but, there is no need
for you to do the same.

Geoff Gannon is a full time investment writer. He writes
a (print) quarterly investment newsletter and a daily value
investing blog. He also produces a twice weekly (half hour)
value investing podcast at: http://www.gannononinvesting.com

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