Value Investing

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a0G70000000yBKAEA2
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Overview
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Based on the Ben Graham or Warren Buffett approach to allocating capital, this exclusive program will teach the frameworks and processes of investing that some of the most successful investors in the world employ to manage and preserve capital.

Value investing focuses on the economic analysis and the valuation of the business operations of the firm with the aim of obtaining an estimate of its fundamental value. It calls to invest in the firm if the fundamental value is sufficiently above the market value so that there is a margin of safety to protect the investor against unforeseen contingencies. The approach is integrated, with the economic analysis of the business operations of the firm, and the valuation of those business operations inform and support each other. In this way, the value investor obtains a coherent view of the firm.

With unmatched access to Wall Street, renowned finance and accounting divisions, and the Heilbrunn Center of Value Investing resources, Columbia Business School is the only school to offer this unparalleled program in investing.

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If you don't believe in value investing, what do you believe in?
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Warren Buffett '51
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Faculty director Tano Santos introduces the program.
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overview
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Participants in Value Investing are exposed to an intense introduction to value investing, taught by thought leaders in the field. You'll walk away with a coherent view of investing, one that integrates a sound understanding of the economics of the business operation of the firm, a robust valuation approach, and a toolbox of risk management techniques beyond mindless diversification.

Hear from Faculty Director Tano Santos on What Distinguishes the Value Investing Approach

"The valuation approach in value investing differs from DCF-like calculations that are standard in the industry. While correct, the DCF method is both difficult to implement and tries to do “too much.” It starts by positing a model of the dynamics of cash flows. These cash-flows, properly discounted, are then added up to provide an estimate of the value of the firm. Operationally, these models typically start with an assumption regarding the rate of growth of earnings and the payout policy of the firm. DCF models are notoriously unreliable and moreover unnecessary in most situations.

In contrast, the value investing approach starts with the economics of the firms and in particular with the competitive position of the firm in the industry in which it operates. Assumptions on the rate of growth of earnings are needed if and only if the business operations of the firm are protected by barriers to entry. Otherwise, we can simply forget about modeling (real) earnings growth for the simple reason that there is none. In that case, an investor should not be willing to pay for any growth option, just for the existing operations of the firm. This is the earnings power value calculation. But how does the valuation support that conclusion: because if the business operations of the firm are not protected by barriers to entry, the asset value of the firms should be equal to the earnings power value."

—Tano Santos, David L. and Elise M. Dodd Professor of Finance at Columbia Business School

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