GARP Investing Portland OR

Growth investing and value investing are two distinct styles of investing that can be combined. When they are, the product is GARP, or growth at a reasonable price, which looks for companies that are undervalued with sustainable growth potential.

Local Companies

Pacific Crest Securities
(503) 248-0721
111 SW Fifth Avenue, 42nd Fl.
Portland, OR
Piper Jaffray
(503)2481345
111 S.W. Fifth Avenue, #3100
Portland, OR
Willamette Management Associates
(503)2220577
111 S.W. Fifth Avenue, #2150
Portland, OR
Becker Capital Management, Inc.
(503) 223-1720
1211 S.W. Fifth Avenue, #2185
Portland, OR
The Commerce Bank of Oregon
(503) 548-1000
1211 SW Fifth Avenue
Portland, OR
Ferguson Wellman Capital Management
(503) 226-1444
888 SW Fifth Avenue
Portland, OR
Security Title Guaranty Company
(503) 549-7949
707 SW Washington
Portland, OR
Homestead Capital
(503) 276-1555
805 SW Broadway
Portland, OR
OTR Transfer and Registrar
(503)2250375
1000 S.W. Broadway, #920
Portland, OR
Northwestern Mutual Financial
(503) 223-7335
1221 SW Yamhill
Portland, OR

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Incorporating Value into Growth Investing
Value is not a term that is tossed around amongst aggressive growth investors too often, but the concept should not be totally ignored by them. Aggressive growth investors make the bulk of their profits by buying stocks with superior earnings growth that consistently trounce earnings estimates. This is great as long as the company continues to deliver stellar profit growth and keeps raising the bar going forward.   But value is important to gauge the level of investor expectations imbedded in the stock, as well as how far a growth stock could potentially fall if it slips up. In other words, value injects a dose of reality into the equation. So what are some strategies and metrics to incorporate value into aggressive growth investing?   GARP Investing   Is the value-conscious growth investor out of luck? The answer is no. GARP, or growth at a reasonable price, is a combination of both value and growth investing: it looks for companies that are somewhat undervalued and have solid sustainable growth potential. The criteria which GARP investors look for in a company fall in between those sought by the value and growth investors. Strong earnings growth is still of utmost importance, but at the same time valuation matters.   GARP investors do not simply buy a portfolio with an equal amount of growth and value stocks. Each stock has to have characteristics of both to qualify.   One of the best known GARP investors was Peter Lynch, who has written several popular books, including "One Up on Wall Street" and "Learn to Earn", and in the late 1990s and early 2000. He is a Wall Street legend due to his 29% average annual return over a 13-year stretch from 1977-1990 as manager of the Fidelity Magellan fund.   PEG Trumps P/E   It is common practice for investors to use the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E ratio) to determine if a company is over or undervalued. However, the PEG ratio is much more relevant to aggressive growth investors. This ratio takes long-term earnings growth rates into consideration, which is vital to the growth investor.  For example, a stock trading at 20x earnings with a 10% growth rate is much less desirable than a similarly valued stock with a 30% growth rate.   Lowest PEG Not Always Desirable   As with everything in investing, there are no hard and fast rules with investing. PEG ratios that are too low can actually be riskier than higher ones. Often times, analysts over-estimate the long-term growth rates of many growth stocks, which artificially lowers the PEG ratio. Analysts routinely forecast 35%+ growth for as far as the eye can see, but studies have shown that few companies can sustain this level of growth for too long. So what should the PEG ratio be?   Ideal PEG Between 0.8 and 1.8   Common wisdom says that 1.0 is the ideal PEG ratio, but reality doesn’t quite measure up to that. The S&P 500 sports a PEG of about 1.5. Anything above 1.8 is probably overvalued, while abnormally low ratios carry their own set of risks. As mentioned above, beware of overly rosy analyst predictions of indefinite hyper-growth. Unrealistic expectations are usually priced into those stocks and they can fall hard when these companies inevitably fail to meet these expectations.    

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Featured Local Company

Pacific Crest Securities

5032480721
111 SW Fifth Avenue, 42nd Fl.
Portland, OR

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