Sunteți pe pagina 1din 4

Has Bill Miller Lost His Mind?

1/7/2013

Fool.com

Growing the love for investing

Welcome!

Premium Advice

Help Join Now or Login

Enter Keywords or Ticker

Home Basics

My Fool ETFs Options

How To Invest Small-Cap

Investing Commentary Dividends & Income

CAPS Community Value

Retirement

Boards

Fool Store

High Growth

Mutual Funds

International

Email Print

HBotsn? alilLsi id se H MM r i
By Chuck Saletta | More Articles December 17, 2007 | Comments (0)

Recs

30
R e c

Today's Market
T h i s

DOW S&P 500 NASD

13,384.29 1,461.89 3,098.81

-50.92 -4.58 -2.85

-0.38% -0.31% -0.09%


0

Bill Miller earned his stripes by beating the market for 15 consecutive years as lead manager of the Legg Mason Value Trust (FUND: LMVTX ) . That's a tremendous accomplishment, especially when you consider that over five of those years, even Warren Buffett fell behind Wall Street's benchmarks. As a result, when Miller speaks, investors listen. Reading Miller's recent market commentary, however, may leave you scratching your head a bit. That's particularly the case if you're not already a seasoned value investor. After all, we're suffering through one of the biggest credit crunches in decades. At the core of the problem is a slumping housing market and the two huge problems it brings with it: People can't use their homes as ATMs to support their spending. Home loans based on inflated values may very well turn out to be worthless. Yet Miller's comments include the following: "I think the new leadership will be U.S., large-cap, dollar-based, and grow to encompass what no one wants to own today, especially financials and consumer." And: "I think the greatest gains over the next five years will be made in those securities people are panicked about today. For specific names, consult the 52-week-low list." Is he off his rocker? Buy financial companies during a credit crunch? Look at consumer stocks when the easymoney spigots have been turned off? Snap up companies whose stocks have fallen precipitously over the past year? Does that sound like the kind of sound thinking that would help you beat the market? In fact, it's precisely the kind of thinking that will win out over the long run. People who invest in the stock market have two things in common: They're in the market to make money. They hate losing money. As a result, people love to buy stocks that go up and want to dump the ones that fall. Unfortunately, none of us has the superhuman power to figure out which ones will rise or fall before it happens. Pure genius What we can do, however, is exactly what Miller is doing. We can look at where people's love/hate relationship with stock-price movements have knocked their prices far away from what the underlying businesses are really worth. And the farther away they're knocked, the better your chances to profit -- in the real world, with real money -- when things return to normal. In fact, here are some pretty solid companies that hit Miller's criteria of being: On the 52-week-low list. In the financial industry. U.S.-based. A large-cap entity (over $10 billion).
Company Recent 52-Week Trailing P/E Ratio 5-Year Expected Growth

updated moments ago

Tweet

by:
Tweet 0

Create My Watchlist
Go to My Watchlist

You don't seem to be following any stocks yet! Better investing starts with a watchlist. Now you can create a personalized watchlist and get immediate access to the personalized information you need to make successful investing decisions.

Data delayed up to 5 minutes

Most Popular Articles


1. The First Thing You Should Do in 2013 2. The Fiscal Cliff Resolution 3. Is the iPad Set for a Blowout or Blowup? 4. TMF's 25 Best Articles of 2012 5. The Future of Retail

http://www.fool.com/investing/value/2007/12/17/has-bill-miller-lost-his-mind.aspx

1/4

Has Bill Miller Lost His Mind?

1/7/2013

Low Washington Mutual (NYSE: WM Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS Allstate (NYSE: ALL ) ) ) ) $14.80 $47.49 $48.90 $16.43 $29.60 ) $50.50 4.9 5.9 6.2 7.0 8.4 6.0 8.3%
Tweet

13.6% 7.9% 8.5% 8.1% 10.5%

National City (NYSE: NCC Citigroup (NYSE: C )

Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER

It's companies like these that Miller says have the best chance to outperform over the next five or so years. They're available so cheaply precisely because of the amazing fear surrounding the financial industry that has knocked their shares down to the bargain basement. Get 'em while they're cheap If you truly want to get the best of Wall Street over the long haul, you have to be willing to think like Miller does. You have to be willing to buy fundamentally strong companies that have fallen on hard times. When the rest of the market is selling because of an overall panic, it just might be the perfect time for you to do the exact opposite. Contrarian thinking like that has led Miller to his amazing success. It's also how we've managed to stay atop the market at Motley Fool Inside Value. If you'd like to see all of our stock picks and research, join us today for a 30-day free trial. After all, contrarian investing really can pay. At the time of publication, Fool contributor Chuck Saletta owned shares of Washington Mutual. Washington Mutual and National City are Motley Fool Income Investor recommendations. The Fool has a disclosure policy. Read/Post Comments (0) |
Email

Related Tickers
MS $19.80
Morgan Stanley

1/7/2013 4:00 PM

-0.39
CAPS Rating:

-1.93%

NCC

$1.81

+0.00
CAPS Rating:

+0.00%

National City Corp

WAMUQ $0.00
Washington Mutual,

+0.00
CAPS Rating:

+0.00%

ALL

$41.74

-0.46
CAPS Rating:

-1.09%

The Allstate Corp

C Recommend This Article (30)


Print Feedback Citigroup Inc

$42.47

+0.04
CAPS Rating:

+0.09%

MER

$11.64

+0.00
CAPS Rating:

+0.00%

Merrill Lynch & Co

The Steve Jobs Betrayal


You may already know that in the final year of his life, Jobs revealed a stunning betrayal and told his biographer, "I will spend my last dying breath... and every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank to right this wrong." What was it that made Jobs so irate and why could it make a few in-the-know investors some major profits over the coming months and years? Click here to find out before it's too late!
Like 0 Like 0

Comments from our Foolish Readers Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment icon found on every comment. Be the first one to comment on this article. Your Fool username will be displayed with your comment. Please be respectful with your comments. Review our Fool's Rules.

http://www.fool.com/investing/value/2007/12/17/has-bill-miller-lost-his-mind.aspx

2/4

Has Bill Miller Lost His Mind?

1/7/2013

Your comment may be delayed up to 15 minutes


Post Your Comment

Compare Brokers
E*TRADE

Trade Free for 60 Days & Get up to $500. Open an Account


Fool Disclosure

Home

About The Motley Fool Privacy Policy

Fool Disclosure

Radio Show

Work at The Fool Help

Member Services Site Map Fool UK lovemoney.com

Advertise with The Fool

Email Subscriptions AOL Business News

RSS Headlines

Fool Friends: Yahoo Finance

MSN Money

Mint Personal Finance Software

Copyright, Trademark and Patent Information

Terms of Use 1995 - 2013 The Motley Fool. All rights reserved.

BATS data provided in real-time. NYSE, NASDAQ and NYSEMKT data delayed 15 minutes. Real-Time prices provided by BATS. Market data provided by Interactive Data. Company fundamental data provided by Morningstar. Earnings Estimates and Analyst Ratings provided by Zacks. SEC Filings and Insider Transactions provided by Edgar Online. Powered and implemented by Interactive Data Managed Solutions. Terms & Conditions 94ms USEQ\WEB03
http://www.fool.com/investing/value/2007/12/17/has-bill-miller-lost-his-mind.aspx 3/4

Has Bill Miller Lost His Mind?

1/7/2013

http://www.fool.com/investing/value/2007/12/17/has-bill-miller-lost-his-mind.aspx

4/4

S-ar putea să vă placă și