Synergy has it nailed here. To put it another way, shares are supposed to reflect the underlying assets of a business. I hate when investment "Advisors" use business buzz-words, so here's a simple example:
A company, A-co, holds 50 tonnes of gold. It sits there in a shiny stack in the company's warehouse. 50 tonnes. Pretty valuable stuff. The company does nothing except sit on this gold. Let's say this gold is generally worth $1mil on a
regular, average, rational day.
The company issues 1 share to John Smith. JS is now the only shareholder of the company.
The theory goes that JS's single share of A-co should be worth about $1mil, no matter what. In theory, whomever holds that share of A-co has ownership of $1mil in gold.
Now imagine one day there's an earthquake. The thing with earthquakes (and disasters, and any other "big" news) is that they cause markets to do silly things. Markets are made of people, and people are stupid. Just look at all the ridiculous things that are posted on this forum about the craziness of people. So for one reason or another, the market goes "HOLY J**ES H! The sky is falling!", and for whatever weird reason, the markets (ie people.) decide that A-co is only worth $500,000 that day. JS goes "Holy Hell, I gotta bail on this, I want to sell my one share for $500k."
But wait a second. What has changed? A-co hasn't done anything other than sit there with its 50 tonnes of gold. It hasn't changed its business model. Literally nothing has changed, other than people being stupid one morning. On paper A-co holds $1mil in gold - but it's share price is being listed as $500k.
A guy like Synergy comes along, or maybe some other no-name investor by the name of Buffett, and looks at the publicly-available quarterly financial statements of A-co. Synergy immediately notices that a company consisting of literally nothing but gold worth $1mil is for sale for $500k. Synergy buys that one share.
Over the next week, people relax. The markets settle down, people realize the sky isn't falling, and decide that a company holding $1mil in gold, should probably be worth $1mil in value. The single share of A-co now becomes worth $1mil in the eyes of the market. Synergy has done well for himself, simply because he recognized the disconnect between market price vs. underlying value.
Examples like Enron only confirm these disconnects. Anyone who actually looked up Enron's financial statements, and actually researched all the attached notes, and reviewed Enron's publicly filed tax returns, responded with "Wtf is going on here. All this "revenue" isn't real revenue, it's inter-company fake sales." And the irony is that all this information WAS available - a shareholder only had to sift through what was in front of his nose.
The issue with Enron was that the market (again, a bunch of crazy people who act irrationally) decided Enron was a darling stock. It was a feel-good entity. People
wanted it to do well. But feelings and emotion aren't a replacement for underlying asset value. At some point, someone like Synergy looks at the statements of Enron, goes "Wtf. This thing stinks" and starts spreading the word. Eventually (and it can take a long time) the markets wise up and bail, and Enron collapses.
This same cycle played out in 2008, with CDO obligations. The information was there, but very few people looked at the writing on the wall.
There really isn't anything magical that a person can do when it comes to investing. Just make sure a person is educated on simple things like how to read a financial statement. How to make sense of a cash flow statement. Make the connection between tonnes of debt on the balance sheet, vs no interest being paid on that debt (likely means payments are being deferred, and there's gonna be huuuuuge repayments in the future. Is the company even able to make these payments?) It's a simple matter of reviewing what's in front of you, and connecting the dots, whether it's a big public company, or a small hardware store in a small town. A good business is a good business, bottom line.
Being able to pick up on good business fundamentals, and connect business value vs. share price, is the difference between a good investor, vs. being a speculator.
synergy1 said:
It didn't but just because the price changes doesn't mean the underlying business has lost anything. This isn't some imaginary hypothesis, its a reality all the time. National Oilwell Varco recorded *higher* than expecte earnings recently and their stock price decreased. Because most people affix price to gain/ loss on the short term...do those people, they have lost money. Because I view price as a guide, this temporary view from the market means nothing to me and I have not lost anything. However the underlying assumption is that the market *will* eventually recognize a good business which is why contrarian value investing is suitable for those who are willing to invest in the business.
Enron was not a good business. They did not make money. No one knew how they did. Nothing about their reporting made any sense. By investing even a penny into the *company* (not the price), the market will eventually recognize a good or bad company...which it did.