Why Value Investing Pays Off

Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD)(NYSE:TD) is a great investment option for value investors, and for good reason.

| More on:

It may not be as exciting as looking at trends, indicators, buy and sell signals, but value investing can often be the safest strategy for your portfolio when you’re looking to build wealth for the long term.

Growth is appealing, but it also comes with risk

Growth stocks like Facebook, Inc. can certainly offer a lot of upside, but there’s also a lot more risk involved there too, and with tech stocks, it’s always about the latest and greatest trend, and it’s easy for a stock to get left behind.

BlackBerry Ltd. is a perfect example of a tech stock that has had to reinvent itself after being unable to stay competitive in the handheld market. Once a top stock in the industry, many people today are surprised to learn that BlackBerry is still around.

Bank stocks often provide lots of value

With value investing, you’re looking for good buys — stocks that trade at reasonable multiples and have good financials overall. Bank stocks like Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD)(NYSE:TD) are often good value buys, and that’s why Warren Buffett always likes to invest in that industry, because it’s a great way to earn stable returns over the long term.

TD trades at a very modest multiple of around 13 times its earnings and has a strong business model that isn’t in any danger. The bank stock actually has a lot of growth potential outside Canada, and that makes it an even more appealing investment.

However, bank stocks aren’t the only place you can find value.

My experience

One of the first stocks that I invested in that grabbed my attention was NeuLion, Inc. The company had high margins, no debt, and what I thought was a great product, and so I invested when I saw a dip in price.

Unfortunately for me, the stock price continued to drop — heavily. From the time that I bought in at over $1 a share, the price fell to less than half of that value within a year. I did what I thought was crazy at the time — buy even more as the price went down. However, if the stock was a good buy at $1, surely it was an even better buy one at $0.80 and $0.70.

The problem is, when you keep digging, you can get yourself into an even bigger hole. So, I stopped even looking at the price, and decided to let things play out. As tempting as it was to sell, and with charts suggesting that the stock was going to crash even further, I resisted the temptation and stuck with it, because I knew it was heavily undervalued.

And then, one early March morning, after I had finished writing an article for this site, I checked to see how the markets were doing. To my surprise, I saw that NeuLion had been bought out for US$0.84, which was well above my average price. Within an instant, my losses turned to gains, and my faith in the system was restored.

Bottom line

What I learned is that the biggest struggle when it comes to investing is simply to resist that urge to get caught up in the hype or pessimism that stocks can lure you into. As long as a company’s business model is still strong and has good value, some bad results shouldn’t change your overall outlook.

Fool contributor David Jagielski has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. David Gardner owns shares of Facebook. Tom Gardner owns shares of Facebook. The Motley Fool owns shares of BlackBerry and Facebook. BlackBerry is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada.

More on Stocks for Beginners

copper wire factory
Stocks for Beginners

Copper Is Near Multi-Year Highs and These 3 TSX Stocks Are Ready for What Comes Next

Copper is back near multi-year highs, and these three miners offer different ways to benefit if prices stay strong.

Read more »

people stand in a line to wait at an airport
Dividend Stocks

The Bank of Canada Just Held Rates at 2.25%. These 3 Dividend Stocks Are Built for the Wait.

Dividend investors who had been hoping for a rate cut should now pivot to "what pays me while I wait?"

Read more »

monthly calendar with clock
Dividend Stocks

A Year Later: 2 Canadian Stocks That Look Even Better Now

A year later, the real winners are the companies that kept executing, buying back shares, and paying you to wait.

Read more »

Dividend Stocks

Canada’s Inflation Dipped to 1.8%, but Economists Say It Won’t Last. Here’s How to Think About Stocks.

Softer inflation can lift retail stocks by easing cost pressures and making shoppers feel less squeezed.

Read more »

cookies stack up for growing profit
Dividend Stocks

5 Canadian Stocks I’d Buy for ‘Instant Income’

Instant income isn’t a gimmick: these five Canadian REITs can start paying you now, even in a shaky market.

Read more »

groceries get more expensive as inflation rises
Dividend Stocks

Inflation Just Cooled Down to 1.8%, and These Stocks Are Positioned to Benefit

Softer inflation can quietly help these TSX names by easing cost pressure, improving consumer credit, and supporting longer-duration growth stories.

Read more »

sound engineer adjusts audio on board
Dividend Stocks

As Earnings Season Winds Down, These 3 Canadian Stocks Proved They Could Sit Through the Noise

These stocks stayed steady with recurring revenue, underwriting discipline, and instant diversification.

Read more »

resting in a hammock with eyes closed
Dividend Stocks

A Year Later: 3 “Boring” Canadian Stocks That Kept Winning

A year of chaos made the quiet winners easier to spot.

Read more »