This screen implements the Magic Formula value investing strategy pioneered by hedge fund manager, Joel Greenblatt. It is based on buying 20-30 "good, cheap companies" defined as having the best available combined MFI ranking in terms of Earnings Yield and a Return on Capital. Greenblatt argues that return on capital is the best determinant of whether a business is a good one or not (companies that can earn a high ROC over time generally have a special advantage that keeps competition from destroying it, such as a unique business model). Earnings yield is his metric for 'cheapness'. Greenblatt believes that stock prices of a firm can experience “wild” swings even as the value of the company stays relatively constant giving investors opportunities to buy low and sell high. To learn more about this strategy please click here »
Value Investor, founder of Gotham Capital and the Value Investors Club. Author of The Little Book that Beats the Market.
The Little Book That Still Beats the Market
by Joel Greenblatt
In his best-selling "The Little Book that Beats the Market", Greenblatt espouses MFI as a do-it-yourself version of the approach he used at his fund Gotham Capital (which apparently returned over 40% annualized from 1985 to 2005).
Results are sorted by:
And limited to the first 30 Results
Chart based on an equal weighted portfolio of max 25 stocks rebalanced quarterly. Qualifying shares below updated daily. Past performance not indicative of future returns.
Can't see the share you expect? View this screen as a checklist to find out why.