Special Report on
Value versus Growth Investing
Photo by i.ytimg.com
Value versus Growth Investing - Trends
Latest Trending Story:
Growth Vs. Value Re-Examined - Forbes.com
In the world of finance, investors struggle to answer the eternal query: growth or value? The solution is not as simple as it seems. For some, growth stocks appeal to their desire for potentially high future returns, while a value stock's low price-to-book ratio typically entices bargain hunters. Currently it seems growth is ascendant, but these designations have started meaning less and less, says the Forbes.com Investor Team. Still, with close to 70% of total market capitalization in growth stocks and 30% in value, the style dispute continues. Standard & Poor's first defined value investing in the 1930s as the ...
to a modern, high-income economy. Its scope includes the process and policies by which a nation improves the economic, political, and social well-being of its people. Gonçalo L Fonsesca at the New School for Social Research defines economic development as "the analysis of the economic development of nations." The University of Iowa's Center for International Finance and Development states that: "'Economic development' or 'development' is a term that economists, politicians, and others have used frequently in the 20th century. The concept, however, has been in existence in the West for ...
One of the longest-standing debates in investing is over the relative merits of active portfolio management versus passive management. With an actively managed portfolio, a manager tries to beat the performance of a given benchmark index by using his or her judgment in selecting individual securities and deciding when to buy and sell them. A passively managed portfolio attempts to match that benchmark performance, and in the process, minimize expenses that can reduce an investor’s net return. Each camp has strong advocates who argue that the advantages of its approach outweigh ... Read More
SURVEY RESULTS FOR
VALUE VERSUS GROWTH INVESTING
INFORMATION RESOURCES
-
Davos Annual Meeting 2010 - Rethinking Market Capitalism
-
Investing with Sam Stovall from Standard & Poor's