111. Value investors may want to sift through the grounds of Diedrich Coffee before its shares begin to perk. 112. Value investors seek to buy temporarily out-of-favor stocks that are selling more cheaply than justified by their longer-term prospects. 113. Value investors specialize in buying down-and-out stocks that show signs of a turnaround. 114. Value investors try to find solace in numerous academic historical studies that have concluded that over the very long run, value outperforms growth. 115. Value investors, who look for under-valued stocks and are presumably a more stable influence, are holding many of the technology issues today. 116. Value investors, in other words, love shopping the sales. 117. Warren Buffett is a classic old-style value investor. 118. Value fund investors may have to swallow one last bitter pill anyway. 119. Value investors try to unearth companies selling for less than their intrinsic worth, while growth investors aim for companies whose earnings outpace the average. 120. Value investors typically look for companies whose share prices are cheap relative to the value of the assets on their books. |