Professor Bruce C. Greenwald discusses his executive education course in value investing and what differentiates the practice from other investment strategies.
"Most investors are constitutionally oriented to buying lottery tickets," he says. "And that's what creates the value opportunities for the plodding, careful investors."
Bio
Bruce Greenwald
Bruce Greenwald, the Robert Heilbrunn Professor of Finance and Asset Management, directs the Heilbrunn Center for Graham & Dodd Investing and the academic program in value investing. Described by the New York Times as 'a guru to Wall Street's gurus,' Greenwald teaches value investing courses to MBAs, executives and professional investors.
His book Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond earned immediate acclaim from both individual and professional investors. Greenwald received the 2000 Columbia University Presidential Teaching Award and the 1997 Margaret Chandler Memorial Award for Commitment to Excellence in Teaching. He also is a two-time recipient of the Singhvi Prize for Scholarship in the Classroom.
Process of exchanging income for an asset that is expected to produce earnings at a later time. An investor refrains from consumption in the present in hopes of a greater return in the future. Investment may be influenced by rates of interest, with the rate of investment rising as interest rates fall, but other factors more difficult to measure may also be importantfor example, the business community's expectations about future demand and profit, technical changes in production methods, and expected relative costs of labour and capital. Investment cannot occur without saving, which provides funding. Because investment increases an economy's capacity to produce, it is a factor contributing to economic growth.