“GARP” — short for “growth at a reasonable price” — is an investing style you’ll hear about from many fund managers. These folks like to find solidly growing business models, yet with valuations that are respectable. In recent years, it was hard to be a GARP investor, as the best growth stocks began to trade up to valuations that were hard to justify. #-ad_banner-#Not anymore. The steady drawdown in tech stocks has left many of them squarely back in the “reasonably priced” camp. My favorite metric to find them: the PEG ratio, which is the price-to-earnings… Read More
“GARP” — short for “growth at a reasonable price” — is an investing style you’ll hear about from many fund managers. These folks like to find solidly growing business models, yet with valuations that are respectable. In recent years, it was hard to be a GARP investor, as the best growth stocks began to trade up to valuations that were hard to justify. #-ad_banner-#Not anymore. The steady drawdown in tech stocks has left many of them squarely back in the “reasonably priced” camp. My favorite metric to find them: the PEG ratio, which is the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) divided by the earnings growth rate. Ideally, you’ll find stocks with a PEG ratio below 1.0, which means that the P/E ratio is lower than the earnings growth rate. Of course, growth investors come in two camps: those seeking out companies delivering torrid profit growth and moderate P/E ratios, or those seeking out tamer growth but even lower P/E ratios. I went scouring the basket of tech stocks, slicing and dicing them according to various GARP approaches. Every one of these firms is expected to boost earnings per share (EPS) by at least 20% in 2015 and again… Read More