Value Line Index

  

Categories: Index Funds

Let's start with the name "Value Line." It refers to a brand name, as well as a conceptual framework. Value Line (the company) is a financial research firm, first founded in 1931 by Arnold Bernhard. Its highest profile product is a newsletter called The Value Line Investment Survey.

Now onto "value line" as an idea. Bernhard conceived the idea of superimposing a line over price charts to normalize the value of different companies. The line was derived from a multiple of cash flow. It was meant to help better compare the value of various stocks.

The Value Line Composite Index provides a way to chart the stocks highlighted in the company's Value Line Investment Survey. The index takes those stocks (minus closed-end funds) and combines them into an index. The performance of the index can then be compared to overall market performance. It's basically a way to prove that the investment survey (and the whole "value line" concept) has merit.

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finance a la shmoop. how do you judge the performance of an index fund? very

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carefully. actually performance means something very different when it comes

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to an index fund versus an actively managed fund. in an index fund the

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manager doesn't really do anything per se other than rebalance the indices so [man sleeps at a desk]

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that they conform to whatever the product was that you bought in the first

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place. for example a technology index fund might claim that 12% of its

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holdings will have wireless telecommunications related stocks as a

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target, but never less than 10% and never more than 15% .and in most cases the

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actual stocks that go in the fund are identified beforehand like before the [man smiles at camera]

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funds actually really launched. and the relative weightings of those investments

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is also predetermined .ie the fund might target having three percent of its total

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as shares in Verizon. but if Verizon suddenly does extremely well and doubles

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in price in a short period of time well the index fund might have to sell

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shares of that stock so that it's weighted holding amount won't pierce the

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maximum weighting of 15%. but all this relates to the composition of the fund [pie chart]

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not necessarily the performance. since an index fund is a reflection of a given

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area like these examples they conform to a general theme, like the Vanguard total

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stock market index. the broadest based reflection of the overall market. like

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the S&P 500 plus Nasdaq plus the New York Stock Exchange indices or another

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one might be the Vanguard small cap Value Index, largely companies under a

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few billion bucks in market cap which trade at relatively low price to [value index listed]

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earnings ratios ie they are value stocks rather than say growth stocks. all right

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next one might be the Vanguard emerging markets stock index. that one's all about

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third world countries trying to become second worlders how's that Nigerian

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oil exchange looking? or what about investing in Vietnam these days? the

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Napalm is mostly washed away by now. and then move it on. yep there's the Vanguard [sink with the water on]

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