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Daniel O'keefe on value investing

From Daniel O'Keefe: Morningstar International Stock Fund Manager of the Year · · WEALTHTRACK

“For us and for our clients, value investing is about trying to find businesses that meet four different characteristics. So we want something that is cheap relative to its long-term intrinsic value. We want a high-quality business, so a business that has some competitive advantage, that has the potential to grow, that's defensible. We want a strong balance sheet, and we want a management team who is working in our interest, actively engaged and building the value of the company on a per share basis.”

Daniel O'keefe
MD and Lead Portfolio Manager of Global Value & Select Equity Strategies, ARTISAN PARTNERS ASSET MGMT
value investinginvestment strategybusiness qualitymanagement

On , Daniel O'keefe, MD and Lead Portfolio Manager of Global Value & Select Equity Strategies at ARTISAN PARTNERS ASSET MGMT, spoke about value investing during Daniel O'Keefe: Morningstar International Stock Fund Manager of the Year on WEALTHTRACK.

Daniel O'Keefe: Morningstar International Stock Fund Manager of the Year
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Daniel O'Keefe: Morningstar International Stock Fund Manager of the Year
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You won't want to miss our rare interview with the 2013 and 2008 Morningstar International Stock Fund Manager of the Year!
Daniel O'keefe

About Daniel O'keefe

MD and Lead Portfolio Manager of Global Value & Select Equity Strategies · ARTISAN PARTNERS ASSET MGMT

In a 2014 interview, Daniel O'Keefe discussed his value investing approach, describing it as seeking businesses that are cheap relative to long-term intrinsic value, have a competitive advantage, a strong balance sheet, and a management team aligned with shareholders. He noted that after significant market gains in 2013, many bargains had been "wrung out of the market," but he found emerging markets attractive due to their low price-to-earnings multiples relative to developed markets. O'Keefe also highlighted specific holdings, including financial stocks such as American Express, BNY Mellon, ING Bank, Lloyds Bank, and Royal Bank of Scotland, which he said were added during or after the financial crisis. O'Keefe used Google as an example of distinguishing between statistical cheapness and fundamental undervaluation, noting that the firm bought it at 12 times earnings in 2008. He criticized Google's corporate governance and capital allocation decisions, such as the Motorola acquisition and the purchase of Nest, while acknowledging the strategic rationale behind investments like Android. He also discussed the risks in banks, stating that low price-to-earnings multiples do not necessarily indicate true value due to high leverage and potential credit risks.

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