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It's Earnings That Count

by Hewitt Heiserman

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Average Rating:4.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Reviews
Product Description

It’s Earnings That Count introduces the Earnings Power Box™— a tool for identifying companies with a wide gap between their accrual performance and earnings. Features include six ratios investors can use to make smarter decisions, techniques for identifying companies poised to outgain the market over the next five to ten years, and more.




All Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5 out of 5 stars
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

3 out of 5 starsInformative, useful, dense, difficult, 2008-03-27
This was a very informative book and discussed an excellent perspective for evaluating value stocks, especially in the current market. I would highly recommend it to the value investor who is willing to roll his/her sleeves up and get into some serious research for a prospective long-term position, with a time horizon of three or more years. What I have learned will help me to avoid the pitfalls of countless stocks that are being eagerly recommended but which pose unacceptable risk for the long-term investor (e.g. Enron and Worldcom type stocks).

Having said that, the book is occasionally (but infrequently) lacking in critical details that would help the reader to understand and replicate the author's analysis models. The preface says the book assumes no prior knowledge of accounting, but I personally feel an accounting background would have helped. It is very dense and occasionally dry reading, only for those truly motivated to profit from risk minimization in a difficult market.


0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

5 out of 5 starsA Must Read, 2008-01-05
I think every investor should read this book. The book explains how to combine cash income and an adjusted version of accrual income to get an accurate assessment of the quality of the company's earnings and its potential future earnings.

The book also shows how to modify the accrual income by capitalizing certain expenses and by accounting for the cost of equity using the appropriate discount rate. These modifications make the accrual income a much more accurate measure of the real earning power of the company.

The book is written in a very easy and readable way. All the concepts are very well explained. Interesting examples of real companies are used to show the ideas in the book. The book is very concise without any useless stories to fill the pages (like most investing books do).



4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:

5 out of 5 starsHighly recommended, 2007-03-29
I am surprised that more investors have not read this book.


This book sets forth an excellent, step-by-step methodology to analyzing stocks that should be of interest to most fundamental investors. The author is a professional writer, and consequently the book is well-written and relatively easy to read even though it also covers some fairly complicated topics. The methods he describes are well thought-out and explained, and I honestly believe they can be of tremendous use to fundamental investors seeking to make investment decisions with respect to particular companies.

Heiserman's main point is that GAAP accounting means that the accrual income statement may not properly reflect the position of a particular company. In this way, he is similar to Marty Whitman (see "Value Investing" and "The Aggressive Conservative Investor") although he is certainly not a traditional value investor. Instead of focusing on book value like Whitman, Heiserman has created a means to adjust the income statement to overcome shortcomings in GAAP to identify companies that are financially sound with strong growth prospects.

His method is to create two new income statements for each potential investment - a "defensive" income statement that will reveal the company's need for outside capital and determine what the company's risk of going bankrupt is, and an "enterprising" income statement that will analyze how effective the company is at earning a return on its capital investment. In this way, Heiserman details a step-by-step methodology to find financially stable companies with strong growth prospects.

Heiserman eschews formulaic investing, meaning that applying his methods takes some time and effort. However, he also sets forth a helpful "five minute test" to enable investors to quickly assess whether it is worthwhile to dig deeper into a company's financials. He also provides good information regarding how to conduct competitive analysis and assess management (although some of the latter information may be dated due to recent SEC disclosure developments). Lastly, because the methods Heiserman has created rely on past financial statements, his methods minimize the possibility that an investor will make overly optimistic assumptions about a company's future prospects.

In all, I would highly recommend this book to intermediate-level investors who are willing to work to uncover individual stocks with sound growth prospects at reasonable prices.



2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:

5 out of 5 starsYes It's Hard Work, 2006-01-30
Calculating the real value of an investment and its potential takes a lot of detective work.

Fortunately for us all Mr. Heiserman has written the gold standard for "The Standard Operating Procedures to Probable Investment Success." Certainly it cannot guarantee it. In most cases it will keep you out of trouble and guide you considerably closer to your goal. Was it Voltaire who once said, "Common Sense is uncommon."

In conjunction with services such as Value Line it offers far better odds at success.

I believe Warren Buffet was once asked, why not do something else and to paraphrase he replied, "Why bother when investing is so simple." If you read the book and apply it you will understand why he said that; simple yes, easy no, hard work yes.

Happily most people will not wish to do the hard work and will continue to purchase investment advisory services hoping that they, with little effort, will be blessed with magnificent returns.

So read the book, work at applying it and you will be amazed; I was. I have a library full of investment books and this is the only one on investments I would take to a desert island.


7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:

3 out of 5 starsGood Book - needs revising, 2005-09-19
The concept taught in this book (of the methods used to evaluate a company) is very good.
It's an extra tool to use in evaluating a company - a very sensible tool. The only reason I gave this book 3 stars is because a lot of the figures in the examples are wrong. They refer to the Financial Statements of Wriggley at the beginning of the book, but then they transpose the wrong amounts in the examples.




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