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Investment Valuation: Tools and Techniques for Determining the Value of Any Asset, Second Edition

Investment Valuation: Tools and Techniques for Determining the Value of Any Asset, Second Edition

List Price: $89.95
Your Price: $56.67
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Book
Review: A wonderful book with clear explanations and excellent support web site. Damodaran never takes anything for granted. He outlines the principles, clearly states the assumption, explains the analysis and even challenges the model, hinting where it will not work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the two valuation reference books
Review: For investors subscribed to discounted cash flows valuation (DCF), there is no other books that offer the kind of in-depth anlaysis (both in step-by-step description and available scenarios using real companies) like this book does. Plus, Professor Damodaran maintains a free website where Excel-based valuation models and industry data are periodically updated. These features make the book invaluable. In short, if I am allowed to buy only one investment book, this is the one.

But since I can buy as many books as I want, it would be more important to tell what this book does not do. First, it's always important to get a second opinion. In this case, it would be something other than DCF. Currently, DCF and relative valuation (such as PE and PV) are the dominent valuation methods used in the U.S. And yes, they are both covered in-depth by this book, in addition to the Economic Value Addded method which is gaining momentum in recent years. But this book essentially dismisses the income statements in favor of cash flows statements for valuing securities, preferring DCF to relative valuation. This is certainly understandable in lights of recent manipulation of GAAP income by offenders like Enron, WorldCom and Tyco. But I believe it's important for investors to hear the voice for income statements valuation method. For that investors should get James English's Applied Equity Analysis - another must-have - as a second valuation reference book. Secondly, this book uses CAPM model for finding the discount rate. Again, it is true that CAPM is the most widely used model in the U.S., but I came to a conclusion, after reading close to a hundred critically acclaimed articles published in the last fifty years as part of my MBA requirements, that factor models provide better tracking of stock prices than CAPM does. Unfortunately, there is no good book available. For institutional investors, they can have models from BARRA and Wilshire, etc, but individual investors would have to construct their own, probably (like me) using the Fama-French three-factor model. Description of their model is available mostly from theirs and other published papers. Data are available from Kenneth French's own website at Dartmouth. Now since you read all the way through my review, here is your reward: go to Damodaran's website and download the manuscript of this book for free if you are really frugal.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The best valuation book I know of, but not perfect.
Review: I bought this book to replace an older valuation book also by Damodoran. I'm a professional analyst and am quite familiar with valuations, and this book provides a very thorough and comprehensive guide. I bought it just in time to serve as guidance through a very heavy and comprehensive research project.

Everything I needed for the project was in the book, however one thing surprised and disappointed me: the organization. I simply don't see much of a logical flow in the chapter structure, so I think it would be more difficult to someone who wasn't already familiar with the basic structure of the valuation process. Why is market efficiency jammed between unrelated chapters? Why is the discussion and examples of the pro-forma capitalization of R&D split between distant chapters? Throughout a single project, one would have to keep the book marked in several diffent places, not neccessarily in the order that one would have to deal with the questions if one were doing a valuation. The result is that this book is less easy to use as a practical guidebook than it could be, and will keep one busy in the index looking for where subjects are addressed.

This is nit-picking however. Professor Damodoran is to be congratulated for producing such a high quality and comprehensive text on valuation.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The best valuation book I know of, but not perfect.
Review: I bought this book to replace an older valuation book also by Damodoran. I'm a professional analyst and am quite familiar with valuations, and this book provides a very thorough and comprehensive guide. I bought it just in time to serve as guidance through a very heavy and comprehensive research project.

Everything I needed for the project was in the book, however one thing surprised and disappointed me: the organization. I simply don't see much of a logical flow in the chapter structure, so I think it would be more difficult to someone who wasn't already familiar with the basic structure of the valuation process. Why is market efficiency jammed between unrelated chapters? Why is the discussion and examples of the pro-forma capitalization of R&D split between distant chapters? Throughout a single project, one would have to keep the book marked in several diffent places, not neccessarily in the order that one would have to deal with the questions if one were doing a valuation. The result is that this book is less easy to use as a practical guidebook than it could be, and will keep one busy in the index looking for where subjects are addressed.

This is nit-picking however. Professor Damodoran is to be congratulated for producing such a high quality and comprehensive text on valuation.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Valuation Enclopaedia
Review: I have both the 1st edition and 2nd editions. It is the most logical and complete valuation text around. Takes you through valuation processes as well as compares various methods step-by-step, logically and rationally. I also have the McKinsey edition and although it's good, it cannot compare with Damodaran's in clarity of language and logical reasoning.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thank you
Review: I have just purchased this book after reading customer reviews. I just want to thank for these people in my making decision to buy this book. Although not finished yet, it is excellent..

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great Book
Review: The shipping damage de cover, handled with care...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A very good modular and implementable guide
Review: This is a very good book for those who are familiar with valuation but want to delve deeper. The great thing about this book is that it is modular i.e. one can jump between chapters without loss of continuity.

It has a very practical treatment of real options which is to say that it helps you think about certain valuation situations in an Options framework rather than getting bogged down with the mathematics of the situation. It has a lot of worked examples and of particular interest are valuation examples relating to off-beat assets like a NYC Taxi Medallion! A decent treatment of valuation of real estate, professional practices (lawyers, doctors) etc. is also provided.

For those who like to think about conceptual issues, there is a very good treatment of estimation of betas, international cost of capital and other similar matters.

The only thing preventing me from giving this book 5 stars is a not-too-detailed treatment of the Market Approach and particularly adjustment of market multiples to reflect subject company parameters. Otherwise, a great book and definitely a must-have.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Extremely Valuable Resource!
Review: This is one of the very best books I have used while working on an MBA. It will occupy a prominent place on my business resources bookshelf. What makes it so special is that it covers the field of investment valuation very broadly, but each topic is handled concisely and with clarity. The author also supplies a healthy amount of context and supporting information as well as the technical matters around valuation.

Another virtue is that it is laid out very well. If you are interested in a specific topic, for example valuing a company with negative earnings or a private company or even contracts for natural resources, it is easy to look up the specific information and study what is relevant to the task at hand.

Plus the author has a wonderful website with supporting spreadsheets and valuable information on companies that can help a great deal in thinking through the topics raised in the book.

If I could only have two or three books of all those I have used during my work at the University of Michigan Business School, this would be one of the keepers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Extremely Valuable Resource!
Review: This is one of the very best books I have used while working on an MBA. It will occupy a prominent place on my business resources bookshelf. What makes it so special is that it covers the field of investment valuation very broadly, but each topic is handled concisely and with clarity. The author also supplies a healthy amount of context and supporting information as well as the technical matters around valuation.

Another virtue is that it is laid out very well. If you are interested in a specific topic, for example valuing a company with negative earnings or a private company or even contracts for natural resources, it is easy to look up the specific information and study what is relevant to the task at hand.

Plus the author has a wonderful website with supporting spreadsheets and valuable information on companies that can help a great deal in thinking through the topics raised in the book.

If I could only have two or three books of all those I have used during my work at the University of Michigan Business School, this would be one of the keepers.


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