You are on page 1of 10

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

A Test of Grahams Stock Selection Criteria


September 6, 2010 | Comments (23)

Written by
Jae Jun
follow me on
Facebook
Twitter
Table of Contents

What is the Graham Stock Selection Criteria


A great way to find ideas is to use the selection checklist of gurus. There is one by Benjamin
Graham that not too many people know about. A couple of readers have been kind enough to
provide the selection criteria and papers testing the process which I will go into detail here.

Grahams Stock Selection Criteria


Forum link to the discussion of Grahams stock selection criteria.
Test of Grahams stock selection criteria on industrial shares traded on the JSE (pdf)

DOWNLOAD A PRINTABLE PDF OF THIS POST


Just share this post to download a printable PDF of this post for you to keep
forever!
tweet

like us

+1 us

There are 10 criteria in total.


The first 5 criteria measure reward and is sensitive to price and earnings changes. The focus
in this group of five criteria is on stock price, earnings and dividends.
The second group of 5 offers a measure of risk and does not change rapidly with changes in
1/10
price and earnings. Criteria number 6,7 and 8 represent the financial soundness of

http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

companies.
Selection, by using the criteria, is based on the concept of maximising the reward to risk
ratio of stock selected.
One thing I want to point out is that the reward-risk philosophy is backward. Personally, after
chasing reward to risk much often and taking the damage, I have found it much better to chase
after low risk to reward ratios. It may sound like the same thing, but determining low risk followed
by reward is much different to finding reward and then performing the risk analysis.

List of 10 Stock Selection Criteria by Benjamin Graham


1. An earnings-to-price yield at least twice the AAA bond rate
2. P/E ratio less than 40% of the highest P/E ratio the stock had over the past 5 years
3. Dividend yield of at least 2/3 the AAA bond yield
4. Stock price below 2/3 of tangible book value per share
5. Stock price below 2/3 of Net Current Asset Value (NCAV)
6. Total debt less than book value
7. Current ratio great than 2
8. Total debt less than 2 times Net Current Asset Value (NCAV)
9. Earnings growth of prior 10 years at least at a 7% annual compound rate
10. Stability of growth of earnings in that no more than 2 declines of 5% or more in year end
earnings in the prior 10 years are permissible.

Test Combination of Criteria


Not a single stock will be able to pass this filter today. When the screen reaches no. 3, only around
30 stocks make it. When you hit the fourth condition, the list becomes 0.
So to make this exercise worthwhile, I would have to run the criteria in combination with each other
but not all at the same time.
The table below is from the paper with the test performed from 1977 to 1995, a span of 18 years.
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

2/10

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

Graham Stock Selection

Keep in mind that back in the days of Graham, most companies were industrial and the stock
universe was much smaller then as well.
In order to clean up the results, I left out financial stocks, OTC stocks and ADRs.
I do not have access to historical AAA bond yield data so I applied a static 4.5% as the AAA bond
yield for all screens for all periods.
Still, it results in plenty of pickings. The additional condition that I applied was (7) Current ratio
great than 2.
I also tested one that included (8) Total debt less than 2 times Net Current Asset Value (NCAV).
The number of results were reduced but the screen did not perform any better so I left it out.

http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

3/10

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

Graham Stock Selection Criteria Results


With the limited amount of data that I have access to, 20 years of back testing is out of the
question. 20 year tests also do not serve much purpose. Such tests, I find to be distorted due to it
being unrealistic. You might as well do the test for 100 years and conclude it kills the market.
I chose the period from 2004 end of August 2010 to test the results.
Why 2004?
I didnt want to apply the test in 2001-2003 because of the dot com bust. By 2004, the recession
was over, markets have stabilized and ordinary people would have gotten back into the market.
Not quite Nobel prize worthy, but realistic.
The conditions I applied to all screens are as follows:
ignore financial companies, OTC and ADRs
AAA bond yield was kept at 4.5%
max 20 stocks held
1 year holding period

http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

4/10

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

I would say a 6 year period is long enough to say that this strategy would beat the indexes over the
long run. With $100, the screen depicted by the orange line would have netted $193.
Individual year performance will vary and fluctuate and you wont beat the market every year, but
Grahams simple selections looks to be solid for the passive investor as well as being a good
source of ideas for the enterprising.

10 Stocks that Graham Would Choose


Applying the (1),(3),(6) & (7) conditions, here is a list of stocks that even Graham would be
interested in if he were alive. That is how to use the Graham Stock Selection criteria.

Disclosure
None
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

5/10

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

Jae Jun is the founder of Old School Value. He is on a mission to provide practical
and actionable value investing tools, tutorials and educational material to help
empower the individual investor. Keep in touch with Jae via any of the methods linked
below.
View all posts by Jae Jun

Blog Twitter Facebook

Google+

Josh
What is meant by (1),(3),(6), etc.? Considering that there are 10 conditions, this part isnt clear.
Thanks
Mark
Interesting results. I would be interested in seeing the response for additional conditions applied
(assuming there are stocks that still qualify). Even more interested in seeing all possible
combinations of the ten conditions. Would the same pattern of improved performance emerge
with additional conditions applied or would this behavior break down at some point?
Sorry if youve answered this before, but what screener did you use to find these results?
Eldinril
So this is referred to as Grahams Last Will and Testament. It was written by a man named
James Rae, who became friends with Graham in the last few years of his life. The bond yield
should be the 5-year AAA Corporate bond yield, total debt should actually be compared with
tangible equity, and earnings should simply double over a ten-year period. Graham stated in a
lecture at UCLA that if an investor just used earnings yield, dividend yield, and debt to tangible
equity, they would get results double the DJIA.
Best wishes,
Eldinril
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com Jae Jun
@ Josh,
(1),(3),(6) are the conditions 1,3 and 6 in the list of 10 criteria.
@ Mark,
With all 10 conditions, you get 0 results. I tried many different combinations but the results were
not any better. I noticed that if too many conditions were included, it actually broke down the
performance.
Ill see about doing a follow up with different conditions.
@ Eldinril,
Do you have a source from where you got this info? Id like to check it out.
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

fandegraham

6/10

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

Hi
Could you backtest with 1,3,4,6,7 criteria ? I guess you should have better result with criteria 4, i
am very interested with the result of that compared to others.
Roy
What is meant by current ratio?
http://www.wiftsinvestment.com R
like Eldinril said, after coming up with these 10 points, Graham said that you could achieve the
same result by selecting stocks with only the following 3 out of 10 points: Dividend yield at least
2/3rd AAA bond, Earning yield at least twice the AAA yield, debt to equity less than 1. Which
means 1 3 and 6 above. Other points are redundant. See how the performance of a portfolio of
those companies look like. I think there was an article on a recent AAII publication.
Eldinril
R is correct. The AAII recently did a write up of the checklist. The original article was published
in the Summer 1977 issue of \ The Journal of Portfolio Management\. It was also mentioned in
a Forbes publication with the chapter about Graham entitled \Value Avatar\.
I will correct myself on the point about bond yield. The original article simply states \the average
AAA bond yield\. I am not certain where I got in the practice of using the 5-year yield for this. Of
course, 7% compounded or doubled over ten years are pretty much equivalent. That said, he
definitely used the tangible book value.
I recall reading once that Rae and/or his son attempted to run money using the ten-point
checklist, but achieved lackluster results. I find it particularly intriguing to compare this checklist
to the list of criteria included in the later editions of \The Intelligent Investor\. It is important to
understand that this particular checklist was the result of conversations between Graham and
Rae. Some of the details were the result of compromises between the two of them.
Best wishes,
Eldinril
TMurphy
Graham also had another criteria that he discussed near the end of his life, he suggested
buying a large number (20+) of stocks that fell 50% below the high of the past 2 years. Hold
these shares until they have appreciated 50% or until two years have past. This buy criteria was
very helpful during the Sep 08 to Mch 09 period. Graham said most of the stocks bought using
this method would be extremely out of favor companies, the beauty of the 08/09 period was
that great companies met this buying guideline. Greatly enjoy your blog. Thx.
Eldinril
Thats right, TMurphy, and that really plays into the comment I made about this particular
checklist being the result of conversations between Graham and Rae. If I recall correctly,
Graham suggested using the criteria of a stock selling below 50% of its 2-year price high.7/10
Rae
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

wanted to use 33% of the 2-year P/E high. They compromised and used 40% of the 2-year P/E
high.
It seems to me that an analyst could use any of the three, or perhaps substitute in EPV or
Grahams Intrinsic Value formula, and achieve what Graham would call satisfactory results.
Best wishes,
Eldinril
dan mcintosh
I know Mark already asked this, and he was sort of answered, but I am curious of what type of
screener you are using and where to find it?
Thanks.
somrh
With respect to bond yields, there does seem to be a bit of interpretation there. Historical
records for government bond yields are available at the Treasury site, for example:
http://www.ustreas.gov/offices/domestic-finance/debt-management/interest-rate/yield.shtml
My thought would be that longer term yields would be more appropriate. Ive been using 10 year
bonds as a guide simply for the fact that I can get them easily here:
http://www.multpl.com/interest-rate/
This gives the following info:
Current Yield: 2.77%
Mean: 4.69%
Median: 3.84%
The 4.5% Jae uses seems reasonable according to historical averages. The only exception I
would make is that the mean is somewhat inflated as a result of the high yields in 70s/early
80s due to high inflation. If we expect the Fed to have a more conservative fiscal policy, then
the high inflation of the 70s (hopefully) wont return making the mean somewhat inflated.
If we wanted to adjust for inflation by hand we can look at TIPS for inflation adjusted yields. The
treasury supplies data for TIPS yields as well:
http://www.ustreas.gov/offices/domestic-finance/debt-management/interest-rate/real_yield.shtml
somrh
Also, the James Rea paper can be accessed here:
http://www.iijournals.com/doi/abs/10.3905/jpm.1977.66
Unfortunately, my university doesnt have online access to this so I havent had a chance to read
it. Anyone happen to have a copy or know where I can access it?
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

http://www.oldschoolvalue.com Jae Jun

8/10

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

Part spreadsheet, part custom made database to get all the data needed for the screens. Used
to use AAII historical data but too complicated. The RobotDough screener is a good start and
they will soon be implementing a backtester as well.
Eldinril
I would just like to say that I appreciate Somrhs comments. I sometimes use Moodys
Seasoned AAA Corporate Bond Yield, which is available on the St. Louis Feds website. Oddly
enough, the yield at the end of August was 4.49. Using the higher number will certainly result in
a more limited number of stocks.
I do use elements of this screen, but use alternate criteria instead of the \below 40% of the twoyear P/E high\ for valuation. I cannot recall when I decided to start using the 5-year Corporate
Bond rate for this screen, but have found that it provides reasonable results. For example, when
I limit myself to Moodys Seasoned AAA, I am limited to stocks such as BKE or JNJ. If I use the
5-year Corporate Bond Yield, the results also include stocks such as BDX and MSFT among
others. That said, the 10-year provides similar results. So, it boils down to a matter of personal
preference.
Best wishes,
Eldinril
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com Jae Jun
@ somrh,
Yea would be nice if someone has a copy of the James Rea article.
I would also much prefer to use a yield of 4.5% rather than anything lower. Just helps to limit the
results and a stock offering better yields than the current 2.x% is very important in my criteria.
Otherwise, I might as well buy the index rather than try to screen for individual stocks.
Daniel Cluley
Nice evaluation of a classic set of rules. I enjoy your analyses of value and dividend strategies.
For Bond Rates you can find historical rates from the St. Louis Fed here: for
AAA:http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/AAA/downloaddata?cid=119 and
Treasuryhttp://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/GS10/downloaddata?cid=115. I have not
updated in a couple months, but AAA historical Mean=5.91 Median=5.25 and 10 yr Treasury
Mean=4.7 Median=3.95. Typically I take a midpoint average of the Median and Mean for both in
calculating some of my formulae. According to the FRED Data over approximately 100 years
the historical AAA Rates are slightly higher than your 4.5% estimate at ~5.58% and 10 Yr
Treasuries are slightly lower at ~4.32% using the midpoint average of Mean and Median. Giving
an expected alternate _safe_ fixed income return of ~4.95%.
I think there are other factors you should take into account in your screen as well. The Main one
is dividend payout ratio. This must be looked at both quantitatively and qualitatively to ensure
http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/
9/10
that the expected dividend return will continue in the long run. Typically I look for <50% payout

06/11/2014

A Test of Graham's Stock Selection Criteria

ratio with rising dividends and NI that coincide with a typical long term inflation rate.
Additionally, I look for High FCF and ROE companies and always at the end take a look at
Dilution in the stock that may happen through adding Shares outstanding, stock options, and
pensions to ensure that future dividend revenue streams won't get spread out to others at my
detriment.
These times have other factors to take into account than just the numbers however. So relying
upon qualitative decisions about a company's future prospects such as management and
buffet's "wide moat" and constant demand are key as well.
Rob
I find it ironic that Graham fathered a number of successful investors that took his DNA and
expanded upon it. Buffett, Ruane, and Schloss all eventually differed in the style of stocks they
chose, the weighting of their portfolio, and when and why they sold/held.
I think the key is to take the best and forget the rest. I dont have an overly strict criteria
For me that begins with low P/E (hopefully) coupled with consistent EPS, compared next to low
P/S and consistent revenuse/sales, and ultimately the dividend. To steal a book title from
Geraldine Weiss, The Dividend doesnt lie and as long as the EPS and sales support the
payout Im generally going to buy.
A rising dividend and/or meaningful share buyback is a strong influence.
Insider buying/sales dont carry as much weight.
Debt is certainly important.
Cash/debt means more to me than book value.
Any inconsistencies can be forgiven even when they are cyclical. These hiccups in the data
usually influence the length of time I plan to hold, the amount of shares purchased or sold.

http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/investing-strategy/graham-stock-checklist-screen/

10/10

You might also like