• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

The 10 Absolute Cheapest New Cars You Can Buy Right Now

March 10, 2026

How to Develop the Top 10 Skills Recruiters Actually Care About

March 10, 2026

Cut Hidden ‘Vampire Power’ and Slash Your Electric Bill: Unplug These 12 Common Household Items

March 10, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • The 10 Absolute Cheapest New Cars You Can Buy Right Now
  • How to Develop the Top 10 Skills Recruiters Actually Care About
  • Cut Hidden ‘Vampire Power’ and Slash Your Electric Bill: Unplug These 12 Common Household Items
  • The Smartest Founders Aren’t Chasing Venture Capital — They’re Doing These 5 Things First
  • How He Took This Product From Garage Hack to 290 Million Sold
  • 5 Tax Moves Entrepreneurs Should Make in 2026 to Build Wealth and Protect Their Estate
  • 5 AI Tools to Run a 1-Person Business While You Sleep (While Millions of ChatGPT Users Flee to Claude)
  • Trump’s New Businesses Are Making Billions. Are His Investors Making a Dime?
Wednesday, March 11
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Indenta
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Indenta
Home » Kraft Heinz And Capital One Look Good Based On Book Value
Investing

Kraft Heinz And Capital One Look Good Based On Book Value

News RoomBy News RoomNovember 13, 20236 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

I believe that the value approach to investing is in the early stages of a comeback, after a decade in retreat.

Roughly speaking and oversimplifying, value was usually a good stock-picking method from 1930 to 2013. Since then, growth and momentum investors have smiled, while value investors have wept.

A stock is a value if its price is low compared to some measure of its intrinsic worth. Book value, earnings, and revenue are the three most common measures.

Once a year, I write about stocks that look great based on the price-to-book value ratio. Book value is a company’s net worth – the sum of its assets minus the sum of its liabilities.

Beginning in 1998, I’ve written 24 columns about stocks selling at or below book value. My previous picks have averaged a 12-month return of 18.2%%. That decisively beats the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, which was up 11.9% per year on average.

Bear in mind that column results are hypothetical and shouldn’t be confused with results I obtain for clients. Also, past performance doesn’t predict the future.

The tabulation of past results includes a column I wrote in 2009, which was mistakenly omitted from previous tabulations. That year, my picks were up 70.7%, led by Dow
DOW
Chemical (now Dow Inc.). The S&P 500 was up 42.4% as the market recovered from the Great Recession.

Here are five new picks of stocks I like, selling for book value per share or less.

Kraft Heinz

Kraft Heinz Co. (KHC), which makes the ketchup you use and the macaroni and cheese your kid eats, is selling for only 82% of book value. I consider anything under 2 times book to be reasonably priced and anything under book value to be cheap.

The stock has done poorly since 2017, and is down about 19% this year. But it increased its earnings by almost 12% in the past four quarters, has well-recognized brands (Kraft, Heinz, Velveeta, Philadelphia) and is held by Warren Buffett, who is widely considered the best living U.S. investor.

Also, Kraft Heinz yields about 4.8% in dividends, which is nothing to sneeze at.

Capital One
COF

Capital One Financial Corp., best known as a major credit-card issuer, is selling for 74% of books value. I think that people fear a rise in credit-card delinquencies. A rise is indeed in progress, but it’s not bad so far, and Capital One has fewer delinquencies than many of its competitors.

Based in McLean, Virginia, Capital One is the 12th largest bank in the U.S. ranked by assets, and the third-largest credit-card issuer. It is also a major auto lender.

For banks, I like to see a return on assets above 1%. Capital One has been in my preferred zone in 11 of the past 15 years.

This is a repeat pick from last year.

Gates Industrial

A mid-sized stock that looks interesting is Gates Industrial Corp. (GTES). Headquartered in Denver, Colorado, the company makes power-transmission and flow-control equipment. It has an all-star customer list including Chevron
CVX
, Exxon Mobil, Ford, General Electric
GE
, Toyota, and Volkswagen.

Gates has been profitable eight years in a row, with handsome profits some years and mediocre ones in others. The stock sells for just under book value.

Topgolf Callaway

Topgolf Callaway Brands Corp. (MODG) was formed by the merger in 2020 of Callaway Golf Co. and Topgolf Entertainment Group. The company, which hails from Carlsbad, California, is the world’s largest maker of golf clubs and sells in some 70 countries.

The stock has been cut in half in the past five years, and now sells for about $10 a share, which is only half of book value. The Altman index, a measure of bankruptcy risk, puts the company in the “distress” zone.

This is a high-risk situation, but I think the company will survive and might thrive. Golf has enduring appeal, and Callaway has managed 6% annual average revenue growth over the past decade (close to 9% last year).

Select Water

A small stock that intrigues me is Select Water Solutions Inc. (WTTR), out of Houston, Texas. It offers water treatment and recycling for customers in the energy industry. Among its customers are ExxonMobil
XOM
, Chevron, Devon Energy
DVN
, and Occidental Petroleum
OXY
.

Earnings have been spotty, but seem to be in an uptrend. The stock sells for exactly book value.

Last Year

My low-price-to-book picks from a year ago fizzled, due mostly to a 27% loss in Fulgent Genetics Inc. (FLGT). Capital One lost 4%. On the plus side, WestRock
WRK
Co. (WRK) gained 7% and Kelly Services Inc. returned 20%.

The net result was a loss of 1.08%, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 Total Return Index gained 13.42%.

Disclosure: Jingshu Zhang, a portfolio manager at my firm, owns Kraft Heinz personally and for his clients, and Capital One personally.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

How He Took This Product From Garage Hack to 290 Million Sold

Investing March 10, 2026

Upgrade Your Business Operating System for Just $13

Investing March 9, 2026

Boost Your Workflow With These 8 Must-Have Microsoft Apps

Investing March 8, 2026

Mindset Shift That Will Boost Your Cash Flow in 2026

Investing March 7, 2026

He Took Nature’s Pantry From Side Hustle to a $3 Million Business

Investing March 6, 2026

Why Transferable Skills Are a Game-Changer in Startups Today

Investing March 5, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

How to Develop the Top 10 Skills Recruiters Actually Care About

March 10, 20262 Views

Cut Hidden ‘Vampire Power’ and Slash Your Electric Bill: Unplug These 12 Common Household Items

March 10, 20260 Views

The Smartest Founders Aren’t Chasing Venture Capital — They’re Doing These 5 Things First

March 10, 20261 Views

How He Took This Product From Garage Hack to 290 Million Sold

March 10, 20262 Views
Don't Miss

5 Tax Moves Entrepreneurs Should Make in 2026 to Build Wealth and Protect Their Estate

By News RoomMarch 10, 2026

Entrepreneur The tax law is always changing. Your tax strategy needs to keep up. In…

5 AI Tools to Run a 1-Person Business While You Sleep (While Millions of ChatGPT Users Flee to Claude)

March 10, 2026

Trump’s New Businesses Are Making Billions. Are His Investors Making a Dime?

March 9, 2026

Why a Job Loss Still Feels Like a Dirty Secret, According to Workers

March 9, 2026
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

The 10 Absolute Cheapest New Cars You Can Buy Right Now

March 10, 2026

How to Develop the Top 10 Skills Recruiters Actually Care About

March 10, 2026

Cut Hidden ‘Vampire Power’ and Slash Your Electric Bill: Unplug These 12 Common Household Items

March 10, 2026
Most Popular

Here’s what the Israel-Hamas war has done to U.S. gasoline and diesel prices

October 22, 20235 Views

Low Mississippi water levels spark concern for farmers, could divert grain shipments to rail and truck

October 8, 20234 Views

Top Jobs That Require No Experience and How to Land One

September 7, 20234 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 Inodebta. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.