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Boyar Asset Management focuses on investing in the equity securities of intrinsically undervalued companies.
"The World According to Boyar podcast brings top investors, best selling authors, and market newsmakers to show you the smartest ways to uncover value in the stock market."
We were honored when Kate Welling of Welling on Wall Street asked us if we would like to be interviewed for her insightful publication (we are loyal readers). The 15-page interview was far-ranging and discussed such topics as:
1. Our recently released annual thematic piece titled How to Profit from Uncertainty;
2. Our investment strategy;
3. Some of our current favorite stock ideas;
4. Behavioral finance;
5. How we believe the current political landscape will impact the economy.
To read the interview in its entirety, please click here.
Below please find the introduction to Kate’s interview. To learn more about Welling on Wall Street, please click here.
Uncertainty. It’s hard to remember already, but that was the dominant trope in the market even before Tuesday’s election upended much of what the chattering class (manifestly including me) thought they knew about this fair land’s economic and political outlook. Which is why I was drawn to interviewing this week’s dynamic duo, the father-son team of Mark and Jonathan Boyar at their eponymous Boyar Value Group. Just a month or so ago, they issued a thought-provoking piece of in-depth investment research, modestly entitled, “Boyar’s Guide to Profiting From Uncertainty.” Mark, is an iconoclastic value investor of the old school whom I have known, well, forever. Incredibly precise, detailed and thoughtful in his research, he’s stubborn enough to hold onto his painstakingly vetted ideas until they bear fruit. Mark has been a securities analyst since 1968 and has been actively managing money since 1975 — accumulating reams and reams of clippings of interviews in Barron’s and all the rest of the financial media sphere over the years. Not to mention a money management record that has created great loyalty among his clients. Jonathan, trained as a lawyer but a finance aficionado at heart, I only met recently. But he’s been working in the family firm since 2008 — after some early tutelage under Mario Gabelli — and seems as much a born value guy as his old man. The two are convinced they’ve found an enduring edge in scooping up quality assets when they are temporarily tossed on the bargain counter by the ebb and flow outrageous fortune. Since we’ve seen a lot of that lately, seems a good idea to listen in.