August 12, 2008 at 1:00 am by Tom Lydon
Benjamin Graham, the forefather of value investing, is the inspiration for a few exchange traded notes (ETNs) based on his beliefs. The ETNs will seek to track companies with strong, liquid balance sheets, and must trade at a discount to the implied intrinsic value, says the provider, Deutsche Bank.
John Spence for MarketWatch explains that Benjamin Graham was a legendary investor who co-authored a famous textbook “Security Analysis” and wrote “The Intelligent Investor.” His best-known disciple is Warren Buffett, who has called “The Intelligent Investor” the best book about investing every written.
A major theme with Graham was telling the difference between investing and speculation. Graham passed away in 1976, but his legacy in investing still speaks.
The ETNs use seven major factors to identify value stocks: earnings quality, valuation, forward price-to-earnings ratio, dividend yield, profitability, debt and measurements relative to industry peers.
HydePark of Nuveen Investments are the creators of the Benjamin Graham Intelligent Value Indexes. Deutsche Bank is the provider of these three new ETNs:




