Welcome

Welcome to the Hannover House Investor Relations Blog

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Value vs. PPS? Big winners look at the long game, says Warren Buffett

Greetings HHSE Friends & Followers -  If you google "Warren Buffett investment strategy," you will most likely get the statement below or some variation to come up at the top of the search:


Warren Buffett's investing strategy is value investing. Value investing involves selecting stocks whose share price is trading below its intrinsic value or book value.


Mr. Buffett's Berkshire-Hathaway looks at the direction of a company and where they fit into the marketplace as well as their inherent value... as opposed to looking at the momentary / daily / weekly fluctuations in share price. This "long view" has taken the emotional-panic out of the equation and enabled Berkshire Hathaway to become one of the world's largest and most successful investment funds.


Over the past few weeks, there have been some emotional-panic sellers of HHSE, which we believe is supremely unfortunate for them.... but a windfall for those who snapped up these shares from weaker hands.  As HHSE steps into the commercial phase of MyFlix - along with the stock registration - many stock and entertainment analysts have provided extraordinary predictions for the potential impact to the HHSE share price... ranging from a PPS of $.10 to as high as $1.00 per share. Will these stock and industry analysts prove correct?  Time will tell.  


But we do know this:  Warren Buffett would never sell a stock poised for greatness (as we feel HHSE is) just because a few impatient shareholders poorly timed the sale of their holdings.  As Buffett said on a recent CNBC interview: "I'm happy when the stock of a company I hold goes down in price, because then I can buy more!


Just food for thought.  HHSE management cannot provide stock buying or selling advice. But we can remind shareholders of what the company has already achieved in our pre-registration "corporate clean-up" and our exciting MyFlix model for the future. 


Who knows? Maybe someday Berkshire Hathaway will take a look our way, too?