The Little Book That Beats the Market — Complete Implementation Specification

Author: Joel Greenblatt First Published: 2005 Core Strategy: The Magic Formula — a simple, mechanical quantitative value investing strategy that combines high earnings yield with high return on capital to identify good companies at bargain prices.


Table of Contents

  1. Philosophy Overview
  2. The Magic Formula — Core Methodology
  3. Earnings Yield Calculation
  4. Return on Capital Calculation
  5. The Ranking and Selection System
  6. Entry and Exit Rules
  7. Portfolio Construction
  8. Risk Management Rules
  9. Behavioral Rules
  10. Common Mistakes
  11. Trade Lifecycle Example
  12. Key Quotes

1. Philosophy Overview

Joel Greenblatt's genius lies in distillation. He takes the essence of value investing — buying above-average businesses at below-average prices — and reduces it to two measurable variables that can be applied mechanically. The Magic Formula is designed to be simple enough for individual investors to implement, yet rigorous enough to outperform professional money managers over time.

The Core Insight

Value investing works because the market is frequently irrational in the short term. Prices deviate from intrinsic value due to emotional overreaction, institutional constraints, and behavioral biases. The Magic Formula exploits this by systematically identifying companies that are:

  1. Good businesses (high return on capital employed)
  2. Available at bargain prices (high earnings yield)

The combination is crucial. Cheap companies that are bad businesses (value traps) are filtered out by the return on capital requirement. Good companies that are expensive (growth traps) are filtered out by the earnings yield requirement. Only companies that score well on BOTH dimensions make the cut.

Why It Works — Greenblatt's Argument

Factor Explanation
Short-term inefficiency Markets misprice stocks over 1-3 year periods due to overreaction to bad news, neglect, institutional selling pressure
Long-term efficiency Over 3-5 years, prices converge toward intrinsic value as fundamentals become undeniable
Behavioral barriers The formula works precisely because it is uncomfortable — it forces you to buy unloved stocks and hold through underperformance
Simplicity barrier Most professionals cannot justify a "simple" strategy to their boards and clients — complexity bias creates opportunity

Historical Performance (Greenblatt's Backtest)


2. The Magic Formula — Core Methodology

2.1 The Two Factors

Factor Metric What It Measures Why It Matters
Earnings Yield EBIT / Enterprise Value How cheap the stock is relative to its earnings power Identifies bargain prices
Return on Capital EBIT / (Net Working Capital + Net Fixed Assets) How efficiently the business converts invested capital into earnings Identifies good businesses

2.2 Why EBIT and Enterprise Value (Not P/E Ratio)

Greenblatt deliberately avoids the traditional P/E ratio because:

P/E problems:

EBIT / EV advantages:

2.3 Why Tangible Capital (Not Total Assets or Equity)

Traditional return on equity (ROE) is distorted by leverage — a company can have high ROE simply by taking on debt. Greenblatt's return on capital uses tangible operating assets:


3. Earnings Yield Calculation

3.1 Formula

Earnings Yield = EBIT / Enterprise Value

Where:

3.2 Detailed Component Definitions

EBIT:

Enterprise Value:

3.3 Interpretation

Earnings Yield Interpretation
> 15% Very cheap — strong bargain candidate
10-15% Cheap — good value territory
7-10% Moderate — fair value range
4-7% Expensive — growth expectations priced in
< 4% Very expensive — requires high growth to justify

3.4 Comparison Benchmark

Compare earnings yield to the risk-free rate (10-year Treasury yield):


4. Return on Capital Calculation

4.1 Formula

Return on Capital = EBIT / (Net Working Capital + Net Fixed Assets)

Where:

4.2 Tangible Capital Employed

The denominator represents the tangible capital the business needs to operate:

4.3 Interpretation

Return on Capital Interpretation
> 50% Exceptional — likely has a strong moat (brand, network effects, or asset-light model)
25-50% Excellent — strong competitive position
15-25% Good — above-average business quality
10-15% Average — typical business
< 10% Below average — commodity business or competitive challenges

4.4 What High Return on Capital Signals

A business with consistently high return on tangible capital is telling you:

  1. It has pricing power (customers are willing to pay premium prices)
  2. It operates efficiently (low capital requirements relative to earnings)
  3. It likely has a competitive moat (otherwise competition would erode returns)
  4. It can reinvest profits at attractive rates (growth creates value)

5. The Ranking and Selection System

5.1 The Dual Ranking Process

This is the mechanical core of the Magic Formula:

Step 1: Start with the investable universe (all stocks meeting minimum criteria)

Step 2: Rank ALL companies by Earnings Yield (highest = Rank 1, lowest = Rank N)

Step 3: Rank ALL companies by Return on Capital (highest = Rank 1, lowest = Rank N)

Step 4: Calculate Combined Rank = Earnings Yield Rank + Return on Capital Rank

Step 5: Sort by Combined Rank (lowest combined rank = best overall score)

Step 6: Select the top 20-30 companies

5.2 Universe Filtering — Exclusions

Before ranking, exclude:

Excluded Category Reason
Financial companies (banks, insurance, REITs) Their capital structure makes EBIT/EV and ROC meaningless
Utilities Regulated returns make ROC analysis unreliable
Foreign ADRs Accounting differences and data quality issues
Companies with market cap < $50M (or < $200M for conservative approach) Liquidity and data reliability concerns
Companies with negative EBIT By definition cannot rank on earnings yield

5.3 Ranking Example

Company EY Rank ROC Rank Combined Rank Selected?
Company A 5 12 17 Yes (Top 30)
Company B 150 2 152 No (good but expensive)
Company C 3 200 203 No (cheap but bad)
Company D 8 8 16 Yes (Top 30)
Company E 25 5 30 Yes (Top 30)

The formula naturally avoids:


6. Entry and Exit Rules

6.1 Entry Rules

Timing — Staggered Entry:

Greenblatt recommends building the portfolio over time to avoid single-point-in-time risk:

  1. Invest approximately 20-33% of allocated capital every 2-3 months
  2. Over 9-12 months, you will have a fully invested portfolio of 20-30 stocks
  3. Each "batch" of 5-7 stocks is selected from the current top-ranked list

Alternative — All-at-Once Entry:

6.2 Exit Rules — Strict Annual Rebalancing

The exit discipline is completely mechanical:

For tax-loss positions (losing stocks):

For winning positions:

Critical rule: Do NOT hold a stock beyond the rebalancing date just because you "like" it. The system is mechanical. If a stock is still top-ranked after one year, it will naturally be repurchased.

6.3 Rebalancing Frequency

Approach Frequency Pros Cons
Annual (recommended) Once per year Tax efficient, low turnover, fewer transaction costs Full year of holding; some positions may deteriorate
Semi-annual Twice per year Faster adaptation to changing fundamentals Higher transaction costs, more short-term gains
Quarterly Four times per year Most responsive Highest costs, most taxable events, noise trading

Greenblatt's recommendation: Annual rebalancing with staggered entry (so you rebalance roughly monthly, but each position is held for ~1 year).


7. Portfolio Construction

7.1 Position Sizing

Equal weight: Allocate equal dollar amounts to each position.

Portfolio Size Stocks Weight Per Stock
Minimum viable 20 5.0% each
Recommended 30 3.3% each
Maximum 30 3.3% each

Why equal weight (not conviction-based):

7.2 Portfolio Turnover

7.3 Cash Management

7.4 Sector Concentration

The formula may produce sector-concentrated portfolios in certain market conditions (e.g., many energy stocks when oil is cheap). Greenblatt does NOT recommend sector caps, as the concentration is a feature of finding the best opportunities. However, conservative investors may choose to:


8. Risk Management Rules

8.1 Primary Risk Controls

  1. Diversification: 20-30 stocks eliminates single-stock risk
  2. Mechanical discipline: Rules-based system prevents emotional decision-making
  3. Annual rebalancing: Forces exit from deteriorating positions
  4. Quality filter: Return on capital requirement screens out low-quality value traps
  5. Universe filter: Minimum market cap eliminates micro-cap risks

8.2 Expected Drawdowns

Critical understanding: The Magic Formula WILL underperform the market for extended periods.

8.3 Tracking Error Risk

This is the biggest practical risk — not losing money, but underperforming the market:

Underperformance Period Expected Frequency Behavioral Challenge
1 quarter Very common Mild discomfort
1 year ~25% of years Serious doubt
2 consecutive years Occurs periodically Strong temptation to abandon
3 consecutive years Rare but possible Most investors capitulate here

The investors who succeed are those who maintain discipline through underperformance periods.

8.4 What the Formula Does NOT Protect Against


9. Behavioral Rules

9.1 The Most Important Rule: Follow the System

Greenblatt emphasizes that the formula's edge comes precisely from the discomfort it creates. The stocks it selects are unloved, out-of-favor, and often have negative news flow. Buying them FEELS wrong. This is why the formula works — most people cannot do it.

9.2 Rules for Maintaining Discipline

  1. Do not override the formula: If a stock appears on the top-ranked list, buy it regardless of your personal feelings about the company
  2. Do not hold winners beyond rebalancing date: "Falling in love" with a position undermines the mechanical system
  3. Do not sell early due to bad news: Unless the rebalancing date has arrived, hold the position
  4. Do not check daily performance: Review portfolio no more than monthly; preferably quarterly
  5. Do not compare to the market daily: Judge results over 3-5 year periods only
  6. Do not tinker with the formula: Adding subjective filters degrades the system's effectiveness

9.3 The Commitment Contract

Before starting, write and sign:

"I commit to following the Magic Formula for a minimum of 3 years. I will buy the top-ranked stocks. I will rebalance annually. I will not override the system. I understand the formula will underperform in approximately 1 out of 4 years. I will judge results only after the 3-year minimum period."

9.4 What To Do When the Formula Underperforms

  1. Re-read Chapter 13 of the book (Greenblatt's explanation of why patience is required)
  2. Review the long-term historical evidence
  3. Remember: the formula works BECAUSE it is hard. If it were easy, everyone would do it, and the edge would disappear
  4. Talk to your "investment buddy" (someone who also follows the system)
  5. Do NOT look at what you "would have" made in the S&P 500

10. Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Cherry-Picking from the Ranked List

Mistake 2: Abandoning the Strategy After 1-2 Years of Underperformance

Mistake 3: Using Reported Earnings Instead of EBIT

Mistake 4: Applying the Formula to Financials and Utilities

Mistake 5: Running the Formula with Too Few Stocks

Mistake 6: Rebalancing Too Frequently

Mistake 7: Attempting to Time Entry


11. Trade Lifecycle Example

Initial Setup (January Year 1)

Capital: $100,000 allocated to the Magic Formula strategy. Plan: Staggered entry over 3 months, ~10 stocks per batch, 30 total stocks.

Month 1: First Batch

  1. Screen universe: All US stocks > $200M market cap, excluding financials/utilities
  2. Calculate EBIT/EV and EBIT/Tangible Capital for all qualifying companies
  3. Rank by Earnings Yield (assign rank 1 to N)
  4. Rank by Return on Capital (assign rank 1 to N)
  5. Add ranks to get Combined Score
  6. Sort by Combined Score (lowest = best)
  7. Select top 10 stocks from current ranking
Rank Company EY Rank ROC Rank Combined Allocation
1 AutoParts Co 8 3 11 $3,333
2 Software Inc 15 1 16 $3,333
3 Retail Chain 4 14 18 $3,333
4 Pharma Corp 6 15 21 $3,333
5 Media Group 2 22 24 $3,333
6 Tech Services 20 5 25 $3,333
7 Consumer Brand 12 16 28 $3,333
8 Industrial Co 7 23 30 $3,333
9 Health Devices 25 7 32 $3,333
10 Energy Equip 3 30 33 $3,333

Total invested: $33,330. Remaining: $66,670 in money market.

Month 2: Second Batch

Repeat ranking process. Select next 10 stocks (may overlap with Month 1 if still top-ranked). Invest another $33,330.

Month 3: Third Batch

Repeat. Portfolio now holds 30 stocks at approximately $3,333 each. Fully invested.

Month 6: Mid-Year Review (Observation Only)

Month 12: First Rebalancing (December Year 1)

Tax-aware rebalancing of the January batch (10 stocks):

Stock Return Action Tax Treatment
AutoParts Co +22% Sell AFTER Jan 1 (long-term gains) Wait 2 more weeks
Software Inc +45% Sell AFTER Jan 1 (long-term gains) Wait 2 more weeks
Retail Chain -30% Sell NOW (short-term loss for tax benefit) Sell immediately
Pharma Corp +8% Sell AFTER Jan 1 (long-term gains) Wait 2 more weeks
Media Group -15% Sell NOW (short-term loss for tax benefit) Sell immediately
Tech Services +35% Sell AFTER Jan 1 (long-term gains) Wait 2 more weeks
Consumer Brand +12% Sell AFTER Jan 1 (long-term gains) Wait 2 more weeks
Industrial Co -5% Sell NOW (short-term loss for tax benefit) Sell immediately
Health Devices +55% Sell AFTER Jan 1 (long-term gains) Wait 2 more weeks
Energy Equip -20% Sell NOW (short-term loss for tax benefit) Sell immediately

Sell 4 losers immediately. Wait 2 weeks to sell 6 winners. Replace all 10 with current top-ranked stocks from new screening.

Year 1 Results

Year 3 Results

13. Key Quotes

"The magic formula works because it's a systematic way of buying above-average companies at below-average prices."

"The formula will not work every year. That's a guarantee. And it's exactly WHY it works over the long term."

"Choosing individual stocks without any idea of what you're looking for is like running through a dynamite factory with a burning match. You may live, but you're still an idiot."

"If the formula worked every single year, everyone would use it, and it would stop working. The periods of underperformance are what keep it effective."

"The secret to investing is to figure out the value of something — and then pay a lot less."

"Most people rank things: they want the best. Well, the magic formula just uses two simple rankings and combines them. That's it. It's elegant because of what it leaves out."

"The formula has beaten the market averages over every measurable period of three years or more. But very few people will have the discipline to stick with it."

"Ben Graham figured out that cheaply priced stocks as a group beat the market averages over time. The magic formula just adds the insight that cheaply priced GOOD businesses do even better."

"You can either follow the formula mechanically, or you can use the formula's output as a starting point for your own research. Either way, it gives you a huge head start."

"In the short run, Mr. Market is a voting machine. In the long run, he is a weighing machine. The magic formula is designed to buy what the weighing machine will eventually reward."


Implementation based on "The Little Book That Beats the Market" by Joel Greenblatt. This specification captures the complete Magic Formula system — a mechanical, quantitative value investing strategy designed for individual investors seeking market-beating returns through disciplined, rules-based investing.