====== Growth at a Reasonable Price (GARP) ====== Growth at a Reasonable Price (GARP) is a popular investment strategy that blends the best of two worlds: [[growth investing]] and [[value investing]]. Think of it as the sensible center ground in the often-polarized debate between buying fast-growing companies and buying cheap ones. GARP investors are treasure hunters looking for businesses that are expanding at an above-average pace, but they refuse to pay the sky-high prices often attached to Wall Street's darlings. They want the sizzle of growth without getting burned by an outrageous bill. This hybrid approach seeks to capture the upside of growing companies while maintaining the discipline of value investing, thus creating a built-in [[margin of safety]]. The strategy was famously popularized by legendary fund manager [[Peter Lynch]], who used it to achieve one of the most successful track records in investment history with his Magellan Fund. ===== The GARP Philosophy: Quality Comes First, Price is a Close Second ===== At its heart, GARP is a quest for quality businesses on a steady upward trajectory, purchased at a sensible valuation. Unlike "deep value" investors who might buy a statistically cheap but struggling company (a "cigar butt," in [[Warren Buffett]]'s old parlance), a GARP investor insists on seeing a clear path for future growth. Conversely, unlike pure growth investors who might chase a hot stock with a triple-digit [[Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio]], the GARP practitioner gets nervous when a valuation seems detached from reality. The goal is to sidestep two of investing's biggest traps: * //The Value Trap:// Buying a stock that is cheap for a very good reason—because its business is fundamentally broken—and it just keeps getting cheaper. * //The Growth Trap:// Overpaying for a popular growth stock, only to see its price collapse when its high-flying growth rate inevitably slows down. The [[Dot-com bubble]] of the late 1990s was a graveyard for investors who ignored this risk. GARP investing is about finding that sweet spot: a wonderful company at a fair price, not a fair company at a wonderful price. ===== The GARP Investor's Toolkit ===== While GARP is as much an art as a science, investors use a few key metrics to screen for potential opportunities. ==== The Star of the Show: The PEG Ratio ==== The most famous tool in the GARP arsenal is the [[PEG ratio]] (Price/Earnings to Growth). It’s a wonderfully simple metric that provides a more complete picture than the P/E ratio alone by factoring in the company's growth rate. The formula is: **PEG Ratio = P/E Ratio / Annual [[Earnings per share (EPS)]] Growth Rate (%)** - A PEG ratio of **1.0** is often seen as a benchmark, suggesting the stock's valuation is in line with its growth. - A PEG ratio **below 1.0** can indicate that a stock might be undervalued relative to its growth prospects—a potential green light for a GARP investor. - A PEG ratio **significantly above 1.5 or 2.0** might signal that the stock is too expensive, even for a fast-growing company. For example, imagine two companies: * **Company A:** P/E of 15, expected EPS growth of 15%. Its PEG ratio is 15 / 15 = **1.0**. Looks reasonable. * **Company B:** P/E of 40, expected EPS growth of 20%. Its PEG ratio is 40 / 20 = **2.0**. A GARP investor would likely find this too pricey. ==== Beyond the Numbers ==== A low PEG ratio is a great starting point, but true GARP analysis goes deeper. Investors also look for qualitative signs of a high-quality business. These often include: * **A Durable Competitive Advantage:** Often called an economic [[moat]], this is a unique edge (like a strong brand, network effect, or patent) that protects the company from competitors. * **Strong and Honest Management:** A leadership team with a track record of allocating capital wisely and acting in the best interests of shareholders. * **Solid Financial Health:** A strong balance sheet with manageable debt and consistent, healthy free cash flow. ===== The Capipedia Takeaway ===== GARP is a disciplined, common-sense strategy that can protect investors from the market's worst excesses. By demanding growth but refusing to overpay for it, you can build a portfolio of high-quality companies with the potential for solid, long-term returns. It’s a strategy that embraces the core philosophy of [[value investing]] as taught by [[Benjamin Graham]]—always insist on a margin of safety—while recognizing that a company's ability to grow its [[intrinsic value]] over time is a key driver of returns. For the everyday investor, GARP provides a robust and less volatile path to wealth creation. It’s not about swinging for the fences every time; it’s about consistently hitting singles and doubles, which is often the surest way to win the game.