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The Everest Formula

how it works

The Everest Formula is a quantitative value investing algorithm that seeks out good businesses when they are available at bargain prices.

The algorithm is linked to an investing strategy (The Everest Strategy) that periodically rotates the best stocks computed by the formula.

Backtest results have shown that the Everest Strategy is a winning strategy over the last 20+ years, returning an astounding 30%+ of average annual returns, even in periods when value stocks underperformed growth stocks. See the results

Formula overview

The Selection Process

The algorithm goes through 4 different steps to extract the best companies to invest in:

01

Precision filter

The first step consists in removing all the stocks that might have misleading or inaccurate data for a quantitative strategy, minimizing investing mistakes.

02

Quality filter

The aim of the formula is to find companies with a solid return on investments made, and a good management team. Consequently, this filter selects only the stocks which meet these criteria, valued with a host of quality metrics.

03

Valuation Filter

The second purpose of the formula is to find businesses that can be purchased at a good price. Therefore, this filter selects only the stocks which respect our meticulous valuation criteria.

04

Valuation Rank

Finally, the remaining stocks are ranked based on our most important valuation metric. The first ranked stocks will give you the best results!

Steps insights

How to apply the strategy

Step 1

Choose the number of stocks to have in your Portfolio

Select the top stocks suggested by the Formula. More stocks offer less volatility, whereas fewer stocks offer more return. The strategy backtests suggest to keep this number between 3 and 10.

Step 2

Buy the Stocks on your favourite broker

Check out on the Everest screener what are the target n stocks to buy, with n as the number you have chosen in step 1.

Make the purchase with your broker, by equally dividing your portfolio among the selected number of stocks.

Step 3

Weekly update your Portfolio

Once a week, check (from the screener or the newsletter) that the stocks in your portfolio are still the top ranked. 

If not, sell those that are exiting and buy the stocks that replaced them, rebalancing all the stocks in order to be equally weighted.

Need more explanations? Consult the​ Faq

BACKTESTS FROM 1999

The Results