What is Tenbagger

A tenbagger is an investment that appreciates to 10 times its initial purchase price. The term “tenbagger” was coined by legendary fund manager Peter Lynch in his book "One Up On Wall Street." While tenbagger can describe any investment that appreciates or has the potential to increase ten-fold, it is usually used to describe stocks with explosive growth prospects. Lynch coined the term because he is an avid baseball fan, and “bag” is a colloquial term for base; thus “tenbagger” represents two home runs and a double, or the stock equivalent of a hugely successful baseball play.

BREAKING DOWN Tenbagger

Peter Lynch identified and invested in numerous tenbaggers when he was manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund from 1977 to 1990. As a result, the Magellan Fund grew from $18 million in assets when Lynch took it over to $19 billion when he left in 1990. Over this period, Lynch achieved a 29.2 percent average annual rate of return, which meant that $1,000 invested when Lynch started managing the fund in 1977 would have grown to $28,000 by the time he left it in 1990.

Lynch preferred stocks that had a price-to-earnings ratio below the industry mean and less than its five-year average. He also looked for stocks where the five-year growth rate in operating earnings per share (EPS) was high but below 50 percent. His reasoning was that such earnings growth rates were not only unsustainable, but companies growing at this pace would attract competition.

In a PBS interview in 1996, Lynch cited Wal-Mart as an example of a tenbagger that investors had plenty of time to buy. He said that investors who had purchased Wal-Mart 10 years after it went public in 1970 would have still made 30 times their money.

Discovering a Tenbagger

When searching for the next tenbagger, investors might consider looking for the following types of situations:

  1. Novel Technology: Technology is what drives the stock market. Early investors into leading high tech companies have made huge amounts of money. However, not all types of technology fit the bill. Investment-worthy technology needs to have a huge potential user base, be easily adaptable by the masses and be something that people use.
  2. Societal Mega-Trends: Following societal megatrends is a key element of many tenbagger stocks. The more people are adopting a novel technology, the more it should matter to potential investors.
  3. Sovereign Action: Sovereign or governmental action can have a huge effect on stock prices.  Regulations and new laws can create and destroy markets and even trends. It is critical that a potential tenbagger be supported by, or at least not be impeded by, government regulations.
  4. New Products: Just like new technologies, companies with new products that fit into mega-trends have a strong chance to become ten baggers. Look for novel products that fill a need created by companies with the ability to produce and market.
  1. Investor interest: Many people seem to think it's best to locate stocks that no one else knows about.  While finding a quality hidden gem is possible, it's not a reliable indicator of potential tenbagger performance.