Fundamental Stock Analysis
Stocknod Fundamental Analysis Research
Fundamentals are typically more closely tied to buy and hold investors, whereby
day traders use solely technical analysis and most swing traders use both fundamental
and technical stock analysis. Technical analysis is specifically important for
swing traders with a very short time horizon (that is, a couple of days or just
a few weeks). Most swing trading software uses only technical analysis but the
Stocknod neural network uses a blended custom recipe of both technical's and
fundamentals. Stock fundamental analysis can answer questions that are beyond
the scope of technical analysis, such as "Why is this security price moving?".
Stock Fundamental Analysis (Value, Growth, Income,
GARP, Quality)
Many people rightly believe that when you buy a share of stock you are buying
a proportional share in a business. As a consequence, to figure out how much the
stock is worth, you should determine how much the business is worth. Investors
generally do this by assessing the company's financial's in terms of per-share
values in order to calculate how much the proportional share of the business is
worth. This is known as "fundamental" analysis by some, and most who use it view it as the only kind of rational stock analysis.
Although analyzing a business might seem like a straightforward activity,
there are many flavors of fundamental analysis. Investors often create oppositions
and subcategories in order to better understand their specific investing philosophy.
In the end, most investors come up with an approach that is a blend of a number
of different approaches. Many of the distinctions are more academic inventions
than actual practical differences. For instance, value and growth have been
codified by economists who study the stock market even though market practitioners
do not find these labels to be quite as useful. In the following descriptions,
we will focus on what most investors mean when they use these labels, although
you always have to be careful to double-check what someone using them really
means.
Value. A cynic, as the saying goes,
is someone who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing. An investor's
purpose, though, should be to know both the price and the value of a company's
stock. The goal of the value investor is to purchase companies at a large discount
to their intrinsic value - what the business would be worth if it were sold
tomorrow. In a sense, all investors are "value" investors - they want
to buy a stock that is worth more than what they paid. Typically those who describe
themselves as value investors are focused on the liquidation value of a company,
or what it might be worth if all of its assets were sold tomorrow. However,
value can be a very confusing label as the idea of intrinsic value is not specifically
limited to the notion of liquidation value. Novices should understand that although
most value investors believe in certain things, not all who use the word "value"
mean the same thing.
The person viewed as providing the foundation for modern value investing is
Benjamin Graham, whose 1934 book Security Analysis (co-written with David Dodd)
is still widely used today. Other investors viewed as serious practitioners
of the value approach include Sir John Templeton and Michael Price. These value
investors tend to have very strict, absolute rules governing how they purchase
a company's stock. These rules are usually based on relationships between the
current market price of the company and certain business fundamentals. A few
examples include:
- Price/earnings rations (P/E)
- Dividend yields above a certain absolute limit
- Book value per share relative to the share price
- Total sales at a certain level relative to the company's market capitalization
of market value
Growth. Growth investing is the idea
that you should buy stock in companies whose potential for growth in sales and
earnings is excellent. Growth investors tend to focus more on the company's
value as an ongoing concern. Many plan to hold these stocks for long periods
of time, although this is not always the case. At a certain point, "growth"
as a label is as dysfunctional as "value," given that very few people
want to buy companies that are not growing.
Growth investors look at the underlying quality of the business and the rate
at which it is growing in order to analyze whether to buy it. Excited by new
companies, new industries, and new markets, growth investors normally buy companies
that they believe are capable of increasing sales, earnings, and other important
business metrics by a minimum amount each year. Growth is often discussed in
opposition to value, but sometimes the lines between the two approaches become
quite fuzzy in practice.
Income. Although today common stocks
are widely purchased by people who expect the shares to increase in value, there
are still many people who buy stocks primarily because of the stream of dividends
they generate. Called income investors, these individuals often entirely forego
companies whose shares have the possibility of capital appreciation for high-yielding
dividend-paying companies in slow-growth industries. These investors focus on
companies that pay high dividends like utilities and real estate investment
trusts (REITs), although many times they may invest in companies undergoing
significant business problems whose share prices have sunk so low that the dividend
yield is consequently very high.
Quality. Most investors today use a
hybrid of value, growth, and GARP approaches. These investors are looking for
high-quality businesses selling for "reasonable" prices. Although
they do not have any shorthand rules for what kind of numerical relationships
there should be between the share price and business fundamentals, they do share
a similar philosophy of looking at the company's valuation and at the inherent
quality of the company as measured both quantitatively by concepts like Return
on Equity (ROE) and qualitatively by the competence of management. Many of them
describe themselves as value investors, although they concentrate much more
on the value of the company as an ongoing concern rather than on liquidation
value.
Warren Buffett of Berkshire Hathaway is probably the most famous practitioner
of this approach. He studied under Benjamin Graham at Columbia Business School
but was eventually swayed by his partner, Charlie Munger, to also pay attention
to Phil Fisher's message of growth and quality.
GARP. Aside from being the name of the
title character played by Robin Williams in John Irving's The World According
to Garp, is an acronym for growth at a reasonable price. The world according
to GARP investors combines the value and growth approaches and adds a numerical
slant. Practitioners look for companies with solid growth prospects and current
share prices that do not reflect the intrinsic value of the business, getting
a "double play" as earnings increase and the price/earnings (P/E)
ratios at which those earnings are valued increase as well.
One of the most common GARP approaches is to buy stocks when the P/E ratio
is lower than the rate at which earnings per share can grow in the future. As
the company's earnings per share grow, the P/E of the company will fall if the
share price remains constant. Since fast-growing companies normally can sustain
high P/Es, the GARP investor is buying a company that will be cheap tomorrow
if the growth occurs as expected. If the growth does not come, however, the
GARP investor's perceived bargain can disappear very quickly.
Quantitative Stock Fundamental Analysis - Buying Based on Numbers
Pure quantitative analysts look only at numbers with almost no regard for the
underlying business. The more you find yourself talking about numbers, the more
likely you are to be using a purely quantitative approach. Although even fundamental
analysis requires some numerical inputs, the primary concern is always the underlying
business, focusing on things like management's expertise, the competitive environment,
the market potential for new products, and the like. Quantitative analysts view
these things as subjective judgments, and instead focus on the incontrovertible
objective data that can be analyzed.
In recent years as computers have been used to do a lot of number crunching,
many "quants," as they like to call themselves, have gone completely
native and will only buy and sell companies on a purely quantitative basis,
without regard for the actual business or the current valuation - a radical
departure from fundamental analysis. "Quants" will often mix in ideas
like a stock's relative strength, a measure of how well the stock has performed
relative to the market as a whole. Many investors believe that if they just
find the right kinds of numbers, they can always find winning investments.
Company Size. Some investors purposefully narrow their range of investments
to only companies of a certain size, measured either by market capitalization
or by revenues. The most common way to do this is to break up companies by market
capitalization and call them micro-caps, small-caps, mid-caps, and large-caps,
with "cap" being short for "capitalization." Different-size
companies have shown different returns over time, with the returns being higher
the smaller the company. Others believe that because a company's market capitalization
is as much a factor of the market's excitement about the company as it is the
size, revenues are a much better way to break up the company universe. Although
there is no set breakdown used by all investors, most distinctions look something
like this:
MICRO - $100 million or less
SMALL - $100 million to $500 million
MID - $500 million to $5 billion
LARGE - $5 billion or more
Arguments Against Quantitative Fundamental Stock Analysis.
Because quantitative analysis hinges on screens
that anyone can use, as computing horsepower becomes cheaper and cheaper many
of the pricing inefficiencies quantitative analysis finds are wiped out soon
after they are discovered. If a particular screen has generated 40% returns
per year and becomes widely known, and if lots of money flows into the companies
that the screen identifies, the returns will start to suffer.
As "fuzzy" as fundamental analysis might be, there are often times
that knowing even a little about the company you are buying can help a lot.
For instance, if you are using a high-relative-strength screen, you should always
check and see if the companies you find have risen in price because of a merger
or an acquisition. If this is the case, then the price will probably stay right
where it is, even if the "screen" you used to pick this company has
generated high annual returns in the past. All Stocknod fundamental
and technical analysis filters this "fuzzy" data which allows pinpointed
buy and entry signals for any market.
Stock Technical Analysis- What would you do if you truly believed
that all information about publicly traded companies was efficiently distributed
and that nobody could get an edge on anyone else by either understanding the
business or analyzing the numbers? You might consider simply giving up on beating
the market's returns by buying an index fund. Some investors have taken an alternate
route to find this technical stock analysis. There are several technical analysis
software programs available, but all require a steep learning curve and long
hours of tedious homework.

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