Monday, March 3, 2008

How to Analyze Stocks

  • Company and Industry Overview

Find out something about the company’s business and its industry.
It may be in a business or market sector that you favor or that you want to avoid. For instance, the home building industry usually prospers when interest rates drop and suffers in a rising interest rate environment. So your take on the future direction of interest rates would influence how you view homebuilders.

  • Market Capitalization

Market capitalization defines a company’s total value (share price multiplied by number of shares). The biggest firms are designated large-caps, and progressively smaller firms are termed mid-caps, small-caps, and micro-caps. There is no good or bad market capitalization, but each size has its own pluses and minuses in terms of potential risks and rewards. Generally, larger companies are considered safer, and smaller firms offer more growth potential. However, even these generalities vary with current market conditions. You may decide that a particular company size range best suits your needs or, conversely, that you’re open to all possibilities. Whatever you conclude, eliminate candidates in this step that don’t fit your requirements.

  • Valuation Ratios

Valuation ratios such as price to earnings (P/E) or price to sales (P/S) define how market participants view your candidate’s earnings growth prospects. High valuations reflect in-favor stocks, that is, those seen having strong growth prospects, and thus appeal to growth investors. Conversely, value players look for stocks with low valuation ratios, indicating that most market players (growth investors) view them as losers. Any given candidate will fit into either the growth or value categories, but not both. The valuation ratios give you a quick read as to whether you have a value or growth candidate on your hands.

  • Trading Volume

Trading volume is the average number of shares traded daily.
Low trading volume stocks spell trouble because they’re subject to price manipulation and mutual funds can’t buy them. Here’s where you’ll toss these bad ideas.

  • Float

Corporate insiders such as key executives and board members are restricted as to when and how often they can buy and sell their company’s shares. So insider owned shares are not considered available for trading. The float is the number of outstanding shares not owned by insiders, and thus available for daily trading.Acceptable float values depend on your investing style. Large firms typically have floats running from a few hundred million shares into the billions. However some investors seek out firms with much smaller floats, typically below 25 million shares. Since the float represents the supply of shares available for trading, these small floats mean that the share price could take off like a rocket if the company hits the news and the demand for shares overwhelms the available supply.

  • Cash Flow

Where reported earnings reflect myriad accounting decisions, cash flow is the amount of cash that actually flowed into, or out of, a company’s bank accounts as a result of its operations. Consequently, cash flow is the best measure of profits. Except for the fastest growers, viable growth candidates should be reporting positive cash flow. Here’s where growth investors should eliminate cash burners from consideration. On the other hand, viable value candidates may very well be reporting negative cash flow resulting from the problems that caused their fall from grace.

  • Historical Sales and Earnings Growth

Whether you’re seeking out-of-favor value prospects or hot growth can chapter didates, your best prospects are firms with a long history of solid long-term sales and earnings growth. In this step, you’ll dispose of stocks that don’t meet this basic requirement.

  • Check the Buzz.

There’s no point wasting time researching a stock if the company’s main product has just been rendered obsolete by the competition. At this point, get up to speed on the buzz surrounding your candidate. Negative buzz is bad news for growth stocks, and you should disqualify such growth candidates. It’s a different story for value prospects, however. The negative buzz is part and parcel of the market’s disenchantment with the stock, and is contributing to making it a value candidate. You will eliminate many of your bad ideas during the quick pre qualify check, most in less than five minutes once you get the hang of it. Take your survivors on to the detailed analysis.

What Is the Danger of Buying on Margin?

One way to purchase stocks is to buy them on margin. Buying stocks on margin allows investors to pay for a fraction of the stock (usually around 50%, but it cannot go beyond this), and then borrow the rest from their broker. Also referred to as leveraging, buying stocks on margin can result in a large return when the stock goes up.Buying on margin allows you to purchase more stocks by using the assets you already have as collateral for the loan, and it also lets you to react quickly to new investment opportunities because you have the added money in your account.

Investing vs. Saving

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What's the difference?  Investing uses money to potentially create more money; saving generally stores money away. Whether a person prefers to invest or to save often depends on his or her tolerance for risk.

Many think of saving as the "safe" way to go. But investing carries its own range of safe to risky choices — with bonds and money market accounts at the more conservative end and equities (stocks) at the more risky end. In addition to risk tolerance, the decision to save or to invest also depends upon other factors, including your time horizon and goals.

Savers are generally more concerned with maintaining the amount they put into an account, i.e., their principal, rather than its potential for generating more income. Saving via low risk vehicles with moderate returns, such as money market funds, a type of mutual fund, offers more liquidity and may be considered more suitable for meeting short-term savings goals.

On the other hand, investors are generally more willing to risk their principal investment, for the potential of higher returns. Investments, such as stocks, bonds and mutual funds, will fluctuate in value. Strategies, such as diversification, don't ensure specific returns but can help manage the risks of investing. By spreading your money among different types of assets, such as equity and fixed-income investments, you can strive for a comfortable balance of risk and return potential that will meet your needs.

Rather than choosing one approach or the other, consider combining them. Then you can blend the relative stability of saving with the accumulation potential of investing, as your individual needs dictate.

Stock market investment rules

The stock market investment rules are listed below:

1. Make investments in the larger companies with price-earning ratios (P/E) of 10 or below.

2. Keep investments limited to the top 2 - 3 companies in each industry or service group.

3. Invest in companies operating in high growth (or sun rise) industries.

4. The price-earning ratio and earnings per share are important tools to estimate the fair value of shares.

5. High price-earning ratio implies that: super growth is expected in the company's earnings in the near future; investor confidence is high; and watch out for low earnings per share ( an earnings per share of 15% of par value of a share is reasonable).