1. derstanding-fundamental-analysis/ derstanding-fundamental-analysis

Post on 17-Dec-2015

219 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

1

2

http://www.investopedia.com/video/play/understanding-fundamental-analysis/

What is Fundamental Analysis?

Academy #6Fundamental analysis

4

“I’ve never bought a stock unless, in my view, it was on sale.”  John Neff

5

Cornerstone of investing

Analyzing fundamentals

Qualitative and quantitative

Great for proposals

Asking the right questions

What is fundamental analysis?

6

Is the company’s revenue growing? Is it actually making a profit? Is the cash flow positive? Is it in a strong-enough position to beat out

its competitors in the future? Is it able to repay its debts? Is management trying to ”cook the books"?

Fundamental questions

7

Quantitative

Qualitative

Applications

Risks

Investment Proposal

8

Intrinsic Value

Accounting

Valuation methods

Stock screener(s)

Quantitative

9

Price on a: Specific time Quantity (supply / demand)

Market price is subjective Opinions differ

What is a stock price?

10

The “real” value of a company

But what determines the real value?

Intrinsic value

11

Intrinsic value

12

Balance sheet

Income statement

Cash flow statement

Financial statements

13

Balance sheet

14

What a company owns (debit):◦ Short term assets◦ Long term assets◦ Intangible assets

How a company owns it (credit):◦ Equity◦ Short term liabilities◦ Long term liabilities

Balance sheet

15

Balance sheet

16

Income statement

17

Net profit -> Shareholders’ equity

Income statement

18

Profit/earnings Accrual accounting Revenue – cash flow Costs – expenses

EBITDA Earnings before interest, taxation,

depreciation and amortization

Income statement

19

Cash flow statement

20

Cash is king! Cash in and outflow

No influence of bookkeeping tricks

Cash flow statement

21

Earnings Per Share (EPS) Dividend yield Price/Earnings (P/E) EV/EBITDA Book to market value Gordon’s growth model

Valuation methods

22

Earnings per share (EPS) Earnings divided by shares outstanding

Dividend per share (money now – reinvesting) Shell - Google

Metrics per share

23

Value of the company divided by earnings (profit)

Price per share divided by EPS

What determines height of the ratio?

P/E ratio

24

Enterprise Value/EBITDA EBITDA – Earnings - Earnings before I tricked that dumb auditor

Book to market value Book value firm / market value firm

Other multiples

25

D = dividend g = growth rate r = discount rate

Gordon’s growth model

26

Compare P/E ratio with peers Is it higher, lower? Why? Good reason(s)?

Practical implications

27

Multiple expansion – contraction◦ Longitudinal: compare ratio’s with previous years◦ EPS growth, dividend growth

◦ Cross-sectional: compare ratio’s with each other◦ EPS growth, dividend per shares growth but P/E

decline -> why?

Practical implications

28

29

Break

30

Business model

Markets

Competitive environment

Management

Market opinion

Qualitative

31

What does the company do?

Where does it generate money?

Look at key drivers/factors

Don’t invest in a business you don’t understand!

Business model

32

Boston Chicken Fixed fee

MC Donald's Franchise system

Example

33

Strategy

Value proposition

Cost structure Fixed costs – variable costs Commodities (Air France-KLM)

Patents (Pharmaceutics)

Business model

34

What drives success? How are these factors changing?

Characteristics of markets:◦ Spare car parts example◦ Smartphones example◦ Nintendo Wii example

Market

35

What can a company do better than it’s competitors? (Michael Porter)◦ Cheaper/better/faster

Google: best search engine Apple: strong brand name Toyota: efficiency advantage Coolblue: fast delivery

Competitive environment

36

How competitive is the industry?◦ Airlines◦ Soft drinks

Competitive environment

37

Incentives◦ Shareholder alignment

Consistency◦ Skagen funds

Track record

Example: Angela Ahrendts – Apple

Management

38

Material events◦ Earnings, public announcements

World events◦ Central bank policies, political and war events

Industry appeal◦ Social media stocks

Example: BP oil spill

Market opinion

39

Finding an edge & catalysts

Where to find valuable information?

Let’s do this!

Applications

40

Edge: asymmetric information distribution◦ Interpretation

Catalyst: why now◦ Intrinsic value versus market price

Edges & Catalysts

41

www.google.com/finance

www.yahoo.com/finance

www.finviz.com

Company website◦ Investor Relations

Valuable information sources

42

Which company?

Let’s do this!

43

Timing◦ Technical analysis

Efficient market hypothesis◦ No free lunch

Is the market ever going to reflect the intrinsic value?

One can be wrong in calculating intrinsic value

Risks

44

Information transfer◦ B&R members◦ Traders

Large cap vs small cap◦ Apple - musclepharm

Stock reflects all available information

Efficient market hypothesis

45

Weak form: ◦ past prices can’t lead to outperformance

Semi-strong form:◦ Public information can’t lead to outperformance

Strong form:◦ All information is incorporated in the price of an

asset, even inside information

Efficient market hypothesis

46

Questions?

top related