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Investing 101 |
Fundamental analysis has a very wide scope. Valuing a company involves not only crunching numbers in Quantitative Analysis and predicting cash flows but also looking at the general, more subjective qualities of a company in Qualitative Analysis.
Although there are many different methods of finding the intrinsic value, the premise behind quantitative strategy is that a company is worth the sum of its discounted cash flows over a five year period. In plain English, this means that a company is worth all of its present assets and future profits added together. The idea behind intrinsic value equaling future profits makes sense if you think about how a business provides value for its owner. If you have a small business, its worth is the money you can take from the company year after year (not the growth of the stock). And you can take something out of the company only if you have something left over after you pay for supplies and salaries, reinvest in new equipment, and so on. A business is all about profits, plain old revenue minus expenses - the basis of quantitative analysis of intrinsic value.
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Qualitative analysis uses subjective judgment based on non-quantifiable information, such as management expertise, industry cycles, strength of research and development, and labor relations. This type of analysis technique is different than quantitative analysis, which focuses on numbers. The two techniques, however, will often be used together.
Management
The backbone of any successful company is strong management. The people at the
top ultimately make the strategic decisions and therefore serve as a crucial
factor determining the fate of the company. To assess the strength of
management, investors can simply ask the standard five Ws: who, where, what,
when and why?
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Know
What a Company Does and How it Makes Money
A second important factor to consider when analyzing a company's qualitative
factors is its product(s) or service(s). How does this company make
money? In fancy MBA parlance, the question would be "What is the company's
business model?"
Knowing how a company's activities will be profitable is fundamental to
determining the worth of an investment. Often, people will boast about how
profitable they think their new stock will be, but when you ask them what the
company does, it seems their vision for the future is a little blurry: "Well,
they have this high-tech thingamabob that does something with fiber-optic
cables… ." If you aren't sure how your company will make money, you can't really
be sure that its stock will bring you a
return.
One of the biggest lessons taught by the
dotcom bust of the
late '90s is that not understanding a business model can have dire consequences.
Many people had no idea how the dotcom companies were making money, or why they
were trading so high. In fact, these companies weren't making any money; it's
just that their growth potential was thought to be enormous. This led to
overzealous buying based on a
herd mentality,
which in turn led to a market
crash. But not
everyone lost money when the
bubble burst:
Warren Buffett
didn't invest in high-tech primarily because he didn't understand it. Although
he was ostracized for this during the bubble, it saved him billions of dollars
in the ensuing dotcom fallout. You need a solid understanding of how a company
actually generates revenue in order to evaluate whether management is making the
right decisions. (For more on this, see
Getting
to Know Business Models.)
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Don't Overcomplicate
You don't need a PhD in finance to recognize a good company. In his book "One
Up on Wall Street", Peter Lynch discusses a time when his wife drew his
attention to a great product with phenomenal marketing. Hanes was test marketing
a product called L'eggs: women's pantyhose packaged in colorful plastic egg
shells. Instead of selling these in department or specialty stores, Hanes put
the product next to the candy bars, soda and gum at the checkouts of
supermarkets - a brilliant idea since research showed that women frequented the
supermarket about 12 times more often than the traditional outlets for
pantyhose. The product was a huge success and became the second highest-selling
consumer product of the 1970s.
Most women at the time would have easily seen the popularity of this product,
and Lynch's wife was one of them. Thanks to her advice, he researched the
company a little deeper and turned his investment in Hanes into a solid earner
for Fidelity, while most of the male managers on Wall Street missed out. The
point is that it's not only Wall Street
analysts who are
privy to information about companies; average everyday people can see such
wonders too. If you see a local company expanding and doing well, dig a little
deeper, ask around. Who knows, it may be the next Hanes.
Conclusion
Assessing a company from a qualitative standpoint and determining whether you
should invest in it are as important as looking at sales and earnings. This
strategy may be one of the simplest, but it is also one of the most effective
ways to evaluate a potential investment.