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What about an FA way to discover the Gunns, Dick Smith, Babcock, Onetel etc before they started to decline?
Only time for a quick reply, but within the broader 'quality' or 'safety' factors you have a subset of 'red flag' indicators (that's just my ad-hoc categorisation). Bankruptcy indicators are close to what you are looking for (given the stocks you mention).
For examples, look up stuff like Altman Z-score, Ohlson O-score, Montier C-Score or Beneish M-Score. It must contain one letter of the alphabet followed by the word 'score' to be effective (sick joke!).
In the academic papers there are heaps of bankruptcy / red flag / distress type research along the lines of the above.
At its simplest level yes! FA would guide you not to invest in cyclical commodity reliant companies, so oil companies would not have been on your watchlist.
I havent run full analysis on any of the companies you mention, probably because they wouldnt even come within my area of interest because of their management, sector, structure, debt or other obvious metrics.
Once a company comes up on a formal or informal scan i add it to a list of companies that might pass muster for detailed analysis, then when I get time I will do a preliminary analysis and if they still look OK I will run a full analysis and if they satisfy all my metrics limits and seem to be priced below their intrinsic value i may decide to take a posiition.
Certainly doesnt gaurantee that there wont be a big drop in price though, something can happen that you had no way of accounting for - regulatory risk, black swan event, or the market can continue to mis-price the company for longer than you can stay solvent (as Keynes famously said.)
If there was an easy way to avoid serious capital loss investing in companies someone would have done it!
EDIT - Systematic put it much more succinctly than I, while I was typing.
Thanks galumay. Could you suggest maybe one or two metrics you'd consider best fit the bill for avoiding sustained big sell offs? I'm interested in ones which are easily accessible so that I can throw them into a backtest.
Thanks for the input everyone.
I agree, it looks difficult. I'll just hope that the price reflects consensus FA opinion amongst the bigger brokers and analysts. It's probably an ok method given that the top 50 are fairly well researched.
Thanks for the input everyone.
I agree, it looks difficult. I'll just hope that the price reflects consensus FA opinion amongst the bigger brokers and analysts. It's probably an ok method given that the top 50 are fairly well researched.
If you can outsmart millions of other people with the same information, you'd be on a million dollar salary somewhere.
...I wouldn't necessarily throw away the idea!
One (Australian) study showed that the effect of price under-performance is significant in eventually bankrupt firms to be clearly evident months and months and months prior. So again, any typically, "TA" / momentum or trend following type trader are already incorporating an appropriate measure. Also an increase in the bid/ask (particularly right at the end, but also often observable up to a year prior).
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