borat
Jagshemash!
- Joined
- 30 November 2006
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Realist said:Quite simply I look for a low price to average earnings over the past few years. Particularly for a company with slow and consistent growth.
A low price to current earnings can be misleading - one bad or good year sways figures, a low price to forecasted future earnings is prediction and should be avoided.
Realist said:Actually I forgot to mention you also need to work out what the companies Net Tangible Assets are as well.
Simply their Assets minus their Liabilities.
There's no point in buying a company that makes $1M in profit each year but owes $50M in debt.
But a company with $50M in assets that made a small loss last year, but has a market cap of only $30M is probably well worth buying.
ducati916 said:On superficial examination, this would seem to make good sense. However, without an understanding of the Capital structure, and the cost of capital, you can miss out, as highly leveraged businesses can make for very profitable investments. For example, in Australia, and on these boards, the majority would feel comfortable holding say CBA or NAB, banks however are massively leveraged common stocks.
Using NAB as an example of a highly leveraged common stock, against VCR, a 100% common stock capitalization. VCR is a speculative common stock, while NAB is considered as a blue chip common stock.
The composition of the assets/liabilities is a further consideration. Assets recorded at Book Value, may bear no resemblance to actual realizable value, they may understate or overstate the value by a very wide margin, as they are recorded at cost, and depreciated, or, amortized, depending on the asset. The liquidity of the asset/liability would also be an important consideration, although in dislocations, otherwise high liquidity can dry up.
Again, to reiterate, the quality of earnings & cash-flow are the prerequisites to an analysis of a leveraged, or unleveraged capital structure, not GAAP earnings, that can be manipulated a dozen different ways. Banks, are especially prone to off-the-balance sheet liabilities, that increase their leverage at most inopportune moments, and thus complicate even further the superficial methodology advocated in the previous post.
jog on
d998
tech/a said:Duc.
Your no Dumby.
How is it then that you have been able to find a company/s which are/is undervalued (in your exercise) and they fall a further 50% in SP?
Now while I'm using your example in no way am I saying its isolated to yourself.
ducati916 said:and some are undervaluations that have become increasingly undervalued
nizar said:...always a problem isnt it....
Duc, why not find an undervalued company as per your strategy, but only buy it after the share price has stopped going down?
nizar said:why not find an undervalued company as per your strategy, but only buy it after the share price has stopped going down?
Has anyone mentioned good management? or proven management?
Its no good having a undervalued stock with crooks running it!
Ubid
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