Shayne,
Thank you for your comments. Great (and fast)
response from David.
I started to prepare a response but the more I
wrote, the more I realised what was left out.
There are so many variables I started to go
down the path of 'if this', 'then that'.
The bottom line is, its all a bit of a
formula of sorts (in some ways similar to creating formulas for an excel
spreadsheet).
The formula will be different dependent
upon the investment objective/s and risk profile.
Identifying your investment objective
and risk profile will help determine the type/s of shares you will
be comfortable investing in.
With this in mind..
What is your investment
objective?
What is your risk profile?
This information will help sharechat
contributors with your question.
Regards,
Cris
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 10:03
AM
Subject: RE: [sharechat] Financial
Statement Analysis?
>My question to everybody is: When you see a company that
you are interested >in investing in, what is the most important analysis
that you do?
1) Cashflow
For me - cashflow is the key. It
is possible for a company to be losing money and still have good
cashflow. It is also possible for a company to be making money and
have terrible cashflow. The cashflow analysis is the first place I
look in an annual report.
If a company is generating cash - it becomes
a candidate.
2) NTA
The next factor is asset
backing. This is more than NTA - some industries, in long term
structural decline, I would expect the price to reflect a significant
discount to the NTA. On the other hand - other industries with long
term growth prospects, I would expect to pay a premium. The
assessment of NTA is mixed with a number of intangible factors.
I
will buy into declining industries if the NTA discount is good enough.
I will only buy growth prospects if the NTA premium is
acceptable.
3) Market Timing
Interest rates are the single
biggest factor, for me, influencing market timing. (I know this does
not directly relate to your question). Some sectors are sensitive to
interest rates (retail), some are not (utilities).
Generally, if
interest rates are trending down - with a lag in timing - I'm buying.
If interest rates are trending up - with a lag in timing -
I'm selling.
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