Forum Archive Index - October 2003
Please note usage of the Forum is subject to the Terms & Conditions.
Re: [sharechat] Financial Statement Analysis?
Hi Shayne,
>
> 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? What formulas do you use in order to determine whether or not
> this will be a good company to invest in?
>
I think that there are two fundamental ingredients to successful
sharemarket investment:
1/ Value
2/ Quality
Any financial formulae you use should be viewed as are merely tools
towards these two goals.
The primary determining factor in how successful and investment will be
is, IMO, how cheaply you can buy into it. Dividend yield is often
something I look at as an initial value indicator. This is because it is
usually an easy figure to get. The newspapers publish it for NZSE and
ASX companies daily.
Nevertheless there are many reasons why you would not invest in a
company with a high dividend yield. The apparently high yield may be
based on past factors (e.g. a one off special dividend) that will not be
repeated. The company may have high capital reinvestment
requirements. It may be part of a sunset industry that is simply no
good. The company may be having trouble covering its interst bill. So
IMO you would be foolish to invest on the basis of dividend yield alone.
But for a one off indicator, it is probably not a bad place to start.
As an indicator for 'quality' I would say that ROE is not a bad single
indicator figure. Return on shareholders equity is is a measure of what
kind of return is being excised from the shareholders funds in the
business. Some might call ROE a measure of financial efficiency. Or
resilience - the ability to recover quickly from unexpected market
shocks.
As with any single indicator, there are plenty of reasons not to dive into
investing with a company that has high ROE. One way to get high ROE
is to operate a company with lots of debt. This is not always a good
thing. It is highly likely that many high ROE companies have already
been recognised by the market and are 'fully priced'. There is no
point in investing in a company like that. Nevertheless as an intial
screen of financial efficiency I'd be hard pressed to leave ROE out of the
equation.
SNOOPY
--
Message sent by Snoopy
on Pegasus Mail version 4.02
----------------------------------
"Sometimes to see the wood from the trees,
you have to cut down all the trees."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at
http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/