What is it? Technique of valuing Quantitative Qualitative securities Typically used for equities; can be used for industry, economy Seeks to answers questions: Is the company’s revenue growing? Is it making a profit? Does it have a competitive edge? Is it able to repay its debts? Is management ethical and responsible? Why should you care? To value invest in a security Warren Buffett - $65.2 B (2016) “It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price” - Warren Buffett Who are its opponents? Technical Analysts Believers of Efficient Market Hypothesis Efficient Market Hypothesis Investment theory impossible to beat the market Financial Statements Balance Sheet Income Statement Statement Flows of Cash Balance Sheet Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Capital of a business at a particular point of time Assets = Liabilities + Shareholder’s Equity Income Statement Report of Revenues, Expenses and Profit over a period of time Also known as Statement of Operations EBITDA Statement of Cash Flows Record of time of cash inflows and outflows for a period Projecting revenue growth DCF Model Gordon Growth Model Discounted Cash Flow Discounting value cash flows back to arrive at a present Gordon Growth Model Uses the dividends paid by the company to value the stock Margins Profit Margin Net Income/Revenue Gross Profit Margin (Revenue - COGS)/Revenue Operating Margin Operating Income/Net Sales Financial Ratios Earnings per share Price/Earnings Ratio Return on Equity Current Ratio Quick Ratio Debt/Equity Ratio Companies for Comparison No two companies are exactly alike… Metrics to use for comparison Industry ○ Sub-Industry Geography ○ Foreign Exposure Market Cap (Asset Management use AUM) Revenue Debt Load or Leverage Compare ratios Management How do you evaluate? Not as easy for retail investors Corporate governance Historic performance Lawsuits or other sporadic behavior Ownership and insider sales Transparency Legal Vulnerability Industries with high litigation costs ? Estimated at 1/3 of S&P 500 profit Poses significant risk to shareholder value Interest Rate Change Susceptibility Sensitivity depends on industry and a measure called duration What companies are the most sensitive to IR changes? Insurance companies, Banks High leveraged companies Average leverage by industry Interest Margins Let’s do an example.. Airline industry Taxes and fuel costs Operating margin Capacity and excess capacity Hedging Ratios Airlines Operating Margins Hedging Airlines hedge the price of oil using financial instruments This gives them the possibility of ‘locking in’ specific prices Hedge for increasing price Large hedging losses in past two years NYSE:AAL Ratio Comparison American United Delta Southwest Market Cap 20.37 Billion 17.10 Billion 29.05 Billion 24.23 Billion Quick Ratio 67.00% 57.00% 48.00% 50.00% Return on Assets 16.19% 18.77% 9.05% 11.32% Debt to Equity 5.298x 1.355x 0.6608x 0.4288x Profit Margin 9.17% 6.26% 14.80% 15.23% Quite a mixed bag of data Need to use additional ratios to determine which airline is the best investment Additional Ratios American United Delta Southwest Return on Equity 150.20% 87.75% 44.47% 33.30% EBITDA Margin 17.23% 17.45% 24.23% 24.18% P/E Ratio 3.67 2.96 6.48 10.55 Let’s Guess Some Companies…
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