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Fundamental analysis of a business involves analyzing its income statement, financial statements and health, its management and competitive advantages, and its competitors and markets.
The analysis is performed on historical and present data, but with the goal to make financial projections. There are several possible objectives:
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When the objective of the analysis is to determine what stock to buy and at what price, there are two basic methodologies.
Investors can use both these different but somewhat complementary methods for stock picking. Many fundamental investors use technicals for deciding entry and exit points. Many technical investors use fundamentals to limit their universe of possible stock to \'good\' companies.
The choice of stock analysis is determined by the investor\'s belief in the different paradigms for "how the stock market works". See the discussions at efficient market hypothesis , random walk hypothesis, Capital Asset Pricing Model, Fed model Theory of Equity Valuation, and behavioral finance.
Investors may use fundamental analysis within different portfolio management styles.
Investors can use either a top-down or bottom-up approach.
The analysis of a business\' health starts with financial statement analysis that includes ratios. It looks at dividends paid, operating cash flow, new equity issues and capital financing. The earnings estimates and growth rate projections published widely by Thomson Financial and others can be considered either \'fundamental\' (they are facts) or \'technical\' (they are investor sentiment) based on your perception of their validity.
The determined growth rates (of income and cash) and risk levels (to determine the discount rate) are used in various valuation models. The foremost is the discounted cash flow model, which calculates the present value of the future
The simple model commonly used is the Price/Earnings ratio. Implicit in this model of a perpetual annuity (Time value of money) is that the \'flip\' of the P/E is the discount rate appropriate to the risk of the business. The multiple accepted is adjusted for expected growth (that is not built into the model).
Growth estimates are incorporated into the PEG ratio but the math does not hold up to analysis.[neutrality disputed] Its validity depends on the length of time you think the growth will continue.
Computer modelling of stock prices has now replaced much of the subjective interpretation of fundamental data (along with technical data) in the industry. Since about year 2000, with the power of computers to crunch vast quantities of data, a new career has been invented. At some funds (called Quant Funds) the manager\'s decisions have been replaced by proprietary mathematical models.investopedia.com. Investopedia: Quant Fund
| Stock market | |
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| Types of stocks | Stock · Common stock · Preferred stock · Outstanding stock · Treasury stock |
| Participants | Market maker · Floor trader · Floor broker |
| Exchanges | Stock exchange · List of stock exchanges |
| Stock valuation | Gordon model · Dividend yield · Income per share · Book value · Earnings yield · Beta coefficient |
| Financial ratios | P/CF ratio · P/E ratio · PEG ratio · Price/sales ratio · P/B ratio · D/E ratio · ROIC · ROE |
| Trading theories | Dow Theory · Elliott Wave Theory · Fundamental analysis · Technical analysis · Mark Twain effect · January effect · Efficient market hypothesis · Arbitrage pricing theory |
| Related terms | Dividend · Stock split · Growth stock · Investment · Speculation · Trade · Day trading · Stock trader/investor · IPO |
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