Fundamental analysis

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Fundamental analysis is a security or stock valuation method that uses financial and economic analysis to evaluate businesses or to predict the movement of security prices such as stock prices or bond prices. The fundamental information that is analyzed can include a company's financial reports, and non-finanical information such as estimates of the growth of demand for competing products, industry comparisons, analysis of the effects of new regulations or demographic changes, and economy-wide changes. It is commonly contrasted with so-called technical analysis which analyzes security price movements without reference to factors outside of the market itself.

A potential (or current) investor uses fundamental analysis to examine a company's financial results, its operations and the market(s) in which the company is competing to understand the stability and growth potential of that company. Company factors to consider might include dividends paid, the way a company manages its cash, the amount of debt a company has, and the growth of a company's revenues, expenses and earnings. A fundamental analyst may enter long or short positions based on the result of fundamental analysis.

Theory and general approach

The theory underpinning fundamental analysis is that, to truly make money in the long run, an investor must focus on the company itself rather than merely on the movement of its stock price. As Benjamin Graham and David Dodd say in their classic work Security Analysis, "in the short run, the market is a voting machine, not a weighing machine." An investor uses fundamental analysis to find the companies that are built to last. Warren Buffett, the second richest person in the world, is believed to base his investment decisions solely on fundamental analysis.

Fundamental analysis adherents believe a company's "intrinsic value" will eventually be reflected in the stock price through market forces, but that, while the market is ultimately efficient, some stocks (for any number of reasons) are either over- or under-valued in the short run.

To this end, earnings multiples, such as the P/E ratio, may be used to determine value, where cash flows are relatively stable and predictable. An important caveat here is that the P/E ratio is ultimately not an objective measure because it must be interpreted; a high P/E ratio might show an overvalued stock, or it might reflect a company with high potential for growth.

Help for this interpretation problem is available in the valuation equations of Aswath Damodaran or from many "market professionals," and websites of varying quality.

Investors should always be aware of the "garbage in, garbage out" problem. Just because there is a "formula" that claims to assign a dollar value to a firm does not mean that formula is reliable or correct. Ultimately, there is no substitute for understanding the underlying economics and accounting.

Other valuation techniques include discounted cash flow models, including the Gordon model, and dividend yield analysis. Accounting book value at first glance appears to be a valuation technique, but is not designed to assign a market value to the firm.....

Three step process

In large organizations fundamental analysis is usually performed in three steps:

Often the procedure stresses the effects of the overall economic situation on industry and firm analysis and is known as top down analysis. If instead the procedure stresses firm analysis and uses it to build its industry analysis, which it uses to build its macroeconomic analysis, it is known as bottom up analysis.

Criticisms

References

See also