|
|
|
|
|
|
StockCentral :: Community
|
|
Join in on the discussion with other like-minded investors in our community forums. Learn about the fundamental investing methodology and participate in educational workshops in the Investing forums, stay up-to-date on StockCentral news and make suggestions to the StockCentral team in Central Square, and discuss your favorite stock or recent market news in our A-Z ticker-based forums.
|
| Note: You must be a StockCentral subscriber and logged in to post messages. |
|
|
| Author |
Messages |
|
 Joe Craig Ellicott City, MD StockCentral Administrator
 |
| 02/15/2008 5:46 PM |
|
If you've been following Sheryl Sostarich's discussion of The Little Book That Makes You Rich by Louis Navellier over in the After Hours Book Forum, you may have been following along to see the eight fundamental factors that Navellier claims have the most influence on a company's stock price.
- earnings revisions
- earnings surprises
These two have to do with changes in analysts perceptions of a company. Earnings revisions may be important, but do they reflect anything other than analysts' misperceptions? Earnings surprises are the result of a company's reported earnings not meeting analysts' expectations.
"We" tend to take the quarterly and annual numbers, and not focus so much on what analysts thought before these number are revealed. We deal with the fundamentals, the actuals, the reported numbers. Not on flights of fantasy.
Suppose, for example, that analysts are expecting a company to report $0.34 in quarterly earnings. Now suppose that the company reports $0.33 and misses the expecation by a penny a share. But suppose that 33 cents is up from 29 cents a year ago. Isn't that a whole lot more important?
This appears on the Stock Selection Guide and on the Ratio Analyzer. In the Ratio Analyzer analysis, there are several items that are compared to the sales growth rate.
- operating margin expansion
The Ratio Analyzer includes a section that looks at the Gross Margin.
Check the extensive analysis of Cashflow in the Ratio Analyzer
Earnings Growth is a key element of the Stock Selection Guide, and is a key item in the Quality Rating computed by Take Stock.
The Sales and Earnings Growth Rates are a key to "our" fundamental analysis of a company.
Momentum, like expectations and surprises, is more of a psychological component, and isn't really part of the fundamental approach. How do you think it should be used?
See, especially, Section 2 of the Stock Selection Guide and the TSSW in Take Stock.
I find it more than interesting, and quite comforting to know that Navellier's "eight fundamental factors" overlap five out of eight times with the key elements of our fundmental investing approach. These items occupy prominent locations on the Stock Selection Guide, the Take Stock TSSW and analysis, and the Ratio Analyzer.
Maybe Louis should be using our tools!
-------
Extra credit: What is Lagniappe, and why is it a good word to use this week?
|
|
Joe |
|
|
Martin Eckerle
 |
| 02/18/2008 8:19 AM |
|
Curiousity got the best of me: Lagniappe
From Merriam-Webster Online Dicitionary:
- Main Entry:
- la·gniappe
- Pronunciation:
- \ˈlan-ˌyap, lan-ˈ\
- Function:
- noun
- Etymology:
- American French, from American Spanish la ñapa the lagniappe, from la + ñapa, yapa, from Quechua yapa something added
- Date:
- 1844
: a small gift given a customer by a merchant at the time of a purchase; broadly : something given or obtained gratuitously or by way of good measure
MY LEARNING FOR TODAY!
Marty Eckerle
|
|
|
|
|
 Joe Craig Ellicott City, MD StockCentral Administrator
 |
| 02/18/2008 8:45 AM |
|
And this is a word you'll most likely hear in New Orleans and the surrounding areas. I thought it appropriate for use during (ok, at the end) of Carnival (Mardi Gras) week!
I'll be back later today with more of this workshop ... |
|
Joe |
|
|
|
| Note: You must be a StockCentral subscriber and logged in to post messages. |
|
|
|
ActiveForums 3.7
|
|