Q: Hi,
When reading questions or watching the news, I hear a lot of financial ratios being referenced to. I hear P/S, P/E, etc.. of a stock being high or low, but what is that in comparison to? Is it relative to the historical sector average or vs current peers? There are just so many metrics that it is kind of overwhelming for the average investor. I understand that if you're a professional financial analyst focusing on a certain sector doing this everyday, you know the important valuation metrics to look at within all the companies within a sector. But what about for us general investors that like to look at some of these important data points that hold stocks in various sectors?
At times, I want to compare important metrics of companies in similar sectors when looking at the best investment, say for example in tech semi conductors NVDA vs UCTT vs QCOM. Or if I wanted to compare ATZ vs GOOS VS DOL in a different sector. What are the best data points to compare? For example, div yield, P/E (NTM), P/S (NTM), EV/EBITA (NTM), FCF/Share (FY), PEG, EBITA CAGR (5Y), REV CAGR (5Y), Net Debt (FY), etc...These are just some examples that I see. I'm more a growth investor so I assume Rev CAGR would be an important data point to watch, for example. I would imagine that you compare different data points when comparing companies in the tech sector vs if you are comparing stocks within the energy sector. Such terms like operating cashflow, net cash, EPS/REV growth, debt, I hear lots from your answers so should these data points always be on my screen? Or is it more important to look at the data points in relation to how they are trending vs historical years and quarters of that specific company.
I have a watchlist of my portfolio with stocks in all different sectors that I look at daily and would like to keep track of important data points at a high level. For example, I have EBITDA(FY) as one column and can easily sort it so I can see which of companies are unprofitable, or CFO so I easily sort that to see which companies have negative cash flow from operations. What would be on your screen if you had to pick say 10-15 data columns and what is your financial analysis process like?
Thanks!
When reading questions or watching the news, I hear a lot of financial ratios being referenced to. I hear P/S, P/E, etc.. of a stock being high or low, but what is that in comparison to? Is it relative to the historical sector average or vs current peers? There are just so many metrics that it is kind of overwhelming for the average investor. I understand that if you're a professional financial analyst focusing on a certain sector doing this everyday, you know the important valuation metrics to look at within all the companies within a sector. But what about for us general investors that like to look at some of these important data points that hold stocks in various sectors?
At times, I want to compare important metrics of companies in similar sectors when looking at the best investment, say for example in tech semi conductors NVDA vs UCTT vs QCOM. Or if I wanted to compare ATZ vs GOOS VS DOL in a different sector. What are the best data points to compare? For example, div yield, P/E (NTM), P/S (NTM), EV/EBITA (NTM), FCF/Share (FY), PEG, EBITA CAGR (5Y), REV CAGR (5Y), Net Debt (FY), etc...These are just some examples that I see. I'm more a growth investor so I assume Rev CAGR would be an important data point to watch, for example. I would imagine that you compare different data points when comparing companies in the tech sector vs if you are comparing stocks within the energy sector. Such terms like operating cashflow, net cash, EPS/REV growth, debt, I hear lots from your answers so should these data points always be on my screen? Or is it more important to look at the data points in relation to how they are trending vs historical years and quarters of that specific company.
I have a watchlist of my portfolio with stocks in all different sectors that I look at daily and would like to keep track of important data points at a high level. For example, I have EBITDA(FY) as one column and can easily sort it so I can see which of companies are unprofitable, or CFO so I easily sort that to see which companies have negative cash flow from operations. What would be on your screen if you had to pick say 10-15 data columns and what is your financial analysis process like?
Thanks!