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:: investing
    
4 steps
to evaluating a company's stock price - is it overvalued? Or undervalued?
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There
are 4 basic steps taken when applying fundamental analysis
to a company, and these involve:-
Place
the company in perspective versus the economy as a whole.
Place
the company in perspective versus the industry sector it belongs
to.
Evaluate
the condition of the company.
Combine
these results to guage the value of the company's stock.
The
Strength of the Economy as a whole
Obviousy,
in boom times, prices tend to be higher than in depressions. Therefore
economists examine the economy as a whole as a starting point to
the analysis - what is the environment in which ALL stocks exist?
Is there rampant inflation? Are interest rates rising or falling?
Are consumers burdened with massive debt? Is the currency exchange
rate good for exports? By determining the state of the general economy,
we construct a 'frame' within which stocks can be guaged.
Strength
of the Industry Sector
Even
the strongest company will fail if it's sector is in trouble. For
example, there were a large number of buggy whip makers at the turn
of the last century, some possessing large cash balances, tight
operations, and apparently excellent prospects. A old chestnut proclaims
that 'a weak stock in a strong sector is better than a strong stock
in a weak sector'. A good recent example would be the telecoms sector.
Until 2000, even mediocre telecoms companies enjoyed massively overpriced
stock prices. Now they have to function in the real world again,
because the sector as a whole hit enormous trouble at the start
of the new century.
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