Stock Selection for Long term Investment

 


Which factors will determine how much you are willing to pay for a stock? 

What makes one company worth 10 times earning and another worth 20 times?

How can be reasonably sure that you are not overpaying for an apparently rosy future that turns out to be a murky nightmare?

Benjamin Graham feels that five elements are crucial. Those are

  •           The company’ s “general long-term prospects”
  •           The quality of its management.
  •           It's financial strength and capital structure
  •           Its dividend record
  •           It's current dividend rate.

Lets have a brief about these factors in the light of today s market.

Firstly The long –term prospects  nowadays, the intelligent investor should get the previous five years Annual reports of the company in which one wants to invest.

To determine whether a company is an Other People’s Money (OPM) addict, read the “Statement of Cash Flows” in the financial statements. The Cashflow Statement of the company will segregate the cash inflows and outflows into “investing activities” and  “financing activities” if cash from operating activities is consistently negative, while cash from financing activities is consistently positive, the company has a habit of   more cash than its own businesses can produce-and you should not join the “enablers” of that habitual abuse.

In 2002, Procter& Gamble spent about 4%of its net sales on R&D, While 3M spent 6.5% and Johnson &Johnson 10.9%.In the long run, a company that spends nothing on R&D is liable to higher penalties, either by convention or sale to that spends too much on R&D.

Now lets think about The quality and conduct of management  A company’s executives should say what they will do, and do what they said. Read the past annual reports to see what forecasts the managers made earlier and if they fulfilled their words or fell short. Managers should straightforwardly admit their failures and take responsibility for the circumstances caused due to their negligence, rather than blaming “the economy “uncertainty,” or “week demand.” Check whether the tone and substance of the chairman’s letter stay constant.

The investors are the owners of the company and the management will run the company these two people’s interest should be the same to make the company profitable. These questions will help you determine whether the management who run the company will act in the interests of the people who are the owners of the company:

If a company reprices (or “reissues” or “exchanges”) its stock options for insiders, stay away. In this scenario, a company cancels existing (and typically worthless) stock options for employees and executives, then replace them with new ones at advantageous prices. If their value is never allowed to go to zero, while their potential profit is always infinite, how can options encourage good maintenance of corporate assets? Any established company that reprices option – as dozens of high-tech Companies have –is a disgrace. And any investor who buys stock in such a company is a sheep begging to be shear.

Government, shows whether a Companies senior executives and directors have been buying or selling shares. There can be lawful reasons for an insider to sell diversification, a bigger house a divorce settlement but repeated big sales are a bright red flag. A manager can’t legally be your partner if he keeps selling while you’re buying. To regulate insider trading in stock markets SEBI has Introduced the SEBI (Prohibition of Insider trading) Regulations 2015. These regulations will restrict the trading of persons who are in possession of Price sensitive Information.

Executives should spend most of their time in managing their company in private, not promoting it to the investing public. All too often, CEOs complain that stock is undervalued no matter how high it goes – forgetting Graham’s insistence that managers should try to keep the stock price from going either too low or too high. Meanwhile, all too many chief financial officers give “earnings guidance,” or guesstimate of the company’s quarterly profits.

Finally, ask whether the company’s accounting practices are designed to make its financial results transparent and True and fair view. if “nonrecurring” charges keep recurring “extraordinary” items appear so often that they seem ordinary, acronyms like EBITDA take priority over net income, you may be looking at a Company that still not in a position of looking over or planning according to the long term interests of the shareholders.

The next thing we have to discuss is Financial strength and capital structure. The most basic possible definition of a good business is this: it generates more cash than it consumes. Good managers keep finding ways of putting that cash to productive use. In the long  run , companies that meet this definition are virtually certain to grow in value, no matter what the stock market does. Whether the stock market index going too high or too low the profits and prospects of the company should keep on growing.

In the Annual Report of the company Start reading the financial statements with the statement of cash flows. See whether cash from operation has grown progressively throughout the past 10 years. Then you can go further. Warren buffett  has popularized the concept of owner earnings, or

Net income

     +    Amortization and depreciation,

-       Minus normal capital expenditures.

 

 “if you owned 100% of this business, what will you think about the business at the end of the day? The answer will be the amount earned by the business at the end of the day” Because it adjusts for accounting entries like amortization and depreciation these entries do not affect the company’s cash balances, this is why the owner earnings will be a better approach for measurement than reported net income in the financial statements of the company. To perfect the definition of owner earnings, you should also subtract from reported net income.

  •          Any costs of granting stock options, which divert earnings away from existing shareholders into the hands of new inside owners.
  •          Any “unusual,” “nonrecurring,” or “extraordinary” charges
  •          Any “income” from the company’s pension fund.

Because the above are not generated from the company operations, hence not considered as the income of the company for the purpose to calculation of owners earnings.

If owner earnings per share have grown at a stable average of at least 6% or 7 % over the past 10 years, the company is a generating a regular cash flows from its operation, also its prospects for growth are good and the company can be suitable for long term investment.

Next, look at the company’s capital structure. Turn of the balance sheet to see how much debit (including preferred stock )the company has; in general, long-term debt should be under 50% of total capital including its reserves. In the footnotes to the financial statements, determine whether the long-term debt is fixed-rate with constant interest payments or variable with payments that fluctuate, which could become costly if interest rates rise.

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