Value Investing How GE Went From American Icon to Astonishing Mess |
- How GE Went From American Icon to Astonishing Mess
- ChinaRock Capital Hedge Fund +119% on Valeant Bet
- Activist Investing Annual 2018 Review
- "Be sure it's yours before you go into it."
- The Most Hated Bull Market of All Time?
- Financial Modeling Courses AdkinsMatchett & Toy
- Question about shares outstanding / treasury stock
- Fairholme Funds 2017 Annual Letter
- Technical analysis on fundamental ratios
How GE Went From American Icon to Astonishing Mess Posted: 02 Feb 2018 01:53 AM PST |
ChinaRock Capital Hedge Fund +119% on Valeant Bet Posted: 01 Feb 2018 06:56 PM PST |
Activist Investing Annual 2018 Review Posted: 01 Feb 2018 10:25 PM PST |
"Be sure it's yours before you go into it." Posted: 02 Feb 2018 03:08 AM PST I am re-reading Graham's The Intelligent Investor and was wondering what is the meaning behind the sentence "Be sure it's yours before you go into it." (page 56, end of chapter 2). Surely I am missing something. It is the part describing alternatives to hedge against inflation, real estate specifically. [link] [comments] |
The Most Hated Bull Market of All Time? Posted: 01 Feb 2018 10:44 AM PST |
Financial Modeling Courses AdkinsMatchett & Toy Posted: 01 Feb 2018 09:06 AM PST Would you reccomend the financial modeling courses of AdkinsMatchett & Toy? Why? Why not? [link] [comments] |
Question about shares outstanding / treasury stock Posted: 01 Feb 2018 06:27 PM PST Hello, Would really appreciate any help with this question I have regarding shares outstanding. I am doing a valuation report on a company for a course I am taking. I am using NAV and EPV to value the company and I am a little confused about the shares outstanding number to divide the NAV / EPV by. The professor mentioned that you should subtract out treasury stock from the common shares outstanding and then use this value as the shares outstanding. However, the balance sheet does not provide an indication of the shares in treasury, but the case provides some information. They give a break down of share repurchases in the last 3 years, and my thinking was to just take the sum of the buybacks and subtract it from the shares outstanding. Is this correct? Or should I ignore treasury stock since it's not given on the balance sheet? Appreciate any help! Thanks [link] [comments] |
Fairholme Funds 2017 Annual Letter Posted: 01 Feb 2018 10:39 AM PST |
Technical analysis on fundamental ratios Posted: 01 Feb 2018 01:19 PM PST I've been playing around with Gurufocus.com's interactive charts, and have really enjoyed overlaying various ratios, dividend yields, and etc. How do I go about running calculations or backtesting based on the charts that I see? For example, STAG, an industrial REIT is trading at about a 5.6% dividend yield, I'd like to know how well the stock has performed over a given time period when the stock has traded at a 5.6% yield. Or, how has the stock traded when the Price to Tangible Book was 2.8. What software do I need to do this? Sorry for throwing the T-bomb, I am completely skeptical about technical analysis when it comes to a Price chart, but when I look at these charts with other fundamental ratios, I see much more interesting patterns. [link] [comments] |
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