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FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS

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Title: FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS


1
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS
  • FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS

2
  • Top-down vs. Bottom-up
  • Top-down approach economy analysis and industry
    analysis
  • Bottom-up approach Technical analysis and
    security analysis
  • Security analysis
  • - Traditional fundamental analysis
  • - Value based metrics analysis
  • - Quantitative fundamental analysis
  • Traditional fundamental analysis
  • - Sources of information
  • - COMPANY ANALYSIS
  • Financial ratio analysis
  • Fund flow statement analysis
  • Cash flow statement analysis
  • Break-even analysis and contribution
    analysis
  • Financial Analysis and measures of risk
  • Interviewing company representatives
  • Quality of management, brand image etc.
  • - Estimation of intrinsic value

3
Fundamental Analysis
  • Top down
  • Bottom up

4
Top-down
  • Relies heavily on the analysis and forecasting of
    trends in the economy and industry
  • Evaluates the expected impact of changes in the
    world economy on the macro economy of the
    country.
  • Evaluates the expected influence of these changes
    on the domestic industry.
  • Identifies the stocks which are expected to
    outperform the market.
  • Thus, the expected market changes are the driving
    force behind this particular investment strategy.

5
Bottom-up
  • Places greater emphasis on individual stock
    selection.
  • Picks up stock which are undervalued and have the
    potential to outperform.
  • Despite its weakness, this approach is very
    popular primarily because of their inability
  • - to forecast long-term economic and market
    trends or
  • - to undertake low-cost stock selection, as well
    as
  • their inherent tendency to speculate.

6
Fundamental AnalysisTop-down approach
  • Economy Analysis
  • Industry Analysis

7
Economy Analysis
  • Growth Rate of National Income (GDP Growth Rate)
  • Growth Rate in Industry
  • Growth Rate in Service
  • Growth Rate in Agriculture

8
Economy Analysis
  • Inflation
  • Higher rates of inflation upset business plans,
    lead to cost escalation and reduce profit margin.
  • It leads to erosion of purchasing power.

9
Economy Analysis
  • Interest Rates
  • High Interest Payment ? Lower Profitability
  • Lower Interest rate stimulates Investment Activity

10
Economy Analysis
  • Government Revenue, Expenditure, Deficit
  • High Fiscal Deficit ? High Inflation
  • High Growth Expenditure ?
  • (i) To stimulate Economy and
  • (ii) Expenditure to a particular sector i.e.,
    infrastructure , cement , IT etc.

11
Economy Analysis
  • Foreign Trade, BOP and Exchange Rate
  • BOT Imports Exports
  • Balance on Current account BOT Invisible
    Items
  • BOP Deficit
  • Balance on Current A/C Loan Receipt /Repaid
  • High BOP Deficit ? Rupee will depreciate ?
    Improves the competitive position of Indian
    product.

12
Economy Analysis
  • Demographic Data (Monsoon)
  • Economic and political stability

13
Industry Analysis
  • Profit
  • 1
    2 3 4

  • Industry Life Cycle

14
Industry Analysis
  • Industry Life Cycle
  • Pioneering Stage (Sunrise industries) Bio-con,
    Sulzon (wind energy)
  • ? Risky Investment
  • Expansion Stage (Tele communication, IT. Etc.) ?
    High Return at low risk
  • Maturity Stage FMCG, Leasing industry (during
    80,s it was in pioneering stage )
  • Decay Stage (Type writer, Jute Industry, BW TV)
    ? get out from the company before the onset of
    the decay stage

15
Industry Analysis
  • INDUSTRY CHARACTERISTIC
  • Demand Supply Gap
  • Competitive Conditions in the Industry
  • Barriers to Entry
  • Product Differentiate (Buyers Preference for
  • established firm)
  • Absolute Cost Advance
  • Economy of Scale

16
Industry Analysis
  • Attitude of Government
  • - Alcoholic Drinks
  • Cost structure
  • Proportion of fixed cost to variable cost
  • Higher fixed cost, higher B/E point

17
Bottom-Up Approaches
  • An investor who follows a bottom-up approach to
    investing focuses either on
  • (1) technical aspects of the market
  • or
  • (2) the economic and financial analysis of
    individual companies,
  • giving relatively less weight to the
    significance of economic and
  • market cycles.
  • The investor who pursues a bottom-up strategy
    based on certain technical aspects of the market
    is said to be basing stock selection on technical
    analysis.
  • The primary research tool used for investing
    based on economic and financial analysis of
    companies is called security analysis.

18
Three types of security analysis
  • Traditional fundamental analysis
  • Value based metrics analysis
  • Quantitative fundamental analysis

19
Traditional fundamental analysis
  • Traditional fundamental analysis begins with the
    financial statement analysis to evaluate the
    financial solvency and profitability of the firm.
  • The investor also looks at
  • - the firms product lines
  • - the economic outlook for the products
    (including
  • existing and potential competitors), and
  • - the industries in which the company
    operates.
  • - the quality of management, brand image etc.
  • Based on the growth prospects of earnings (or
    cash flows), the fundamental analysts attempts to
    determine the fair value or intrinsic value
    using P/E ratio (or DCF Technique).

20
Value based metrics analysis
  • Based on Economic Value Added (EVA) method
    developed by Stern Stewart Company during the
    early 80s.
  • Fair market value should be equal to book value
    of assets plus present value of future EVA (MVA)
    i.e.,
  • Fair market value
  • Book value of assets PV of future EVA (MVA)

21
Quantitative fundamental analysis
  • Quantitative fundamental analysis seeks to assess
    the value of securities using a statistical model
    derived from historical information about
    security return.
  • The most commonly used model is the fundamental
    multifactor risk model which may be as follows
  • E(R) a ßM (market return) ß1(equity
    capitalisation)
  • ß2 (book-to-price ratio)
    ß3(dividend yield)
  • ß4(industrial) ß5(non-industrial)

22
Traditional Fundamental AnalysisSources of
information
  • The basic information about a company can be
    gleaned from publication (both print and
    Internet), annual reports, sources such as the
    commercial financial information providers CMIE,
    Prowess data base, Indian Quotation Systems Pvt.
    Ltd. (Moneyline Telerate), RBI bulletin.

23
The basic information about a company consists of
the following
  • Type of business (e.g., manufacturer, retailer,
    service, utility)
  • Primary products
  • Strategic objectives
  • Financial condition and operating performance
  • Major competitors (domestic and foreign)
  • Competitiveness of the industry
  • Position of the company in the industry (e.g.,
    market share)
  • Industry trend
  • Regulatory issues
  • Economic environment

24
COMPANY ANALYSIS
  • Important Financial Statements
  • Income Statement (PL Account)
  • Statement of Financial position (Balance Sheet)
  • Fund Flow Statement
  • Cash Flow Statement

25
FINANCIAL RATIO ANALYSIS
  • Liquidity Ratios
  • Leverage/Capital Structure Ratio
  • Turnover Ratio
  • Profitability Ratio (Net Profit, Operating
    Profit, Non-Operating Profit)
  • Common Stock Ratio (DPS, EPS, etc.)

26
FINANCIAL RATIO ANALYSIS can not tell the whole
story
  • So many assumptions.
  • Other areas of concern
  • - selection of an appropriate benchmark
  • firm or firms for comparison purposes
  • - interpretation of ratio.
  • - pitfalls in forecasting future operating
  • performance and financial condition
  • based on past trends

27
ACCOUNTING POLICY AND NOTES
  • Depreciation Policy WDM, SLM
  • Inventory Valuation FIFO, LIFO, etc.
  • Before comparing two companies, you must recast
    their comparison on the basis of uniform
    accounting policy.

28
FUND FLOW STATEMENT ANALYSIS
Sources of funds Application of funds
Fund flow from operation Fund flow from financing Activities Decrease in W. capital Acquisition of Assets Increasing in W. capital
29
Fund Flow ANALYSIS
  • What is the fund from operation (FFO)?
  • Whether acquisition is from FFO.
  • Whether the firm has used short term sources of
    funds to finance long-term investments.
  • Level of Increase/Decrease in Working Capital.
    Is it justified?
  • What is existing Current Ratio?
  • Excessive Liquidity is bad.

30
CASH FLOW STATEMENT
  • 1. Cash Flow from Operating Activities is
    expected to be positive.
  • 2. Cash Flow from Investment Activities is
    expected to be negative.
  • 3. Cash Flow from Financial Activities is
    expected to be positive.

31
CASH FLOW STATEMENT ANALYSIS
  • Checking the Power of Cash Flow Engine (CF from
    operating activity)
  • Whether it is increasing?
  • Is it increasing at the cost of Working Capital?
  • What is the qualities of Net Profit?
  • Correlation between net profit and cash flow from
    operation.
  • Whether cash flow from financing activity is now
    for investment activities or it is used to meet
    daily expense.
  • Whether CFOP Activity is negative?

32
BREAK-EVEN ANALYSIS AND CONTRIBUTION ANALYSIS
  • EBIT TR TC PQ (Va F)
  • Q (p v) F
  • At Break-even point EBIT 0,
  • Or QB/E F/(p v)
  • Fixed Cost/Contribution

33
Margin of Safety
  • Margin of Safety
  • Actual Sale Break-even sale
  • Suppose B/E sale is 80 of actual sale.
  • Margin of safety is 20.
  • Its sales can drop by 20 before it shows loss.

34
Contribution Margin
  • Contribution Margin contribution / sale
  • Suppose sale Rs50 per unit
  • Variable cost Rs20 per unit
  • Contribution margin (50 -20) / 50 60 i.e.,
    60.
  • This means that every rupee of additional sales
    will increase the pretax profit by 60 paise.
  • The traditional financial ratio does not provide
    this information at all.
  • Suppose we have got PBT to sales 20.
  • Will profit increase by 20 paise for every rupee
    increase in sales?

35
Limitation of contribution margin analysis
  • Since an investor is interested only on the
    profit of the firm, the forecasted sale or growth
    in sale can be translated into earnings growth
    with the help of contribution analysis.
  • Two notes of caution are, however, in order.
  • First, the contribution analysis is valid only as
    long as the existing capacity is adequate to meet
    the forecasted demand growth.
  • Second, the traditional accounting statements do
    not provide adequate information about variable
    and fixed costs.

36
FINANCIAL ANALYSIS AND MEASURES OF RISK
37
FINANCIAL ANALYSIS AND MEASURES OF RISK
38
FINANCIAL ANALYSIS AND MEASURES OF RISK
39
Interviewing company representatives
  • Interviewing representatives of company may
    produce additional information and insight into
    the companys business.
  • Because the analyst comes armed with knowledge of
    the companys financial statements, the questions
    should focus on taking a closer look at the
    information provided by these disclosures
  • - Extraordinary or unusual revenues and expenses
  • - Large differences between earnings and Cash
    Flows from
  • operating activities.
  • - Changes in accounting policy
  • - How the company values itself versus the
    markets valuation

40
Other company specific factors
  • Age of Plant
  • Quality of Management
  • Brand Image
  • Labour-Management relation

41
ESTIMATION OF INTRINSIC VALUEEarning Analysis,
dividend and dividend discount models
  • Value of a firm
  • expected value of a future cash flow of the
    firm
  • As an alternative, what is typically done is to
    examine the
  • historical and current relation between stock
    prices and
  • some fundamental values, such as earnings,
    dividends,
  • using this relation to estimate the value of a
    share.

42
ESTIMATION OF INTRINSIC VALUE
  1. Estimate the expected earnings per share (EPS).
  2. Establish a P/E Ratio.
  3. Develop a value anchor and a value range.

43
1. Estimate the expected earnings per share.
PL account Actual Projected
Net Sale Cost of Goods sold G/Profit Operating Expenditure Operating Profit Non-Operating profit PBT Tax PAT No. of Shares EPS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
44
Can earnings be managed?
  • There is a possibility that reported financial
    information may be managed or manipulated by the
    judicious choice of accounting methods and
    timing.
  • Earnings can be manipulated using a number of
    devices
  • including the selection of Depreciation Policy
  • WDM, SLM
  • Inventory Valuation FIFO, LIFO, etc.

45
  • There are many pressures that a company may face
    that affect the likelihood of manipulation. These
    pressures include
  • - Reporting ever-increasing earnings, especially
    when
  • the business is subject to variations in the
    business
  • cycle
  • - Meeting or beating analyst forecasts
  • - Executive compensation based on earnings targets

46
Earnings Per Share
  • EPS EAT / Number of common shares outstanding
  • What is there to interpret?
  • EAT is the net income available to shareholders.
    It is pretty clear.
  • What about the number of common shares
    outstanding?
  • Can that change during the period of time under
    consideration?
  • Diluted shares.
  • Basic EPS vs. Diluted EPS

47
Establish a P/E Ratio.
  • The P/E ratio may be derived from
  • 1. The constant growth dividend model, or
  • 2. Historical analysis

48
1. DIVIDEND GROWTH MODEL
49
  • Calculate P/E ratio on the basis of above
    formula. (1)
  • Historical P/E ratio for 5 year (average) ..(2)
  • Weighted Average P/E ratio
  • (12)/2

50
DETERMINE A VALUE ANCHOR AND A VALUE RANGE
  • Projected EPS x Appropriate P/E Ratio
  • Suppose it is 5 x 6.8 Rs.34
  • Intrinsic Value Range Rs.32 Rs.36

51
Buy-hold and sale decision
Market Price Decision
Less than Rs.32 Buy
Between Rs.32-36 Hold
More than Rs.36 Sell
52
Some Tools for judging undervaluation or
overvaluation
  • ROE
  • Low High
  • Low
  • PBV
  • ratio
  • High

Low ROE Low PBV Undervalued High ROE Low PBV
Overvalued Low ROE High PBV High ROE High PBV
53
Value Based Metric Analysis
  • ECONOMIC VALUE ADDED

54
  • Economic Value Added (EVA) is a residual income
    that subtracts the cost of capital from the
    operating profits generated by a business.
  • The term EVA is a registered trademark of a New
    York based consulting firm Stern Stewart Co.

55
  • One of the earliest to define residual income was
    Alfred Marshall way back in 1890.
  • Marshall defined economic profit as total net
    gains less the interest on invested capital at
    the current rate (A Marshall, 1890, Principles of
    Economics, The MacMillan Press Ltd.)

56
DEFINING EVA
  • EVA essentially seeks to measure a companys
    actual rate of return as against the required
    rate of return. To put it simply, EVA is the
    difference between Net Operating Profit after Tax
    (NOPAT) and the capital charge for both debt and
    equity (overall cost of capital).
  • If NOPAT gt the capital charge, EVA is positive
  • If NOPAT lt the capital charge, EVA is negative.

57
  • NOPAT is the return on capital employed.
  • Thus, if r is the rate of return on capital
    employed,
  • the NOPAT r x capital
  • Capital charge is the overall cost of capital.
  • Thus, if c is the rate of cost of capital,
  • the capital charge c x capital

58
  • Thus EVA NOPAT capital charge
  • r x capital c x capital
  • (r c) x capital
  • (rate of return cost of
    capital) capital
  • If, for example, NOPAT is Rs 250, capital is Rs
    1,000, and c is 15, then r is 25 (NOPAT/capital
    ) and EVA is Rs 100.
  • EVA (r c) x capital
  • (25 - 15) x Rs 1,000 Rs 100

59
NET OPERATING PROFIT AFTER TAX (NOPAT)
  • NOPAT is equivalent to income available to
    shareholders plus interest expenses (after tax).
  • Suppose, OPERATING PROFIT BEFORE INTEREST AND TAX
    EBIT Rs3,000. If interest is Rs1,000 and tax
    rate is 40, then PAT is Rs1200
  • EBIT Rs3,000
  • Interest Rs1,000
  • PAIBT Rs2000
  • Tax (40) Rs800
  • PAT Rs1200

60
NOPAT is equivalent to income available to
shareholders plus interest expenses (after tax).
  • Income available to shareholders PAT Rs1200
  • Interest expenses (after tax)
  • effective interest interest interest
    tax shield
  • Rs1,000 40 x Rs1,000
  • Rs1,000 Rs400 Rs600
  • NOPAT Rs1200 Rs600 Rs1,800

61
  • If before tax cost of debt is kd 10 ,Debt
    capital Rs1000 ,Cost of equity capital (ke)
    12 and Equity capital Rs5000
  • Total capital charge
  • after tax cost of debt cost of
    equity
  • kd (1 t) x Rs10,000 ke x Rs5000
  • 10(1 - .40) x Rs10,000 12 x Rs5000
  • Rs600 Rs600 Rs1200
  • Thus, EVA NOPAT capital charge
  • Rs1,800 Rs1200 Rs 600

62
Alternatively EVA can be calculated as follows
  • EVA NOPAT( which is equivalent to income
    available to shareholders plus actual interest
    expenses) actual cost of capital (which is
    before tax cost of debt plus after tax cost of
    equity capital)
  • Or EVA NOPAT(Rs1200 Rs1000) actual cost of
    capital(10x Rs10,000 12 x Rs5000 Rs1000
    Rs600 Rs1600) Rs2200 Rs1600 Rs600

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  • EVA NOPAT capital charge
  • r x capital c x capital
  • (r c) x capital
  • (rate of return cost of
    capital) capital
  • EVA / capital rate of return cost of capital
  • excess return on invested
    capital

69
  • MV of equity book value of equity MVA
  • MV of equity Debt book value of equity
    debt MVA
  • MV of company book value of company MVA
  • Or MV of company / book value of company
  • 1 MVA / book
    value of company
  • Tobins q 1 MVA / book value of company

70
Company selection using EVA
  • Excess return to invested capital (EVA / book
    value of capital)

  • Best fitted
    line

  • x x x x xx

  • x x x x

  • x xx x xx x
  • x x
  • x Y
    x x
  • Z x
  • x
  • xx Ratio of
    market value to book value or replacement cost
    (q)
  • x x x x
  • x x

71
  • The above figure shows the excess return on
    invested capital versus the market Value of
    Invested capital-to-Replacement Cost of Invested
    Capital for a number of hypothetical companies.
  • The data points that lie above the best fitted
    line represent potentially undervalued companies
    (or shares), while those data points that fall
    below the best fitted line represent
    potentially overvalued companies.

72
Company selection using EVA
  • Excess return to invested capital

  • 4 4
  • 2
  • 1.5 2
    Ratio of market value to replacement cost (q)

73
  • Tobins q MV of company / book value of company
  • Consider the following situations
  • For firm Y , MP fair value (FV)
  • For firm X, MP lt FV , the firm is under priced
  • For firm Z, MP gt FV, the firm is overpriced.

Firm Excess return Tobins q
X 4 1.5
Y 4 2
Z 2 2
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