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Emory Trade

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Emory Trade October 17, 2005 Board of Directors President: Michael Becker Co-CEO: Simon Tan Co-CEO: David Burton CFO: Kevin Cheng Executive Board VP of Public ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emory Trade


1
Emory Trade
  • October 17, 2005

2
Board of Directors
  • President Michael Becker
  • Co-CEO Simon Tan
  • Co-CEO David Burton
  • CFO Kevin Cheng

3
Executive Board
  • VP of Public Relations Ashley Terry
  • Asst. VP of PR Eric Joannu
  • VP of Accounting Ryan Huff
  • Asst. VP of Acct. Niles Lingard
  • VP of Fantasy Stock Market Game David Olscamp
  • VP of Membership Sam Shapiro
  • VP Event Coordinator Stephen Pack
  • VP Market Analyst Suhan Islam

(Note Positions listed in no particular order)
4
Agenda
  • Prize for Attendance! Sign up for next car wash
    (10/29)!
  • Introduction Future of Club (Michael)
  • 100 Fantasy Game winner Curt Champagne
  • Fantasy Game (David)
  • Stock Analysis (Suhan)
  • Saturdays Car Wash Fox 5 (Niles)
  • Next meeting November 14th!!

5
Attendance 2nd Car Wash
  • Sign the attendance sheet!
  • Prize for best attendance at end of semester!
  • 2nd Car Wash Oct 29th
  • Sign-up with your available times!
  • (1130 am 3 pm)

6
Introduction, Future of Club
  • Presented by Michael Becker, President

7
Summer Fantasy Game Winner!
  • Curt Champagne receives a 100 check!
  • Congratulations!
  • How can you win?
  • His strategies!

8
Next Fantasy Game Marketocracy
  • David Olscamp Fantasy Game VP

Marketocracy
9
Stock Analysis
  • Suhan Islam VP Market Analyst

10
Hewlett-Packard (HPQ)
  • Stock Analysis

11
Random Terms
  • Quarter
  • Most Recent Quarter (MRQ)
  • Fiscal Year
  • Twelve Month Period (FY)
  • Trailing Twelve Months (TTM)
  • Most recent twelve months moving measurement.

12
Types of Analysis
  • Fundamental
  • Qualitative Analysis
  • Technical

13
Background
  • Hewlett-Packard Company provides products,
    technologies, solutions, and services to
    consumers, businesses, and governments worldwide.
  • It operates in seven segments Personal Systems
    Group, Imaging and Printing Group, Enterprise
    Storage and Servers, HP Services, HP Financial
    Services, Software, and Corporate Investments.
  • They sell commercial personal computers, consumer
    PCs, workstations, handheld computing devices,
    digital entertainment systems, calculators and
    other related accessories, and software and
    services for commercial and consumer markets.
  • What do they do?

14
Why is HP Interesting
  • Technological company with growth potential
  • Turn around situation with new CEO
  • Strong Revenue growth
  • Brand-name recognition
  • Large-cap safety

15
Fundamental Analysis
  • Also known as quantitative analysis
  • Primarily involves looking at historical
    performance to predict future performance
  • Specifically looks at revenue, expenses, assets,
    liabilities, and all the other financial aspects
    of a company
  • Find this data in 10K (sec.gov) Balance Sheet,
    Income Statement, Cash Flow Statement

16
Current Ratio
  • What is it?
  • Definition Current Assets / Current Liabilities
  • Current assets are short-term, less than one year
  • Current Assets include Cash, Inventory,
    Short-term receivables
  • Current Liabilities include Short-term payables
  • General idea A company is generally considered
    financially healthy when current assets are equal
    or higher than current liabilities
  • Current Ratio of 2 is superb, but 1.35 is good
    the higher the better
  • HP Current Ratio
  • 1.429 per most recent quarter

17
Debt to Equity Ratio
  • What is it?
  • Definition Long-Term Debt / Equity
  • Long-Term Debt
  • Equity Total assets Total Liabilities
  • General idea A higher debt/equity ratio
    generally means that a company has been
    aggressive in financing its growth with debt
  • New or growth companies tend to have higher debt
    since they are growing. However, too much debt is
    never good
  • HP Long-term debt/ Equity Debt/Equity Ratio
  • 5.77 B / 37.47 B 0.154 (mrq)
  • Lower the ratio the better, but its a
    comparative tool within an industry
  • Recommendation 0.1 (less than .0338 is great)

18
Price to Earnings Ratio
  • What is it?
  • Definition Price / Earning
  • The price of the stock / companys yearly
    earnings per share
  • Or Market Capitalization/Net Income (use diluted
    of shares)
  • Earnings Earning in EPS (Earnings per share)
  • General Idea The higher the P/E ratio, the
    higher the speculation of the companys future
    earning performance
  • High P/E means market is optimistic ? overbought,
    lots of potential growth
  • HP Price / Earnings Ratio
  • 27.54 / 1.05 26.33 (Trailing Twelve Months)
  • Generally PE of 15 is good, but its a
    intra-industry comparative tool. Tech and growth
    companies have higher PE
  • Which has the highest and lowest PE? Why?
  • GE, Dell, HP, Google, Starbucks or Exxon

Google 89 Starbucks 46 HP 26 Dell 24 GE
20 Exxon 13
19
Growth
  • Definition The compounded annualized rate of
    growth of a profit, earnings, revenues, etc.
  • Relative measurement (percentage)
  • (This years profit Last years profit) / (Last
    years profit)
  • General Idea Higher the growth rate, higher the
    risk.
  • Want to look for growth for higher potential
    return
  • Your ability to take on risk determines how many
    growth stocks you want to have
  • Calculated by (Year 2 Year 1 / Year 1)
  • Usually read from sources
  • HP Quarterly Revenue Growth 9.90 (yoy)
  • Finance.yahoo.com

20
Earnings
  • Earnings The net income of a company during a
    specific period. Generally, but not necessarily,
    referring to after-tax income.
  • Earnings are perhaps the single most studied
    number in a company's financial statements. They
    show how profitable a company is.
  • Guidance has a role in the market because it
    provides information that can be used by
    investors to analyze the company, evaluate
    management, and create forecasts. Careful because
    numbers are internally generated and maybe
    somewhat biased
  • Earnings Estimate An analyst's estimate for a
    company's future quarterly or annual earnings.
  • Analysts use forecasting models, management
    guidance, and fundamental information on the
    company in order to derive an estimate.
  • Earnings Growth Rate indicators that reflect the
    opinions of industry analysts as to the growth
    potential of a company's earnings.
  • HPQ Earnings Estimates

21
Insider Trading
  • Insider Trading The buying or selling of a
    security by someone who has access to material,
    nonpublic information about the security.
  • Insider trading can be illegal or legal depending
    on when the insider makes the trade
  • Illegal when the material information is still
    nonpublic. Trading while having special knowledge
    is unfair to other investors who don't
    have access to such knowledge. 
  • Includes tipping others when you have any sort
    of nonpublic information. Directors are not the
    only ones who have the potential to be
    convicted of insider trading. People such as
    brokers and even family members can be guilty.
  • Legal once the material information has been made
    public, at which time the insider has no direct
    advantage over other investors.
  • The SEC, however, still requires all insiders to
    report all their transactions. 
  • An executive, director or major shareholder sold
    a small number of shares recently. (Neutral)
  • Planned versus Unplanned
  • HPQ Insider Transactions
  • Is it legal?

22
Major Holders
  • Usually the largest shareholders of a company are
    not individuals but rather institutions
  • Analysis of Major Holders provides insight to
    what the some of the best managers think the
    stock is worth and in what capacity growth,
    value, blue chip
  • HPQ Major Holders

23
Qualitative Analysis
  • How does the company compare to competitors
  • Is the companys business model working
  • How are the officers of the company
  • Is there any extraordinary problems with the
    company
  • SEC investigation

24
Competitors
  • How does key statistics compare to competitors
    PE, Net Income, EPS
  • HP (27.35) is more pricey than its competitor
    Dell (32.93) and is not as efficient as Dell when
    it comes to making custom computers.
  • Unlike Dell, HP still relies on vendors to sell
    their product. However price comparisons of the
    two firms direct purchase programs do not show
    great disparity
  • HPQ and its Competitors
  • Who are HPs biggest competitors?!

25
Business Model
  • Very specific to the Company
  • HP
  • HPs retail computers are organized into two
    units HP and Compaq
  • Compaq is made primarily for licensing to
    corporations or multiple unit buyers, its
    technology focuses on efficiency
  • HP unit is primarily made for private consumers
    and its technology focuses on high quality media
    both audio and visual
  • HP does significant Research and Development that
    it showcases
  • Nanotechnology

26
Moving Averages
  • An average of data over a certain time period
    (ex 50 day, 200 day)
  • Note Above 200-day moving average and its
    bouncing off the 50 day moving average
  • Conclusion Its support is the 50 day moving
    average

27
Relative Strength Index
  • Technical indicator that compares the days that a
    stock finishes up against when it finishes lower
  • Overbought (gt70) vs. Oversold (lt30)

28
Stochastic Oscillator
  • Compares a security's closing price to its price
    range over a given time period.
  • Technical momentum indicator
  • The oscillator's sensitivity to market movements
    can be reduced by adjusting the time period or by
    taking a moving average of the result
  • The theory behind this indicator is that in an
    upward-trending market prices tend to close near
    their high, and during a downward-trending
    market, prices tend to close near their low

29
Bollinger Band
  • A band plotted two standard deviations away from
    a simple moving average
  • Because standard deviation is a measure of
    volatility, Bollinger Bands adjust themselves to
    the market conditions. When the markets become
    more volatile the bands widen (move further away
    from the average), and, during less volatile
    periods, the bands contract (move closer to the
    average)
  • This is among one of the most popular technical
    analysis techniques. The closer the prices move
    to the upper band, the more overbought the
    market, and the closer the prices move to the
    lower band, the more oversold the market.

30
Bollinger Band (cont.)
31
Moving Average Convergence
  • A trend - following momentum indicator that shows
    the relationship between two moving averages of
    prices.
  • The MACD is calculated by subtracting the
    26-day exponential moving average (EMA) from the
    12-day EMA.
  • A 9-day EMA of the MACD, called the "signal
    line", is then plotted on top of the MACD,
    functioning as a trigger of buy and sell signals
  • Crossovers - When the MACD falls below the signal
    line it is a bearish signal indicates possible
    time to sell.
  • Conversely, when the MACD rises above the signal
    line, the indicator gives a bullish signal, and
    indicates that it may be time to buy.
  • Divergence - When security price diverges from
    the MACD, it signals the end of the current
    trend. 
  • Dramatic rise - When MACD rises dramatically
    signals its overbought will soon return to
    normal levels.
  • The shorter moving average pulls away from the
    longer-term moving average.

32
195 Raised _at_ Saturdays Car Wash!
33
Thanks for coming!
  • Questions?
  • Dates to Remember
  • Next meeting November 14th!
  • Next Car Wash Saturday, 10/29
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