Title: Joseph York
 1Fundamental Analysis of Stock ResearchMentor 
Session One
- Joseph York 
- Monday, November 16, 2009
2What is Fundamental Analysis?
- Can be split into two categories 
- Quantitative 
-  ?Analyzes key ratios 
-  ?Provides concrete data for analysis 
- Qualitative 
-  ?Analyzes Intangible Data 
-  ?Management, patents, innovation, etc. 
-  ?Difficult to measure numerically 
3Quantitative Measures
- The following presentation will give you some 
 understanding into what these quantitative
 measures are and how to use them
- It is important to remember, however, that you 
 must not focus on only one of these values, but
 rather, use several of them together with other
 research tools (technical analysis, industry
 analysis, annual/quarterly reports) to develop a
 true picture of the companys health
Source http//finance.yahoo.com 
 4The Ratios
PEG
ROE/ROA
Current Revenues
EPS
Quick Ratio
Alpha
Price to Sales
Beta
PE
Current Ratio
Debt to Equity
Net Profit Margin
Price to Book 
 5Revenues
- Money that a company collects from customers for 
 the sale of a product or service. When you
 subtract out all costs from revenues, you get
 profits or earnings.
6Market Capitalization
- The total dollar value of all outstanding shares, 
 calculated by multiplying the price of a single
 share by the total number of shares outstanding.
- Mega Cap Market cap of 200 billion and greater 
- Big/Large Cap 10-200 billion 
- Mid Cap 2 billion to 10 billion 
- Small Cap 300 million to 2 billion 
- Micro Cap 50 million to 300 million 
- Nano Cap Under 50 million 
7Net Profit Margin
- Net income as a percentage of sales. You get this 
 by dividing net income by sales. Since it's a
 percentage, it tells you how many cents on each
 dollar of sales is pure profit.
- The higher a companys profit margin compared to 
 its competitors, the better
8Net Profit Margin Example
- Suppose True Religion made a profit of 20 on the 
 sale of a 200 pair of jeans. Dividing the dollar
 amount of earnings by the product cost, that
 firm's profit margin would be 0.1 or 10 percent,
 meaning that each dollar of sales generated an
 average of ten cents of profit.
- The profit margin is very important as a measure 
 of the competitive success of a business, because
 it captures the firm's unit costs.
9Earnings per Share (EPS)
- A very important fundamental, calculated 
- Basically, this will tell you if and how 
 profitable the company is.
- Whats preferred stock? A class of ownership in a 
 corporation with a stated dividend that must be
 paid before dividends to common stock holders.
10P/E Ratio
- One of the favorite ratios, it is simply 
- EPS from the last four quarters is called 
 trailing P/E
- EPS taken from the estimates of earnings expected 
 in the next four quarters is called forward P/E
- P/E is referred to as the "multiple," because it 
 shows how much investors are willing to pay per
 dollar of earnings.
- High P/E means high projected earnings in the 
 future.
-  It's usually only useful to compare the P/E 
 ratios of companies in the same industry, or to
 the market in general, or against the company's
 own historical P/E
11Price to Sales
- Price to sales is calculated by dividing a 
 stock's current PRICE by its revenue (SALES) per
 share
- A low price to sales ratio (for example, below 
 1.0) is usually thought to be a better investment
 since the investor is paying less for each unit
 of sales. However, sales don't reveal the whole
 picture, since the company might be unprofitable.
12Price to Book
- Price to book is calculated by dividing the 
 current closing price of the stock by the latest
 quarter's book value.
- What is book value you ask? It is the total value 
 of the company's assets that shareholders would
 theoretically receive if a company were
 liquidated today.
- A low P/B ratio could mean the stock is 
 undervalued, or something is very wrong with the
 company
For Those Interested A liability is recorded on 
the balance sheet and can include accounts 
payable, taxes, wages, accrued expenses, and 
deferred revenues. Current liabilities are debts 
payable within one year, while long-term 
liabilities are debts payable over a longer 
period. 
Book Value equals the total of all, minus all 
liabilities, dividing the result by the number of 
common shares outstanding.  
 13Debt to Equity
- A relative measure of how much debt a company 
 has
- Essentially long-term funds provided by 
 creditors divided by funds provided by
 shareholders.
- A higher debt/equity ratio generally means that a 
 company has been aggressive in financing its
 growth with debt. This can result in volatile
 (RISK) earnings
14Current Ratio
- A good measure of liquidity of a company, or how 
 easily it can cough up cash.
- AKA - Indicator of company's ability to pay 
 short-term obligations calculated by dividing
 current assets by current liabilities.
- The higher the ratio, the more liquid the 
 company! (What types of companies might this
 ratio be VERY important?)
15Quick Ratio
- Like current ratio, this gives a measure of a 
 companys financial strength
- It is a measure of how quickly a company's assets 
 can be turned in cash
- You subtract inventories so you can check and see 
 if a company has sufficient liquid assets to meet
 short-term operating needs. (NOTE THAT CURRENT
 RATIO DID NOT SUBTRACT INVENTORIES)
- A ratio that is really hard to calculate because 
 its quick
16Return on Assets (ROA)
- Also sometimes called Return on Investment or 
 ROI, this is a measure what earnings were
 generated from capital investment back into the
 company
- Always given as a percentage 
- Think of it as How much money (income) was 
 generated from a companys investment into itself
 (capital investment or company assets)
17Return on Equity
- It is a measure of how much in earnings a company 
 generates in four quarters compared to its
 shareholders' equity and is a good measure of
 profitability
- It is also measured as a percentage. 
- For instance, if XYZ Corp. made 1 million in the 
 past year and has shareholders' equity of 10
 million, then the ROE is 10. Some use ROE as a
 screen to find companies that can generate large
 profits with little shareholder investment in the
 company.
18Beta
- A measure of a security's or portfolio's 
 volatility, or systematic risk, in comparison to
 the market as a whole. (usually calculated with
 SP 500 Index)
- Think of beta as the tendency of a security's 
 returns to respond to swings in the market. A
 beta of 1 indicates that the security's price
 will move EXACTLY with the market. A beta less
 than 1 means that the security will be LESS
 volatile than the market. A beta greater than 1
 indicates that the security's price will be MORE
 volatile than the market.
19Price/Earnings to Growth (PEG)
- It is 
- Can give you an idea of a stock potential growth, 
 since it divides be Earnings Per Share (EPS)
 annual growth rate  but is based on analysts
 ESTIMATES!
- If a company has a P/E of 20 and analysts expect 
 its earnings will grow 15 annually over the next
 few years, you'd say it has a PEG of 1.33.
 Anything above 1 is suspect since that means the
 company is trading at a premium to its growth
 rate.
20Many Others 
- There are many other ratios out there to help you 
 get an idea of what the financial health of a
 company is
- What do you do if you dont know what they mean? 
 Panic and run around the room? No, use
Many of the formulas and definitions from this 
presentation were borrowed from Investopedia 
without their consent please dont turn me in. 
 21Our Example Company
- SFBC International Inc. (SFCC) 
- A drug development services company, Provides 
 clinical drug development services to branded
 pharmaceutical, biotechnology, generic drug, and
 medical device companies. SFBC specializes
 primarily in the areas of Phase I and early Phase
 II clinical trials and bio-analytical laboratory
 services. The company also provides late stage
 clinical development services that focus on Phase
 II through Phase IV clinical trials.
22Analyzing SFCC Fundamentally
- Valuation Price/Earnings, Price/Sales, 
 Price/Book
- Growth Rates 
- Debt and Liquidity Debt to Equity, Quick Ratio 
- Returns ROA, ROE 
23Valuation
- PE  Always compare to industry and sector! 
- 16.55 vs. and industry of 40.54 and sector of 
 30.89
- Is this due to low price or high earnings? 
- PS  Due to higher sales growth, PS is much lower 
 than industry or sector!
24Growth Rates
- For a small market cap (457.09M), it is 
 imperative that the company is growing its
 earnings while backing up these earnings with
 increasing SALES.
- Important to look at both quarterly and annual 
 growth rates.
25(No Transcript) 
 26Debt and Liquidity 
 27Returns 
 28Questions?