1 / 23

Introduction to Financial Analysis

Introduction to Financial Analysis. Shyam Sunder Yale School of Management September 12, 2012. An Overview. The opportunity sets Business model Resource flows, technology, and strategy How Far to look Gathering Financial data Financial manipulations, Shenanigans Assessing and deciding

annot
Download Presentation

Introduction to Financial Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Financial Analysis Shyam Sunder Yale School of Management September 12, 2012

  2. An Overview • The opportunity sets • Business model • Resource flows, technology, and strategy • How Far to look • Gathering Financial data • Financial manipulations, Shenanigans • Assessing and deciding • What to expect

  3. Opportunity Set? • What is the range of investment opportunities you wish to consider? • Corporate and government securities (e.g., stocks, bonds, derivatives) • Commodities, currencies, their futures and derivatives • Land, housing, and other real estate (and related securities) • Art, antiques, and collectibles • Other • Limit discussion today to equities

  4. Business Model • Independent of what you choose to analyze, you always have to identify, understand, and build the “business model” of the investment opportunity you wish to analyze • What do we mean by business model? • Understand how the investment works • Let us start with equity investment in a business firm

  5. Resource Flows Sunder, Good Management

  6. “Production Technology” • What is the “technology of producing” output from inputs (include products and services)? • Plant investment, fixed and variable costs of plant • How does this “technology” compare with others? • What have been the changes in past? Prospective changes? In the firm and in the industry? • Likely consequences of these changes for the resource flows?

  7. For Each Class of Resource Flows • Identify each significant resource • Estimate the volume or resource flows • Identify existing terms of exchange (price, volume, elasticity) • Identify market conditions (competition, growth, new technologies, price sensitivity, etc.) • Characterize the counterparties (the other side) • Identify potential changes, disruptions, innovations • Identify flexibility, substitutability, vulnerability • New ideas for improving terms of exchange, reducing vulnerability by restructuring

  8. Capital Flows • Common equity • Preferred equity • Bonds • Bank debt • Other borrowing (including private) • What combination of sources of financing? • Domestic or foreign, currency denomination? • At what cost and what risk? • New ideas?

  9. Labor • Managerial: skills, quality, work culture, price, mobility • White collar: skills, quality, work culture, price, location • Blue collar: Education and skills, quality, work culture, price, location, flexibility • Fixed and variable components of labor costs

  10. Product Market • Demand and growth, potential size • Price elasticity (demand function) • Geographical distribution (under exploited markets) • Receptivity to innovation • Product portfolio, overlap, canabalizing, market shares, profitability and cross-subsidies

  11. Vendors • Supply chain (diversification, competition, vulnerability to disruption) • Competitive conditions • Ownership and commitment • Geographic distribution • Potential for growth in volume • Pricing • New ideas: make-or-buy decisions

  12. Externalities • Resource flows which are not priced • Most difficult part of analysis of business model • Difficult to price does not mean not important • Examples?

  13. Strategy • What is firm’s strategy with respect to • Technology • Products • Financiang • Labor • Supply chain • Generating profits and growth

  14. How Far Do You Look? • Do you know when you would want to exit (cash out) your investment? • If not, how uncertain are you? • How much flexibility do you have in your time horizon?

  15. Gathering Financial Data • 10-K: • auditor’s report: absence of opinion, qualified report, reputation of auditor, audit committee (independent directors act as intermediary with auditors) • Footnotes: accounting policies / changes (in policies or estimates), review inventory valuation, (LIFO vs. FIFO / specific id) (except technology), revenue recognition (after sale vs. At sale with risk remaining), depreciation (accelerated vs. Straight line), estimate of warranty (high vs. Low), estimate of bad debts (high vs. Low), treatment of advertising (expense vs. Capitalize), loss contingencies (accrue loss vs. Footnote only), pending or imminent litigation (Item 3, better than footnote in annual), long term purchase commitments (at what price?) • Industry specific notes • Segment information (showing unhealthy segment) • Management discussion and analysis • Specific concise disclosures liquidity, capital expenditures, candor • consistent with footnotes

  16. More Financial Data • Annual Report: president’s letter, forthright vs. Always upbeat • Proxy (for annual meeting): litigation, executive compensation • Turnover of management • Related party transactions • 10-Q: unaudited, consistency with 10-K • 8-K (special events): auditor changes, disagreements over accounting policies (opinion shopping), change in control of the company, acquisitions, dispositions, resignation of directors, bankruptcy • Prospectus • Past performance • Quality of management and directors • Conference calls, market history, industry reports, personal experience with products and services of the firm

  17. Things to Watch for • Executive incentives which encourage managing financial statements • Poor internal controls • Quarterly financial statements (they are not audited) • Companies with weak control environment (board of directors is not independent; auditors not independent) • Management facing extreme competitive pressure • Management with questionable character • Fast growth companies whose real growth is beginning to slow • Basket case companies struggling to survive • Newly public companies • private companies (especially those which aren’t audited)

  18. Seven Financial Manipulations • Recording Revenue Too Soon • Recording Bogus Revenues • Boosting Income With One Time Gains • Shifting Current Expenses to a Later Period • Failing to Record or Disclose All Liabilities • Shifting Current Income to a Later Period • Shifting Future Expenses to the Current Period • accelerating discretionary expenses into the current period

  19. Assessing What You Find • Valuation models: choices, triangulation • When you find an over or under-valued security, ask yourself • Did others miss something that I know? • Did I miss something that other know? • Is the market efficient? If so, how efficient?

  20. Deciding on investment • Have I found something which is mis-priced? • Do I understand why it is mispriced? • Does investment in this opportunity fit my goals, investment horizon, and constraints? • What is the worst that can happen with this investment? Can I live with that?

  21. Was that a good investment or bad? • Learning from post mortems • Why did that investment work, or did not work? • What did I learn from this experience?

  22. What should You Expect? • You are competing with a lot of other smart people • Most of us cannot expect to be the winners all the time • If your winning average is slightly more than 50/50, you are doing fine • But it takes a long time to find out • Markets makes it tough for the wise to make a lot of money, and for fools to lose a great deal (index funds will earn you the average anyway) • So, you better do the hard work of research and understanding before jumping into the investment game

  23. Thank You!

More Related