Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Business Fundamentals====== Business fundamentals are the core pieces of information about a company that reveal its financial health, operational efficiency, and overall performance. Think of it as a thorough medical check-up for a business. Instead of checking blood pressure and heart rate, investors examine financial statements, key ratios, management quality, and competitive position. This process, known as [[fundamental analysis]], is the bedrock of [[value investing]]. It's about understanding the //actual business// you're buying a piece of, not just trading a ticker symbol based on market chatter or chart patterns, which is the domain of [[technical analysis]]. By digging into the fundamentals, you can determine a company's [[intrinsic value]]—what it’s truly worth—and decide if its current stock price offers a good deal. It’s the difference between being a business owner and a speculator. ===== The Heart of a Business: What Are Fundamentals? ===== At their core, business fundamentals are the signals that tell you whether a company is strong, growing, and built to last, or if it's struggling and facing risks. To get a complete picture, investors look at two categories of fundamentals: the numbers (quantitative) and the story behind the numbers (qualitative). A great company excels in both areas. A high profit margin is fantastic, but it's even better when you know it's protected by a powerful brand that customers love. ===== The Numbers Game: Quantitative Fundamentals ===== Quantitative fundamentals are the hard data you can find in a company's financial reports. They are measurable and objective, providing a clear snapshot of financial performance. ==== Financial Statements: The Big Three ==== Every publicly traded company must regularly publish three key financial statements. Learning to read them is a superpower for any investor. * **The [[Income Statement]] (or P&L):** This tells you about a company's profitability over a period (usually a quarter or a year). It shows revenues, costs, and ultimately, the net profit or loss—the famous "bottom line." * **The [[Balance Sheet]]:** This provides a snapshot of what a company owns (assets) and what it owes (liabilities) at a single point in time. The difference between them is the shareholders' [[equity]]. A healthy balance sheet shows that a company can cover its debts. * **The [[Cash Flow Statement]]:** Cash is king! This statement tracks all the cash moving in and out of the company from operations, investing, and financing. Profit can be misleading due to accounting rules, but cash is much harder to fake. A company that generates a lot of cash is generally in a strong position. ==== Key Ratios and Metrics: Your Financial Toolkit ==== Ratios help you compare companies and understand their performance more deeply. They turn raw numbers from the financial statements into actionable insights. * **[[Earnings Per Share (EPS)]]:** A company's total profit divided by the number of outstanding shares. A consistently growing EPS is a great sign. * **[[Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio]]:** The stock price divided by the EPS. It tells you how much the market is willing to pay for each dollar of earnings. A lower P/E can sometimes indicate a bargain. * **[[Debt-to-Equity Ratio]]:** This compares a company's total debt to its shareholder equity. A high ratio can be a red flag, indicating too much borrowing. * **[[Return on Equity (ROE)]]:** This measures how efficiently a company uses its shareholders' money to generate profits. [[Warren Buffett]] loves companies with a consistently high ROE (above 15%). * **[[Free Cash Flow (FCF)]]:** The cash left over after a company pays for its operating expenses and capital expenditures. This is the cash that can be used to pay dividends, buy back shares, or reinvest in the business. ===== Beyond the Numbers: Qualitative Fundamentals ===== Numbers tell you what happened, but qualitative factors tell you //why// it happened and what might happen next. These are the less tangible, but equally important, aspects of a business. ==== Key Qualitative Factors ==== * **Business Model:** How does the company actually make money? Is the model simple to understand and sustainable for the long term? * **[[Economic Moat]] (Competitive Advantage):** What protects the company from competitors? This could be a powerful brand (like [[Coca-Cola]]), network effects (like Facebook), patents (like a drug company), or low-cost production. A wide moat is a value investor's best friend. * **Management Quality:** Is the leadership team competent, honest, and focused on creating long-term value for shareholders? Read their annual letters to shareholders. Do they talk straight, or do they use a lot of jargon to hide poor performance? * **Industry and Market Position:** Is the company a leader in a growing industry, or is it a small player in a dying one? It's much easier to succeed when the wind is at your back. * **[[Corporate Governance]]:** This refers to the rules and practices that direct and control a company. Good governance ensures that the interests of management are aligned with the interests of shareholders. ===== Why Fundamentals Matter to Value Investors ===== For a value investor, the stock market is a place where you can buy great businesses at a discount. The only way to know if a business is great and if its price is a discount is by studying its fundamentals. This disciplined approach helps you avoid getting swept up in market hype or panicked by market crashes. When you understand a company's fundamentals, you develop conviction. You know what the business is worth, so if the market price drops for no good reason, you see it as a buying opportunity, not a reason to sell. By focusing on the underlying business, you are investing, not gambling. This allows you to build a portfolio with a strong [[margin of safety]], which is the ultimate key to preserving capital and achieving long-term success.