Financials ratios & Values to evaulate a company or indu

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wintrade
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Financials ratios & Values to evaulate a company or indu

Post by wintrade »

Dennis,

after attending the course, I'm a little confused or unsure which Financials ratios &/or Values to use to evaulate a company or industry.

You mentioned ratio like PE<10, PEG<0.7, PB<0.7 (and they mainly for property or banks?), D/A <= 1 and D/E<=2

Do you have a list of ratio or values to use for different company and different industry?

Maybe you can list down which Ratio or value is important for which company or industry?

Thanks! :)
Dennis Ng
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Re: Financials ratios & Values to evaulate a company or

Post by Dennis Ng »

wintrade wrote:Dennis,

after attending the course, I'm a little confused or unsure which Financials ratios &/or Values to use to evaulate a company or industry.

You mentioned ratio like PE<10, PEG<0.7, PB<0.7 (and they mainly for property or banks?), D/A <= 1 and D/E<=2

Do you have a list of ratio or values to use for different company and different industry?

Maybe you can list down which Ratio or value is important for which company or industry?

Thanks! :)
nope. If life is so simple, then no one needs to work. Everyone just invest in stocks.

I already share some of the ratios useful for some specific industries, no such thing as specific formula for EVERY industry.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
lootster
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Post by lootster »

Hi, I was just about to ask Dennis regarding this.....

So far we have covered more on food, property and finance industry so is this the more common type of stocks you will buy, Dennis?

Also, i've tried to value "Tat Hong" stock after attending your seminar but seems like the method cannot be apply to this stock, or am I wrong? (Cannot figure which sectors this company belongs to)

I am holding "Tat Hong" shares at a loss so trying to figure out if it is still worth holding. Tat Hong are into crane rental business so I am not sure if the NAV plays a part for this type of stock? Are the "cranes" considered assets to the company?
Dennis Ng
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Post by Dennis Ng »

lootster wrote:Hi, I was just about to ask Dennis regarding this.....

So far we have covered more on food, property and finance industry so is this the more common type of stocks you will buy, Dennis?

Also, i've tried to value "Tat Hong" stock after attending your seminar but seems like the method cannot be apply to this stock, or am I wrong? (Cannot figure which sectors this company belongs to)

I am holding "Tat Hong" shares at a loss so trying to figure out if it is still worth holding. Tat Hong are into crane rental business so I am not sure if the NAV plays a part for this type of stock? Are the "cranes" considered assets to the company?
You don't analyse Tat Hong using NAV alone. Actually, such stocks are cyclical. Instead of Tat Hong, I just bought a smaller player called Tiong Woon. This is the beginning of the 3rd round I make money in Tiong Woon. (I simply love such cyclical stocks, where making money seem so easy).
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
Dennis Ng
Site Admin
Posts: 9781
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 7:16 am
Location: Singapore
Contact:

Post by Dennis Ng »

hi graduates, please do NOT post info shared in the seminar here. Please note that this forum have graduates who might not have attended Secrets to Making Money in Stocks Seminar.
Cheers!

Dennis Ng - When You Master Your Finances, You Master Your Destiny

Note: I'm just sharing my personal comments, not giving you investment advice nor stock investment tips.
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