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Trading with Fundamentals

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by LION63 -  Jun 14, 2005
5.7 (from 22 ratings)

The whole procedure above takes less than 30 minutes and a smart 15 year old could perform this basic exercise. The beauty of it is that you would not have lost any money during the Technology bubble. Some people were buying shares that were priced based on the number of times people viewed the website. Hello? Why would I buy a fashion boutique based on the number of people that look at the mannequins through the window? It is all about sales, cash flow, profits and assets. Why would any rational thinking individual pay 1000 times earnings or 100 times sales for a company that has no assets, that was started within the last 12 months and is run by a couple of high school dropouts? The astute were busy snapping up the cyclicals, utilities, mining, banking stocks etc. that were extremely cheap on fundamentals and yielding more than bank deposits. When the music stopped, the technology speculators ended up without chairs (and in some cases they lost their beds as well).

By the time the charts told them the shares were heading for the abyss, it was too late, somewhat akin to trying to flee from a tornado or tidal wave. Ask yourself if you would put your boat out to sea if you knew that this would occur: obviously not. Neither would you head for the ski slopes if you had been told about an impending snowstorm. Fortunately, fundamentals are like the weatherman: you receive advanced warnings of the impending direction of the markets.

Whenever I see shares that are way out of line with their fundamentals I latch onto them and get ready to pull the trigger. It does not always have to be a case of buying (going long), it could be selling (shorting) - one simply reverses the criteria. A good example is Google: the speculators are piling in as if they are the best thing since sliced bread and they are currently priced around $293 per share. Now if I did not consider them good value at $115, $150, $180, $200 or even $250, why would I buy them at $293? I am either a momentum trader along for the ride, a technical trader following the steep gradient on my chart or a fool looking for gold. Before anyone says "But what about the massive profits that could have been obtained?" remember that trading with hindsight is impossible. More importantly, I used to do some work for a bookmaker and he once said, “Son it is not about the winners that you miss but the losers you do not back.” These shares are strictly for gamblers and those that have a high pain threshold and in my opinion there are much better trades elsewhere.

Trading based on fundamentals may not be exciting and you are very unlikely to grab any headlines but you certainly will not be parted from all your money. Sure and steady capital growth will be your reward and you will sleep well at night. I often laugh when I hear people say that they cannot leave trades running overnight because their stops might get hit but that is because they are taking on unnecessary risk. (Am I buying shares in BP or Exxon because they are good value or because I believe oil will hit $75 per barrel? Oil reaching those lofty levels should be a bonus). Sound trading based on fundamentals does not require tight stops: whenever they are hit, it means that the analysis was wrong or the company’s fundamentals have changed. You take the knock on the chin and move on because there are lots more fish in the sea.

On a final note, one does not require deep pockets to trade in this manner, as one can use spread betting which offers gearing of at least 10:1, CFDs which offer 5:1 or outright stock purchases. Depending on the method used and the number of open positions, it is possible to start and be profitable with as little as £2,500 starting capital (or something in that region). If one is astute it is quite feasible to compound the money and turn it into a large amount of capital.

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Comment on this Article

Recent Comments:
Very good, trading by the charts is a complete waste of time you will never make serious money unless you consider what drives the market. G Soras did NOT go by the charts when he shorted the pound, he went by the evidence in the market and won the biggest bet of all time. JB
Jonathon4   29-06-2008 03:32:50
Ken2win: I find the article is very helpful for the understandig who we are and what we are doing trading on Stock Exchange Markets. FA works perfectly on Emerging Markets, just we should not be afraid of them.
Ken2win   24-09-2007 04:33:34
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/econ...sp?siteid=mktw
Baruch   24-03-2006 05:54:02
That's all very well if markets were rational. They simply aren't because people are not rational. There is no doubt fundamental analysis works, but it does mean you will get to miss out on the greatest opportunities. Technical analysis coupled with fundamental analysis reminding yourself that markets are not rational? Now you are talking about a powerful comination.....
Dispassionate   18-09-2005 20:19:19
Please.. who trade with fundamentals this days?
Tomerep   03-09-2005 05:12:47

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