31-12-2012, 10:34 AM
(31-12-2012, 10:12 AM)Musicwhiz Wrote:(30-12-2012, 12:29 PM)d.o.g. Wrote: The same can be said of P/E. Exactly what is in the "E"? There may be revaluation gains, one-off asset disposals, negative goodwill etc. Earnings may also be cyclical. Blindly buying low P/E companies can be just as problematic as blindly buying low P/B companies. Nothing beats doing your own homework.
Quick question - would it mean using P/FCF is the most robust compared to P/E and P/B as FCF is much harder to manipulate and is based on cash flows rather than earnings (which can be managed) or book value (which can be written down or based on historical)?
Thanks!
i dont think valuation of a company should just be based on a simple criterion. Should consider all of p/e , p/b, p/fcf, profit margin comparison across the whole industry, integrity of management + many many other factors..
if only investing was so easy