Internal
drivers are company factors that are directly
related to the actual business in question.
For example, liabilities, assets, revenue,
income, products, management, etc. It
is these characteristics in a company
that you will be comparing to other companies
in the same industry. This allows the
trader to get a general understanding
of where this company "sits" in relation
to other companies with similar businesses.
A trader can also use these internal numbers
to calculate many different ratios that
will help determine if the company is
currently undervalued or overvalued.
Management
Management.
Who are they? What have they done in the
past? What is the quality and diversity
of the management team? All these questions
can lead to a lengthy discussion about
the particulars of each individual in
management. Traders should use analysts
reports, news, internet, and other sources
to help make an informed decisions about
the management team.
Products,
product cycles and competition. What is
the company's product and/or service?
How does it compare to other competitive
products? What's unique? Why is it better?
If you would not be willing to buy the
company's product why would you invest
in that company? Companies with inferior
products, weak development/product cycles,
poor quality companies tend not to last
very long (I'm sure there are some exceptions
to that rule, but it can be considered
bad policy to invest in companies with
bad products).
Production
Production
is very important when it comes to companies
that produce oil/gas, wood, power, metals
etc. Their value depends highly on their
production output as well as the current
value of the product. The more a company
produces, the more it can earn. As well,
these specific commodities vary in cost,
the higher the value of the product, the
higher the potential for profit. Oil is
a perfect example of this relationship.
As global oil prices rise so does the
value of oil companies.
Profit
Profit
margins are important, or for that matte,
profit in general is important. Profit
can be considered the keystone to fundamental
analysis - the more profitable the company,
the higher the potential for dividends
as well as price growth. Most valuation
techniques compare profit in some form
or another to that of similar companies.
Companies
that have not yet attained net profit
are still in the early stages of development.
While these companies generally have a
larger growth potential, they also have
more risk. Companies that are producing
net income can generally be considered
established in the market place. There
is less risk, and typically, the price
of the stock will reflect that. The axiom
here is that the more the company makes,
the more the company is worth.
Institutional
presence
Is
there an institutional presence? The level
of institutional presence is determined
by the amount of shares outstanding that
are owned by institutional investors (mutual
funds, pension funds, investment houses,
etc). As small companies mature, there
is a point where they will be recognized
by institutional investors. When these
institutions begin investing in a company,
the stock price will reflect that recognition
(also when they sell out, it will be noticed
in the stock price as well). Larger and
more established companies typically have
larger percentile institutional presence
than smaller companies (micro-caps tend
to have little to none).
Share
volume
While
the study of volume patterns is in the
realm of technical analysis, volume can
also be used as a fundamental indicator.
Does the company you are looking at have
enough share volume to sell your shares
at a later date? A simple check will keep
you from getting trapped.
Also
see: