Master the Morningstar Rating for Stocks to sort bargain stocks from overpriced fare. Use Morningstar stock types for insight into a company's potential risks and rewards.
How do you find a great company to invest in? A great company is not always a great investment. It all boils down to the math.
You've probably heard of P/E ratios, P/B ratios, and the like. Learn what they and several other exotic ratios are all about.
Can you measure the absolute value of any company? That is what discounted cash flow aims to do. This lesson is an introduction.
In this course we will work through an example of how to determine the discounted cash flow of a company. It is fairly math-heavy.
Taken from baseball, the fat-pitch strategy refers to buying under the best possible conditions. Let's look at what this means.
The Morningstar Rating for stocks is based on a stock's market price relative to its estimated fair value, adjusted for risk.
Behavioral finance shows us many ways in which we are not always rational investors, despite what we think. Here are several examples.
Dividends often get lost in the shuffle when we talk about stocks, but ultimately, the value of stock is based on dividends.
We will look at identifying high-quality stocks with good return prospects. Dividends can establish a firm intrinsic value for a stock.