Fire Your Stock Analyst Analyzing Stocks On Your Own
Post on: 17 Апрель, 2015 No Comment
Description
This is the eBook version of the printed book. If the print book includes a CD-ROM, this content is not included within the eBook version.
The #1 Guide to Do-It-Yourself Stock Analysis- Now Fully Updated with Powerful New Shortcuts!
-Harry-s book is among my most recommended readings because it provides a step-by-step process that enables any investor to analyze potential investment opportunities and ultimately become a much better investor.-
- Charles E. Kirk, The Kirk Report
-This is a thoughtful book that will stir the imagination and whet the appetite of anyone considering investing in stocks. It will serve as a foundation for lifelong education in how to improve your wealth.-
- Victor Niederhoffer, Chief Speculator, Manchester Investments, and author of the best-selling Education of a Speculator
-This book is sensible, balances risks with rewards, has a lot of real-world practical examples carefully worked out, and a lot of tangible parameters. This is the book I wish I had time to write.-
- David Edwards, President, Heron Capital Management, Inc.
-Fire Your Stock Analyst! grabbed my attention early and held it to the very end. This is a good book if you are interested in being your own stock guru or just getting started in common stock investment analysis.-
- Nicholas D. Gerber, Portfolio Manager, Ameristock Funds
-A refreshing antidote to run-of-the-mill investing -how-tos.- The net result is an insightful and useful treatise on investing that works for both growth and value plays.-
- Charles Mulford, Invesco Chair and Professor of Accounting, Georgia Institute of Technology, and coauthor of The Financial Numbers Game: Detecting Creative Accounting Practices
-Fire Your Stock Analyst! offers honest and up-to-the minute advice and guidance on the investment-research process. Domash offers up a great combination of textbook knowledge backed by real-world examples.-
- Richard H. Driehaus, Driehaus Capital Management, Inc.
-Fire Your Stock Analyst! provides well-thought-out, sensible, step-by-step strategies for analyzing stocks, including when to sell. These analytical methods, used by pros though rarely explained to individual investors, will help you improve your results in the market right away.-
- Jon D. Markman, Senior Investment Strategist and Portfolio Manager, Pinnacle Investment Advisors
Details
- Published on: 2009-11-05
- Released on: 2009-11-05
- Format: Kindle Book
Reviews
So good I paid retail at the bookstore.
Let me be honest about my biases. I strongly prefer technical analysis when it comes to analysing stocks. Price is determined by PERCEPTIONS about fundamentals.
By studying price and volume, the chartist can understand what the general market sentiment is regarding these fundamentals, and figure out, with a reasonable degree of confidence, which stocks to buy, and which to sell. With enough capital, skill, and the discipline to cut inevitable losses, you can make money.
Despite the benefits of technical analysis, I can see the value (no pun intended) in understanding the fundamentals on their own. Fundamentals complement the technicals, and any rational investor will compare market action with fundamental data to come to a profitable conclusion.
My problem: I’ve tried to read various books on fundamental analysis, but most put me to sleep.
This book is different. It is packed with solid, step-by-step directions on how to perform your own fundamental analysis. Tips include screening for candidates, determining a stock’s current valuation, setting a target price, and how to determine if the company is a potential Enron or Kmart. This is far from an exhaustive list of what you will learn.
Best of all, these techniques have been taken from money managers with a track record of beating the S&P, from Richard Dreihaus to the infamous short seller Jim Chanos.
Domash provides a highly readable, useful, and important book for the intelligent stock investor. Whether you are an investor or a trader, you will understand how those who move the markets tend to think. Read it if you want to make money.
A thorough, organized method of stock analysis
In clear prose, Harry Domash lays out a concise step-by-step guide to evaluating and analyzing growth and value stocks. I had no intentions of buying a book when I entered the store, but after looking over this book I was compelled to buy it. Yes! Another one who gladly paid retail. In only a week’s time the pages are dog-eared and highlighted.
Mr. Domash covers in depth each of the tools you need to find and evaluate good stocks. Not only does he cover the topics you’d expect a book like this to cover—profit margins, ROE and ROA, and inventory and A/R analysis—but he also gives you tools to look at the quality of a company’s management, whether it has a solid business plan and whether it’s a candidate for bankruptcy, but also some technical analysis tools too.
He doesn’t stop there though. Fire Your Stock Analyst! also gives you a complete tutorial on how you would go about using all the tools he provides to analyze growth stocks and value stocks. Moreover, he shows you exactly where to find all the information you need. And gives you a useful, rational method for valuing the stock, i.e. determining a price to buy at and fixing a target price. This is as complete a process as you could hope to find.
Again, the book is well worth the price at retail—and a steal at the discount being offered here!
Solid guide to fundamental analysis
This book will help you to evaluate and decode the stock information available on free financial websites likeYahoo! Finance and MSN Money. This is a thick book, very detailed and in-depth, with tons of useful information to help you can find the stocks that will generate solid returns. For example, Domash explains the difference between Return on Equity (ROE), Return on Assets (ROA), and Return on Capital (ROC). The author is obviously a very experienced stock analyst with a wealth of practical techniques for readers to use.
The main weakness is that Domash never really gives the reader a practical strategy for choosing stocks. He does give a generic value and growth approach, but never says which approach he uses or why. Also, there are many different kinds of value and growth investing; the strategies he lays out are so generic that they are of quite limited usefulness. Hardly anyone uses a pure value or growth approach.
Overall, this is one of the best books available on fundamental analysis, along with Pat Dorsey’s FIVE RULES FOR SUCCESSFUL STOCK INVESTING.