Chapter 13

Evaluating Stocks’ Prospects

In This Chapter

arrow Measuring the potential risk and return of a stock

arrow Valuing a stock using a discounted cash flow analysis

arrow Determining the valuation of a stock, including price-to-earnings ratios

arrow Using online stock selection tools to study investments

arrow Comparing a company to its peers and industry

When investors say they bought a stock because “it’s a good company,” you should automatically become skeptical. As you find out in this chapter, one of the biggest mistakes investors make is confusing a company and its stock. They’re not the same thing.

A company is a business that sells things to customers and tries to make a profit. A company’s success is measured by its revenue and earnings growth, things I discuss in Chapter 11. But a stock is a different animal. Stocks are essentially pieces of ownership in a company. Stock prices are determined by how much investors are willing to pay to own a piece of a company. If too many people think a company ...

Get Investing Online For Dummies, 8th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.