Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
Analyzing Stocks
Overview
After youve populated your Watch List using the concepts outlined in the Generating Ideas section, your next step is to do an in-depth
analysis. Your goal is to buy the very best stocks at the very best times.
Fundamental Data
Youll next want to take a closer look at the fundamental data offered in the
MarketSmith Data Boxes on the daily and week chart views. An overarching
concept to keep in mind is that the biggest winners in the stock market tend to be
the number one companies in their fields. Your goal is to identify the present-day
leaders, the companies that have the best economics in their respective areas.
In our studies of the biggest winning stocks of all time, we identified a number of
characteristics that were common to those companies before their stocks went on
to tremendous gains for their shareholders. Youll be able to identify each of these
characteristics in the MarketSmith Data Boxes.
One of the first things youll want to focus on is the companys earnings history.
Growing earnings are the lifeblood of almost all major stock moves. Without
Annual earnings for the last three years should be increasing at a rate
of 25% per year or even more. If you are looking at a younger company
that recently had its IPO, you might accept the last five or six quarters being
up a significant amount.
A time-saving way to
evaluate the above earnings
growth measures is by
looking at the EPS rating
available in MarketSmith.
This rating averages a
companys most recent two
quarters of EPS growth with
its three-year to five-year
annual growth rate and then
compares its growth to all other publicly traded companies in the ONeil Database. Stocks are rated on a 1 to 99 scale with 99 being the
best. Growth investors should spend most of their time focusing on companies with an EPS Rating of 80 or higher.
In addition to earnings growth, youll want to see an accompanying increase in sales. A company can cut costs only so much to
increase earnings. Big profit gains must eventually be accompanied by sales growth. Use the following sales-related parameter during
your analysis:
Finally, you should analyze how efficient the company is at generating returns given the amount of capital it employs. Return on
equity(ROE) measures how much net income (earnings) a company generates in relation to the amount of shareholder equity it has.
The very best companies will generate consistently high ROEs. Keep the following parameter in mind:
Return on equity should be 17% or higher.
To recap what key fundamentals to focus on in your research, here is what we covered:
Earnings per share in the latest quarter up at least 18-20% versus the same quarter a year ago
Earnings growth accelerating in recent quarters compared with earlier rates of change
Annual earnings for the last three years should be increasing at a rate of at least 25% per year
Sales up 25% or more in one or more recent quarters, or at least accelerating in their percentage change for the last three
quarters
Return on equity of 17% or higher
year to form, though three to six months is the most common. The correction from
the top of the formation to the bottom varies from the 12% to 15% range to
upwards of 33%. The pattern shouldnt correct more than 2 times the correction
in the overall market averages.
The typical cup with handle pattern starts with the stock moving down five to seven
weeks to form the left side of the cup. In most cases, the bottom part of the cup
should be rounded, more in the fashion of a U than a V. This area of the pattern
is important because it wears out the weak investors and establishes a
foundation of strong holders who are less likely to sell during the coming advance. The pattern then moves up the right side, traveling
more than halfway up the pattern, usually within 15 percent of the patterns old high price on the left side.
Next, the pattern starts drifting sideways in the handle portion. Volume in the lower part of the handle frequently declines to a low level.
This means theres not much more selling into the stock, a constructive sign.
The pivot or buy point of a cup with handle pattern occurs after the handle, which
should have been drifting down along its price lows, has completed its decline
and the stock starts to move back up, surpassing its earlier peak price in the
handle area. We call this a breakout. On the day of a breakout, volume should
spike at least 40-50% above normal. You can visually track this in MarketSmith by
comparing the days volume to the 50-day moving average volume line.
Its important to wait until the pivot point is reached to execute your purchase. Buy
too early, and in many cases your stock will never get to its breakout point, leaving
you with a stock that has stalled or may actually decrease. You want a stock to
prove its strength to you. At the same time, if you buy more than 5% to 10% past
the pivot, you are buying late, and you will likely get shaken out in a normal price
correction or could suffer a sharp loss if the breakout fails.
Saucer
This pattern is similar to the cup with handle, but is shallower and tends to stretch out over a longer period of time. A typical saucer
pattern corrects 12% to 20% from peak to trough. While some saucers may last only seven weeks, often this pattern can take several
months or even a year to form.
In most cases, you will see a handle with this pattern as well. If a handle forms,
the pivot point for a saucer is the top of the handle. If a handle does not
materialize, the pivot point is the top of the left side of the base.
Double Bottom
This pattern looks like the letter W, but in almost all cases, the second leg down
should undercut the low price of the first. This is constructive because it shakes
out the weak holders that held on during the first leg down. Double bottoms may
also have handles, although this is not essential.
As with a cup with handle, a double bottom needs at least seven weeks to form.
The middle peak of the W should be lower than the high at beginning of the base,
but above the midpoint of the base. Pay attention to the volume within this and all
patterns. Constructive signs would include tight price ranges in light volume,
weeks of high-volume support at the 50- and 200-day moving average lines, and
price declines in the second part of the base on low volume.
A double bottoms pivot is usually the same price at the middle peak in the W.
This peak should definitely be below the old high peak price of the overall doublebottom pattern. Look for a volume surge of 50% or more above average on the day
of the breakout. In some cases, a double bottom will form a handle before reaching the middle peak in the W. In those situations, the
pivot point is when the stock clears the highest price point in the handle.
Flat Base
This pattern basically goes sideways, not correcting more than 10 to 15 percent.
This base doesnt take as long to form, with five or six weeks as a minimum. Flat
bases usually form as second-stage base after a stock has advanced and
retained most of the 20 to 25 percent or more move from its initial base. If you
missed the initial breakout, a flat base can give you another entry point into a
stock.
The pivot point for a flat base is the same as that for other bases and usually
occurs when the stock reaches the high point of the consolidation. You can
sometimes find an earlier pivot point for a flat base and for the handles on other
bases by drawing a down trendline across peak points in the stocks flat base or
handle. The buy point is then when the stock crosses above the trendline.
Ascending Base
This is another pattern that usually occurs after a stock has broken out of an initial
base and runs up partway through its overall advance. Its generally 9 to 16 weeks
in duration, with three 10 to 20 percent pullbacks in price. Each pullback has a
higher low and each rally has a higher high. Short-term general market sell-offs
are usually the cause of these three price pullbacks.
After the stock completes its third pullback , the stock will begin to rebound. The
pivot point for the ascending base is where the stock clears the high point of
the third rally.
Further Study
You can learn more about these concepts along with a few other less common base patterns in William J. ONeils books How to Make
Money in Stocks and The Successful Investor. You may also want to take a look at the investment education resources of
Investors.com.
Seeking Sponsorship
Youve found a stock with a great looking chart. It has a fantastic record of earnings and sales growth. It has an innovative new product.
The market is in an uptrend. Ready to buy? Wait! Do you know who owns your stock?
Its estimated that institutions (mutual funds, pension funds, banks, etc) represent 70% of trading activity in the market. If a stock is
going to make a big move, its going to need institutional sponsors.
Pent-up Demand
Institutional sponsorship is also important because it can take a portfolio manger several quarters to build a position in a stock due to
the large positions funds need to take. Thus, a new position by a fund can represent future demand for the stocks shares by that same
fund. Funds that hold their positions for longer periods may also be less likely to sell positions they are just starting to build. Pay close
attention to times when you spot a fund taking a new position in a stock.
It can also be useful to know what type of managers own your stock. Are there a lot
of aggressive growth managers that buy on strength and may push a breakout
stock to new heights? In addition, do the same managers tend to sell on technical
weakness? If so, you should be conscious that this could cause more volatility in
the name. On the other hand, if a stock has a lot of value style managers, they may
be inclined to start unloading their positions as a stock reaches new high territory.
This kind of knowledge helps you keep future price moves in context.
To determine the style of a mutual fund, youll want to first check out the Objective
and Investment Policy Statement available in the Profile tab of the Related
Information Panel for mutual fund charts. Another helpful way to determine the
style of a mutual fund management team is to simply look at their holdings. Do
they own a lot of stocks with fast growing earnings at or near new price highs?
Then they probably lean toward aggressive growth. Do they own beaten down
stocks with low P/E ratios? Then they probably lean toward deep value.
Sponsorship Rating
Another tool for analyzing the institutional sponsorship of the stock youre
researching is the Sponsorship Rating, which appears in the Data Box on a
MarketSmith Weekly Chart. This rating averages the three-year performance of all
the mutual funds owning a stock. The rating scale ranges from A to E. A high
sponsorship rating indicates that a number of better performing mutual funds own
the stock, a positive sign.
Its important, however, to keep recent market activity in mind when analyzing a stocks Sponsorship Rating. For example, if you are
researching stocks to buy in the early stages of a bull market, the preceding period may have been one when a lot of more aggressive
growth mutual funds struggled. As a result, those funds will have poor three-year performance ratings, and growth stocks will then likely
have poor Sponsorship Ratings. Or perhaps the preceding period had been one during which strong relative strength stocks
dominated and a lot of value funds struggled. Again, those funds will likely have poor three-year performance ratings, and value stocks
will then likely have poor Sponsorship Ratings. Keep the market context in mind when using Sponsorship Rating as the measure of the
quality of a stocks institutional backers.
Overowned Stocks
While some sponsorship is a good thing for a potential investment, it is possible for a stock to have too much sponsorship. We call
stocks like this overowned. The problem with these stocks is that if something goes wrong at the company or a bear market begins,
several large institutional sellers may run for the exit at once, crushing the stock. For example, Janus Funds alone owned more than
250 million shares of Nokia and 100 million shares of American Online in 2000 and 2001, which contributed to heavy selling pressure
when these positions were unwound. By the time a stock becomes obvious to everyone, its probably too late to own. In the Data Box
located on the weekly chart, you can see what percent of a stocks shares are held by institutions. You can also see the raw number of
funds in a name. Be cautious of stocks that seem to be owned by everyone.
2015 Daily Graphs Online. All Rights Reserved. Daily Graphs Online is a trademark of William O'Neil + Co. Incorporated.