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Equity Valuation Techniques
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subu76
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Quote subu76 Replybullet Posted: 04/Jun/2009 at 12:27pm
Originally posted by manish_okhade

Past data is important for assessement of companies competitive strenght as well as management capability. I dont think in India we have any company which is having something very unique to offer, theres always a competitor.
 
I thought a bit more....thanks for correcting me.
 


Edited by subu76 - 04/Jun/2009 at 1:02am
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talk2me
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Quote talk2me Replybullet Posted: 10/Aug/2009 at 6:46pm
I came accross a artical on Move Over P/E, Make Way for the PEG
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manish_okhade
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Quote manish_okhade Replybullet Posted: 10/Aug/2009 at 6:54pm
Originally posted by talk2me

I came accross a artical on Move Over P/E, Make Way for the PEG
 
In my humble opinion all mathematical valuation techniques are based on historical correlation. In business past does not necessarily repeat in future. For evaluation metrics like PEG, DCF etc are good to give comfort in making final buying decisons but real rational should be dependant on many facets like understanding of business model, scalability opportunity etc.
 
In fact valuation techniques vary greatly from  sector to sector. I recommend you to read a book Beating Strat from Peter Lynch. Its a great book in which Peter has opened his heart on various types of companies and explained how he come acrss a valuation of them.
 
A must read for all!
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talk2me
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Quote talk2me Replybullet Posted: 10/Aug/2009 at 7:15pm
Thanks for your recomendationClap, I had read this book long back. Wink
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manish_okhade
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Quote manish_okhade Replybullet Posted: 17/Aug/2009 at 5:24pm
Hello Basantji, Vivekji, FutureBull, Kullmanji, SmartCatji and others,
 
I am giving below once example for right prise evluation. Let me know if you see any flaw here:
 
Stock Name: Colgate Palmolive
Today's prise: 600
PE: 28.6
MktCap/Sales(FY08-09) : 8187/1770 = 4.6
 
Historical data:
 
Mar '05 Mar '06 Mar '07 Mar '08 Mar '09
EPS 8.33 10.12 11.78 17.04 21.34
CAGR % 26.51%
 
I am assuming a safe growth rate of 20% and PE of 20 as worst case scenario for next 3 years. It gives me following:
 
P/E by 2012 20
EPS Growth rate 20%
2009 2010 2011 2012
EPS 21.34 25.608 30.7296 36.87552
 
So EPS of 36.87 gives me following:
 
Prise by 2012 737.5104
Current Prise 600
CAGR 7.12%
 
So if i get the Col-Pal by say 550 then i will be earning CAGR of 10.27% for 3 years.
 
Is something wrong above, am i seeing a margine of safety above? Typically FMCG scrips gets PE of 25-30 in best time so upside is also look higher.
 
Looking forward to your comments.
 
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chimak10
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Quote chimak10 Replybullet Posted: 17/Aug/2009 at 6:23pm
Add dividends or vivek will go ballastic




Edited by chimak10 - 17/Aug/2009 at 6:24pm
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smartcat
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Quote smartcat Replybullet Posted: 17/Aug/2009 at 6:24pm

That is an extension of PEG investing - this is what everybody who has just read a Peter Lynch book starts off with, as their stock investing strategy. However, it works well for evaluation of FMCG stocks only.

Try this technique with any other sector, and you will get mixed results.
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manish_okhade
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Quote manish_okhade Replybullet Posted: 17/Aug/2009 at 6:27pm
Originally posted by smartcat

That is an extension of PEG investing - this is what everybody who has just read a Peter Lynch book starts off with, as their stock investing strategy. However, it works well for evaluation of FMCG stocks only.

Try this technique with any other sector, and you will get mixed results.
 
Yeah i know that i am just extrapolating past to future bit linearly.
 
But i still did not get my answer whether for a stable player like Co-Palm, is anything looks wrong in evaluation  Confused?
 
 
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