Get Organized With An Investment Analysis Form
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Get Organized With An Investment Analysis Form
When you're thumbing through annual reports, proxy statements and analyst ratings of multiple companies, the numbers can start to blur together. On top of that, once you've taken a look at all the financials a company has to offer, you can find yourself wondering what the significance is of the figures you've been looking at. It's information overload and it's to be expected in any situation where fairly abstract ideas, like solvency ratios and assets per share, are thrown about in large quantities. In this article, we'll show you how to organize all the company information you've gathered into a readable and useful format.
Just sitting down with a bunch of financial statements isn't a very efficient or effective way of determining whether or not a company is a good investment decision. You've got to organize your thoughts - otherwise you're just going to be spinning your wheels. That's why creating your own investment analysis form can be one of the most valuable investment tools in your arsenal. An investment analysis form is a tool that you can use to help gather numbers and essential information needed to make an investment decision in one easy-to-use format.
Simplify Your Research
An investment analysis form is the perfect place to record key figures and pieces of information about your company as you find them in your research. This can be done on a customized form on a sheet of paper or on the computer through a spreadsheet program.
An investment analysis form allows you to better interpret your data systematically, as all of the information is collected into a standardized format. Because information is plugged in uniformly, you're guaranteed not to miss anything that you have deemed important.
An investment analysis form also allows an investor to simplify his or her research by only looking at information that is relevant to the investment decision , while throwing out any superfluous data. There are a lot of reasons why you might run into extraneous information in your research, but unless you make sure that it's kept out of your investment criteria, it's difficult to say whether or not unimportant information is influencing an important decision.
You can bet that investment professionals don't just go at a 10-K without a plan, and neither should you.
Collect Key Figures
Information Within the Form
The first step in developing your own investment analysis form is determining what you want to include in it. There are some figures that are essential and some that will be specific to your individual investing style.
Things like recent stock price, earnings per share (EPS), price/earnings ratio and total debt are pretty universal. Don't have an investment form that is missing an essential piece of financial information - anything that you would expect to see on the stock quote page of your favorite financial website should probably be included.
Numbers aren't the only thing that belongs on the form. You'll definitely want places to write in things like products, addressed and unaddressed risk, legal troubles and the like. Your personal instincts and impressions after doing your research will be invaluable when you go back to looking at the stock a day or a year down the road, so make sure that you have a place to write them down. If you do a lot of investment research , it's even easier to forget your impressions about a certain stock. That's when having all those comments right at your fingertips is such a benefit. (Learn why it is helpful to keep a log of your instincts and actions, read Lessons From A Trader's Diary.)
Now that you've got the essentials and the write-ins taken care of, don't forget the simple stuff. Have a place for the company name, the symbol and the date you did your research. Include things like state of incorporation, investor relations contact and a phone number for the main circuit board. While it may seem like a lot, it sure comes in handy when you need to reach someone to voice your concerns or just to get the latest financials from the company.
The process of creating an investment form is not a one-time deal, as you will likely make many changes over time as you hone your analysis skills.
Creating the Form
There are a couple of ways to set up your form. You can take a pen and paper and set up your spaces to write in information or, for the technically inclined, you can put it together on your computer using anything as simple as a word processor or as complex as professional page layout software.
If you'd prefer to go paperless, using a spreadsheet program like Microsoft Excel can offer you quite a bit of flexibility. If you prefer to use the old-school paper method, take your form template to your closest copy center and go copy crazy. Make enough copies so that you won't have to worry about running out in the near future. That way, when they are finally ready for some analyzing, you'll have all the blank copy forms you'll need.
Analyze Your Investments
Once you're all set up with a form of your own, you'll probably find that collecting your thoughts is a lot easier than it used to be. If you can interpret a stock quote online, you should have no problem interpreting the data you'd want to include on your form. It just simplifies the process of investment analysis.
Where the idea of an investment analysis form really shines is when you're trying to scale across investments . Having information available to you in an organized way for multiple companies makes a comparison of two companies a much less impractical task and can help cement your understanding of what attributes make for an attractive investment. Just don't forget that an investment analysis form is just an aide. It won't tell you whether a particular stock is a smart investment, but it can help you organize your thoughts and data so that you can make that determination for yourself.
Conclusion
Scouring through piles of 10-Ks can be an unpleasant and confusing task, especially for a less experienced investor, but with the right tools for the job, making use of the information you collect can be all the easier. Creating your own investment analysis form can enable you to interpret the information you deem important in selecting an investment without losing your head in a sea of numbers.