Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (2024)

Tagalog Version (Click Here)

Personal finance gurus all teach you to save a part of what you earn and invest it, but not a lot of them will teach you the specifics of fundamental analysis (analyzing the specifics of companies) and how you should choose specific stock investments aside from “buy shares of big companies.”

Warren Buffett said that “Risk comes from not knowing what you’re doing.” Before you invest in a stock, you need to learn what the company’s valuation numbers mean. You need to know what the numbers say about the company’s performance instead of gambling solely on what the stock price graphs say.

*Note: This is a basic guide and I’ll include links to the Investopedia articles if you want to know moreabout each one. The true importance of this guide is in its Tagalog translation as it’s intended to serve as a primer for Filipinos who want to learn a few things aboutchoosing the best stocks.

Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (1)

1.Stock

Also called “Shares” or “Equities,” investopedia defines this as “a type of security that signifies ownership in a corporation and represents a claim on part of the corporation’s assets and earnings.” Contrary to what most people believe, stocks are not lottery tickets or “racehorses” you gamble on. They’re ownership of companies. In order to invest well, you need to learn how to spot great companies and buy them at fair prices.

2.Stock Price

This is how much you buy or sell a stock. Prices move depending on how the market views the company. If people think a company is going to do well, they buy shares and the price increases. If people think it’ll do badly, they stop buying, sell, and the price decreases. Very often, if people are frightened some bad news in the market (e.g recessions, market crashes, etc.), then even if the company is doing well, the stock price decreases anyway. You have to learn to ignore market sentiment and use cold logic when investing in stocks. If it’s a great company, you should invest in it.

Here’s an example of how people’s perceptions affect the stock price:

Let’s say Company A earns a consistent P10 million a month from its regular products. It then announces that it will launch a NEW product. That new product will likely produce more profits, so more people will buy more of that company’s stock and thus the demand will cause the shares’ price to increase.

…but what if two weeks later the new product FAILS? What if everyone hates the product? Then that will negatively affect the company’s reputation. Everyone will sell their shares and avoid buying it and that drives the stock price down… EVEN IF the company STILL earns the consistent P10 million a month from its regular products and is still VERY profitable. Very soon, however, people will recognize that and the stock price of that company will return to normal or even increase.

What’s the lesson here? Concentrate on buying great companies as they will do well in the long run. Never forget what Benjamin Graham said: “In the short run, the market is a voting machine but in the long run, it is a weighing machine.”

3.Price/Sales Ratio (P/E Ratio)

This is the stock price divided by the sales per share. What you’re looking for is a large amount of sales for a low stock price. The lower the number, the better.

Example:

Company A has P1,000 in sales per share and each share costs P100. The price to sales ratio would be 100/1000 or 0.1.

Company B, however, has lower sales per share of just P100 and each share costs P100. The price to sales ratio would be 100/100 or 1.

If you spent P100 to buy a share of company B, you only get P100 worth of sales. On the other hand, if you spend P100 to buy a share of company A, you get a huge P1,000 worth of sales. Do you understand now why a smaller Price/Sales Ratio is better? Keep that in mind.

*By the way, in this example I’m not saying that you’d get P1,000 or P100 for each share bought. That’s the company’s sales at the money is within the company. The moneypaid to you for owning shares is called Dividends and we’ll discuss that later on.

4.Price/Earnings Ratio

Divide the stock price by the earnings per share. This is how much you need to pay in order to receive one peso or dollar’s worth of the company’s earnings.

Example:

If the stock price per share is P100 and the annual earnings per share is P10, then the P/E ratio is 10.

If the stock price is P100 and the earnings per share is P50 (high earnings) or the stock price is P20 and the earnings per share is P10 (low stock price), then the P/E Ratio is 2.

For most stocks, the lower the P/E ratio the better. Companies with low P/Es are usually the large and slow-growth ones like utilities while newer or more “exciting” companies that people think will have higher earnings in the future (“growth stocks”) will have higher P/Es.

5.Book Value

The net asset value of a company minus intangible assets and liabilities. To put it simply, if Company A has P1 million of farm equipment and P4 million worth of land and it owes P3 million to the bank, then the book value of the company would be P2 million.

According to Lowell Miller, you should look at the Book Value per Share and the Stock Price. The closer the stock’s price is to the book value per share the better. Unfortunately though, the book value cannot calculate intangible assets like a brand’s popularity (ex. “Starbucks’ Coffee” vs “ABQD* Coffee”), but it’s a useful tool nonetheless. Just imagine two shops earn P10,000 a month, but the second shop also has several hectares of land that can be sold for P5 million. The second one has a major advantage because it can sell parts of that land to get more cash in order to expand and improve business.

*It’s a fictional company and if there IS a brand like it, that’s pure coincidence.

6.Cash Flow

It’s how much cash or cash equivalents flow into and out of the company. To give you a rough example, one company buys materials and profitably sells a thousand products every day so it has a high cash flow. Another company that buys a little material and sells profitable products once every three years will have a lower cash flow. For most companies, you’d generally want a high, POSITIVE cash flow, and it’s even better if the numbers increase.

7.Cash

How much cash a company has and its assets that can be immediately converted into cash. Like having more money in your wallet or bank account, in general a growth in a company’s cash is a VERY good sign. For one, it’s because cash usually comes from actual profits and it can also be used to buy assets or other companies in order to increase earnings. Aside from those, cash can also be used on stock buybacks and dividend increases which are very good news for shareholders (that’s you if you own that company’s shares of stock).

8.Dividends

A portion of a company’s earnings given to to shareholders (again, that’s you if you own that company’s shares of stock). For best results, you’ll want companies that pay high dividends (high yields) and those that also regularly increase dividends. If you’ve learned about the power of compounding, then you should realize that dividend growth will supercharge it by a lot. To add to that, you should also know that while accounting numbers can be illegitimately manipulated or faked to improve stock price, dividends, as Geraldine Weiss and Janet Lowe explained, are excellent indicators of a company’s performance as they need to come from actual earnings or profits. You can lie with the numbers, but you can’t lie with the cash you give out.

9.Payout Ratio (or Dividend Payout)

How much of the company’s earnings are paid out as dividends. A lower payout ratio percentage is better since it means a company is only paying a small part of its profits and they may have room to pay more. A very high payout ratio means that a company is paying too much of its profits to its shareholders and that can have disastrous effects if something causes their profits to decline.

10.Relative Strength

How the stock price moves in relation to the rest of the market and this aims to show which companies are doing better compared to everyone else. If the whole market is doing well, a good company will do better. If the whole market is doing badly, a good company will still do well and won’t be as bad as everyone else. In general, you’d want a company with better relative strength compared to most others in the market. (Note: This is different from Relative Strength Index or RSI.)

There are countless other lessons, indicators, and techniques out there that can help you decide on what company to invest in, but we shall end it here for now. If you want to continue your lessons, you can check out these Amazon Kindle eBooks below (I personally recommend them):

Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (2)Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (3)Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (4)Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (5)Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (6)Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (7)

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Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn (2024)

FAQs

Choosing the Best Stocks: 10 Investing Terms you HAVE to Learn? ›

If at any point in time, the money you have put into these risky investment's crosses 10%, you have to promise to sell enough to get yourself back down to 10%.

What is the 10 10 rule in investing? ›

If at any point in time, the money you have put into these risky investment's crosses 10%, you have to promise to sell enough to get yourself back down to 10%.

What is the 20 rule in stocks? ›

In other words, the Rule of 20 suggests that markets may be fairly valued when the sum of the P/E ratio and the inflation rate equals 20. The stock market is deemed to be undervalued when the sum is below 20 and overvalued when the sum is above 20.

How should I choose the best stocks for investment? ›

  1. How to Pick a Stock.
  2. Determine Your Goals.
  3. 3 Types of Investors.
  4. The Diversified Portfolio.
  5. Keep Your Eyes Open.
  6. The "Story" Behind a Stock Pick.
  7. Find Your Companies.
  8. Tune-in to Corporate Presentations.

What is the number 1 thing you want to learn as an investor? ›

1. Have a Financial Plan. The first step toward becoming a successful investor should be starting with a financial plan—one that includes goals and milestones.

What are Warren Buffett's 5 rules of investing? ›

A: Five rules drawn from Warren Buffett's wisdom for potentially building wealth include investing for the long term, staying informed, maintaining a competitive advantage, focusing on quality, and managing risk.

What is the 10 * 10 * 10 rule? ›

One way to analyze the short-term and long-term consequences of your work-life-balance decisions is to apply the 10/10/10 Rule: to ask yourself how you'll feel with the options in 10 minutes, 10 months, and 10 years.

What is the 90% rule in stocks? ›

Understanding the Rule of 90

According to this rule, 90% of novice traders will experience significant losses within their first 90 days of trading, ultimately wiping out 90% of their initial capital.

What is the 7% rule in stocks? ›

Always sell a stock it if falls 7%-8% below what you paid for it. This basic principle helps you always cap your potential downside. If you're following rules for how to buy stocks and a stock you own drops 7% to 8% from what you paid for it, something is wrong.

What is the 3 5 7 rule in stocks? ›

The 3-5-7 rule in trading is a risk management guideline that suggests limiting the amount of capital you put into any single trade. According to this rule, you should not risk more than 3% of your trading capital on any one trade, no more than 5% on any one sector, and no more than 7% on all trades combined.

What is the formula for picking stocks? ›

P/E Ratio – The P/E ratio is a calculation that evaluates a stocks relative performance and value. It is computed by dividing the stock's price by the company's per share earnings for the most recent four quarters.

How to learn which stocks to invest in? ›

  1. Determine your investing goals. Not every investor is looking to accomplish the same thing with their money. ...
  2. Find companies you understand. ...
  3. Determine whether a company has a competitive advantage. ...
  4. Determine a fair price for the stock. ...
  5. Buy a stock with a margin of safety.
Jul 8, 2024

What are 3 good stocks to invest in? ›

10 Best Stocks to Buy Now—August 2024
  • Yum China YUMC.
  • Estee Lauder EL.
  • Ambev ABEV.
  • Nike NKE.
  • Zimmer Biomet ZBH.
  • Reckitt Benckiser Group RBGLY.
  • Anheuser-Busch InBev BUD.
  • Polaris PII.
7 days ago

What is the most successful thing to invest in? ›

1. Stocks. Almost everyone should own stocks or stock-based investments like exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and mutual funds (more on those in a bit). Stocks have consistently proven to be the best way for the average person to build wealth over the long term.

How should a beginner start investing? ›

Let's break it all down—no nonsense.
  1. Step 1: Figure out what you're investing for. ...
  2. Step 2: Choose an account type. ...
  3. Step 3: Open the account and put money in it. ...
  4. Step 4: Pick investments. ...
  5. Step 5: Buy the investments. ...
  6. Step 6: Relax (but also keep tabs on your investments)

What are good stocks to invest in for beginners? ›

Here's a list of seven high-quality stocks that are excellent choices for beginning investors who don't have a lot of money:
  • Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (ticker: BRK. A, BRK.B)
  • JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
  • Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)
  • Walmart Inc. (WMT)
  • PepsiCo Inc. (PEP)
  • Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)
  • American Water Works Co. Inc. (AWK)
Jun 17, 2024

What is the 10 10 rule in finance? ›

There are several different ways to go about creating a budget but one of the easiest formulas is the 10-10-10-70 principle. This principle consists of allocating 10% of your monthly income to each of the following categories: emergency fund, long-term savings, and giving. The remaining 70% is for your living expenses.

What is the point of the 10 10 rule? ›

If the marriage and military service overlap for 10 years or more, the non-military spouse may receive a share of the service member's retirement pay directly from the Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS), which is the entity responsible for military pay and benefits.

Do 90% of millionaires make over 100k a year? ›

69% of millionaires did not average $100,000 or more in household income per year-and (get this) one-third of millionaires NEVER had a six-figure household income in their entire careers. When people don't waste money trying to LOOK wealthy, they have money to actually BECOME wealthy.

What is the 50/20/30 budget rule? ›

The 50-30-20 rule recommends putting 50% of your money toward needs, 30% toward wants, and 20% toward savings. The savings category also includes money you will need to realize your future goals.

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