Ovido
Language
  • English
  • Spanish
  • French
  • Portuguese
  • German
  • Italian
  • Dutch
  • Swedish
Text
  • Uppercase

User

  • Log in
  • Create account
  • Upgrade to Premium
Ovido
  • Home
  • Log in
  • Create account

CSC 2

An industry with a record of stable earnings and continuous dividend payments and which has demonstrated relative stability in poor economic conditions.

Defensive Industry

Chart formations that usually precede a sizeable advance or decline in stock prices.

Reversal Pattern

A method of market and security analysis that studies investor attitudes and psychology as revealed in charts of stock price movements and trading volumes to predict future price action.

Technical Analysis

The average of security or commodity prices calculated by adding the closing prices for the underlying security over a pre-determined period and dividing the total by the time period selected.

Moving Average

An active, leading, nationally known common stock with a record of continuous dividend payments and other strong investment qualities.

Blue-chip

A chart formation indicating that the current trend will continue.

Continuation Pattern

The theory that a stock’s price reflects all available information and reflects its true value.

Efficient Market Hypothesis

A trend reversal pattern that can occur either at a market top or at a market bottom and consists of a shoulder, a head, and a second shoulder and the breaking of a neckline.

Head-and-Shoulders Formation

An industry that has moved out of the maturity stage and is now growing at rates slower than the overall economy, or has a slowing growth rate.

Declining Industry

decline industry

An industry that experiences slower, more stable growth rates in profit and revenue than growth or emerging industries.

Mature Industry

An industry in which sales and earnings are consistently expanding at a faster rate than in most other industries.

Growth Industry

An industry that is particularly sensitive to swings in economic conditions.

Cyclical Industry

Which investors use sentiment indicators to determine what the majority of investors expect prices to do in the future so that they can take the opposite position?

Contrarion Investors

Based on the assumption that price moves in predictable waves; used to forecast when the market will start moving in a particular direction and when it will ultimately reach its peak or trough.

Cycle Analysis

Security analysis based on facts about a company as revealed through its financial statements and an analysis of economic conditions that affect the company’s business.

Fundamental Analysis

An economic principle whereby the per unit cost of producing each unit of output falls as the volume of production increases.

Economies of Scale

A price level at which a security stops falling because the number of investors willing to buy the security is greater than the number of investors wishing to sell.

Support Level

The theory that stock price movements are random and bear no relationship to past movements.

Random Walk Theory

The line joining the two recovery points in a head-and-shoulders formation.

Neckline

__________ accompanied by increased volume may be considered confirmation of a change in trend.

Breaking of a Neckline

The breaking of a neckline, either downside break or upside break, accompanied by _______________ may be considered confirmation of a change in trend.

Increased Volume

A form of technical analysis that relies on statistics to construct indicators and has thus been greatly enhanced by computer technology.

Quantitative Analysis

A price level at which the security begins to fall as the number of sellers exceeds the number of buyers of the security.

Resistance Level

Measure investor expectations or the mood of the market. These indicators measure how bullish or bearish investors are.

Sentiment Indicators

Industries in which risk and uncertainty are unusually high because analysts lack definitive information

Speculative Industry

The use of charts and patterns to forecast buy and sell decisions.

Chart Analysis

What are the 3 Industry Classifications used by Fundamental Analysts?

Cyclical Defensive Speculative

What are the 3 Categories of Macroeconomic Factors where a change in one requires a change in investment strategies?

Fiscal Policy Monetary Policy Inflation

Name the 4 Life Cyles used to Classify Industries

Emerging Growth Growth Maturity Decline

emerging growth growth maturity declining

What do competitive forces in an industry affect?

Growth and Risk Levels

What are the Key Assumptions of Technical Analysis

All market influences are reflected in price activity;
Prices move in persistent trends;

The future repeats the past.

Bears and selling are related to ___________

Supply

Bulls and buying are related to _______________

Demand

As demand increases, prices __________

Advance

increase

rise

go up

As Supply increases, prices ______________

Decline

fall

go down

decrease

What happens to prices when supply and demand are balanced?

They move sideways - bulls & bears fight for control.

What is the primary task of a Technical Analyst?

Identify a trend in its early stages and carry positions to take advantage of the trend until it reverses.

Identify the factors that can limit the effectiveness of fiscal policy:

1. A lag between fiscal action and its impact on the economy.
2. A time lag between the decision to take fiscal policy action and getting approval from parliament.

What economic event could cause a tilting of the yield curve?

The Bank of Canada raising short-term rates to slow the rate of economic growth.

What would be the direction of a stock price, if you are a believer in the random walk theory.

It will be impossible to predict as past prices are no predictor of future prices.

What are the 4 ways by which analysts classify an industry?

Product or service Stage of growth Competitive forces Reaction to the economic cycle

What are the five basic competitive forces that determine the attractiveness of an industry?

Threat of new entry
Competitive rivalry

Threat of substitutes

Bargaining power of buyers

Bargaining power of suppliers

What is the significance of a symmetrical triangle?

Consolidation of an existing trend

Identify the theory that suggests that investors make intelligent decisions after weighing all available information.

Rational Expectations Hypothesis

Samra believes that the Canadian dollar is going to decline in the future. What type of industry would you recommend she invest in?

Cyclical Industries

Identify the issues that support the argument that capital markets are inefficient

New information is not available to everyone at the same time.
Investors do not react in the same way to the same information.

Not everyone can make accurate forecasts and correct valuation decisions.

Mass investor psychology and greed may at times cause investors to act irrationally.

Trader who makes use of sophisticated computerized strategies to swiftly sell or buy large quantities of equities is using what strategy?

Program Trading

What is the main problem with a large government debt?

It restricts both fiscal and monetary policy options; impairs the government’s ability to reduce taxes or increase spending

What impact does economic growth have on bonds?

Bond yields tend to rise

bond yeilds rise

What does a head-and-shoulders bottom formation signal?

Bullish signal for the stock

What does a head-and-shoulders top formation signal?

Bearish signal for the stock.

Tuan recognizes a symmetrical triangle formation in the movement of the price of a stock he is interested in. How will Tuan interpret this pattern?

It suggests a continuation pattern, or pause in the market trend.

What is Company Analysis?

Process of examining company specific factors that can influence investment decisions.

What is one of the goals of company analysis?

To identify risks and opportunities

Tells you whether management is making good use of the company's resources.

Statement of Comprehensive Income Analysis

What are the factors involved in performing company analysis to determine whether a company represents a good investment?

Revenue
Operating Costs

Dividend Record

What does a rising trend in operating costs of a company indicate?

The company may have difficulty keeping overall costs under control and therefore losing potential profits.

What does a falling trend in operating costs of a company indicate?

The company is operating costs effectively and is likely to be more profitable in the future.

How do you determine the main reasons for any changes in a company's ability to pay its operating costs?

Measured by using the gross profit margin ratio.

What are the reasons for a company to have unusually high dividend payout rate (more than 65%)?

- Stable earnings that allow a high payout;
- Declining earnings, which may indicate a future cut in the dividend;

- Earnings based on resources that are being depleted.

What are the reasons for a company to have a low dividend payout rate?

- Earnings reinvested back into a growth company’s operations
- Growing earnings, which may indicate a future increase in the dividend amount

- Cyclical earnings at their peak, along with a company policy to maintain the same dividend in good and

bad times

- A company policy of buying back shares, rather than distributing earnings through higher dividend payouts

What type of securities are suitable for a company with a heavy debt load?

Common Shares

Total dollar amount of all debt, preferred and common stock, and retained earnings of a company. Can also be expressed in percentage terms.

Capital Structure

A financial ratio that shows the earnings available to each common share.

EPS - Earnings Per Common Share

What issues need to be considered when analyzing capital structure?

- a large debt issue approaching maturity may need to be refinanced;
- retractable/extendible bonds may need to be financed if investors chosse to retract/extend;

- convertable securities represent a potential decrease in EPS through dilution;

- outstanding warrants or stock options represent a potential increase in the number of common shares outstanding.

The effect of fixed charges (i.e., debt interest or preferred dividends, or both) on per-share earnings of common stock.

Leverage

Financial calculations based on a company’s financial statements, often providing clues about the company’s financial health.

Financial Ratios

How to calculate Trend Ratio

-Selecting a base period,
- Treat the figure or ratio (trend) for that period as 100

- Then divide it into the comparable ratios for subsequent periods.

When is the base period in a trend ratio negative?

When a loss was sustained in the base year.

When is it impossible to calculate a trend ratio?

When the base period is negative

Cyclical Industries usually fall under what 3 categories?

Commodity
Industrial

Consumer

Forest Products, mining and Chemicals

Commodity Cyclical Industries

Transportation, capital goods and steel and building materials

Industrial Cyclical Industries

Merchandising and automobiles

Consumer Cyclical Industries

What are the 4 categories of cycle lengths?

Long-term - more than 2 years;
Seasonal - one year;

Primary/Intermediate - 9-26 weeks

Trading - 4 weeks

What are the 4 methods used by technical analysts to identify trends and potential turning points?

Chart Analysis
Quantitative Analysis

Analysis of Sentiment Indicators

Cycle Analysis

What does the Debt-to-Equity Ration tell you?

The portion of borrowed funds relative to the amount of money invested into the company

What does the dividend discount model (DDM) calculate?

The Intrinsic value of a stock

What is a "rights offerring"?

It allows existing shareholders to buy additional shares at a price that is slightly below its current market value.

In what way will a rights offering impact the number of common shares outstanding?

It will result in additional common shares outstanding

How is the net profit margin calculated?

Net Profit - Share of Profit from Associates / Revenue

What does Net Profit Margin measure?

How effectively management runs the business after accounting for both expenses and taxes

What can be considered leveraged capital?

Debt & Preferred Share Equity

Is common share capital considered leverage capital?

No. Belongs to common shareholders.

You have calculated a company's current ratio. What additional information will you need to calculate its quick ratio?

Investory figures

What are the 4 operating performance ratios?

Gross Profit Margin
Net Profit Margin

Return on Common Equity

Inventory Turnover

What is another name for quick ratio?

Acid Test

What does the quick ratio meaure?

Whether or not a company will be able to make its short-term (current) liability payments.

What are the 4 categories of financial ratios?

L-O-V-R
Liquidity

Operational

Value

Risk Analysis

Which ratio indicates the efficiency of management in turning over the company's goods as a profit?

GPM - Gross Profit Margin

What does it mean if a company was said to have a dividend payout ratio of 70%?

It paid out 70% of its earning as dividends to common shareholders. The rest is retained in the company to finance future growth.

What is another name for the current ratio?

Working Capital Ratio

In what circumstance would it be impossible to apply the trend line method?

If the base period figure is negative - ie if the EPS is negative in the base year

All else being equal, how are a company's earnings and P/E ratio related

They are inversely related - ie if price earnings go up, P/E ratio goes down.

What is the formula for the DDM - Dividend Discount Model?

Intrinsic value of stock = Div 1 yr from now/ r-g

What does a company's P/E ratio tell you?

How much investors are paying per dollar of income for the company's stock.

Where would it be recorded on a company's financial statements that a company has changed auditors?

In the notes to the financial statements.

If a company converted its short term loans to long term loans, would its working capital ratio improve or decline?

The working capital ratio would improve

A company has a total capital of 12 million in which 4 million is in the form of common share equity. What percentage of its capital structure is leveraged?

12-4 = 8; 8/12 = 66.67%

How is the pre-tax cost of a dividend calculated?

Div / 1 - tax rate

Quiz
Sergio
Latina všechny slovíčka
Science
Examen economía tema 4
FYSIK
words
Situacoes
contact 4
English
chapter 10 lauseet
Kartenkunde
spanish vocab test - claro 2 - 1.5
Glosor v47
Psychologie cognitive
Vädret på franska
Sprachdienst
Unione europea
geschiedenis
Compito
Mapeh (Arts) 2nd exam
verzamelingen
Biology
Diritto Ue
Teorier
anatomia umana
l’information genetique
la synthèse des protéines
phlebotomy pt2
quimica
fagstoff relevant til eksamen
science quiz
empresa e iniciativa emprendedora tema 4
Brass
kap 1
Environmental Science - 2.1.3 - Ozone depletion
Examen lengua
Environmental Science - 2.1.2 - Feedback mechanisms and tipping points
développement affectif chez l’enfant
SO Ekonomi åk 8 1. Ekonomiska system
fisica Moti
Stress chronique
la settimana
anatomia
la
Allison
Intermediate Accounting 1
Intro to AIS
INCOME TAX
Intro to AIS
Strategic Cost Management