PLV pluton resources limited

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  1. 24,386 Posts.
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    One more thing AKA et all.

    The following article has been written by someone more knowledgeable than me. This article also talks about chartings as well, and part of it refers to chartist as well.

    Obviously I am not only one of a few that don't belive in chart, as IMO all the information in a Chart therein, is only based on what happened in the past. A mathematical approach to investments if you ask me. Nothing more and nothing else. Something like studying the form for the horseraces, which most of the times, if not all of the time, it ends up with the bookys walking away from the races with their bags full.

    Enjoy it.

    "Is there too much fizz??

    A couple of years ago I read an article about Coca-
    Cola Amatil (CCL) in a popular Australian investment
    magazine. It claimed to be utilizing techniques
    which assisted in the “identification of investment
    opportunities”.
    But instead of providing a steer on whether to buy
    or sell Coke it was simply a commentary on its share
    price movements for the prior 30 years. There was
    no mention of what I normally look upon as the 2
    main drivers of the share price. That is its underlying
    value combined with a strong dose of short-term
    expectation – realistic or otherwise. The article was
    laced with terms like “momentum divergence”,
    “overspent momentum”, “reversal zones”, “triangular
    patterns” and “pullbacks”. The only reference to
    anything sounding like an economic force was the
    brief mention of an equal struggle between supply
    and demand due to the appearance of a “symmetrical
    triangle”. The same article could have been written
    by describing the path of an empty Coke can blowing
    across the MCG.
    What I wanted to know was whether any advice
    could be drawn from all of this pattern recognition.
    And there it was at the very end of the article. The
    author expected the share price (then at $11.80) to
    either fall to $7.50 or rise above $20. Anyone want
    to toss a coin?
    If there are any chartists still reading this article let
    me now offend the fundamentalists. Because some
    fool themselves they can come up with an exact
    alternative price for a stock. Given the centuries-old
    title of “intrinsic value” it is often quoted by Socratic
    analysts with a degree of accuracy befitting a direct
    descendant of Nostradamus. Let’s face facts. No one
    can predict the future which means no one can derive
    an exact value for stock prices. Full stop.
    Despite this I remain a fundamentalist at heart. After
    all, as another analyst once said to me, “You have to
    use something”. So what I’d like to do is look at one
    simple tool I use when making a value assessment.
    And in doing so also have a look at Coca-Cola Amatil.
    Testing built in Assumptions

    There is a simple answer to the question - What is a
    stock worth? It’s worth the sum total of the discounted
    cash flows it delivers in the future. Easy to say, hard
    to calculate. It means a company’s share price is built
    on multiple assumptions - principally earnings growth,
    dividend payout and the discount rate needed to
    adjust for the combined impacts of risk and inflation.
    Intrinsic value considerations can be looked at from
    two directions. Either you come up with a set of
    assumptions to derive your own intrinsic value or you
    dissect the current market price to see what sort of
    assumptions the market is building in. Then test them.
    Is the market assuming excessive earnings growth,
    the maintenance of an excessively high return on
    equity or is it undervaluing risk? Enough preamble,
    let’s look at Coke.


    The above methodology is simplistic. It is based on
    a number of underlying assumptions which are easily
    challenged. It also assumes the use of an accounting
    method called clean surplus accounting - one which
    no company actually uses to construct its accounts.
    But both of these issues are typically overlooked by
    many writers and promoters of popular intrinsic value
    formulas and systems.
    So where does this leave us? With the undeniable truth
    that picking stocks is about picking future business
    success not about blindly plugging historical data into
    formulae. Additionally it is important to understand
    the dynamics between a company and the business
    sector it operates in. It is not enough to simply predict
    sector growth since growth within a sector can be
    satisfied by new entrants with no net benefit to the
    company under review.

    As Warren Buffett likes to say:
    Look for a business with an economic moat.""




 
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