Other questions are about the company’s strong sales organisation, whether its products enjoy a handsome profit margin that can be protected over the years, and so on. These relate to whether the company has products and services with adequate market potential to keep increasing its sales over the next several years, and if the management is serious about R&D to help it develop the next generation of products. In the key chapter titled ‘What to buy’, Fisher elaborates upon the 15 questions that investors need to ask while vetting a stock. However, quantitative analysis will not tell you about a company’s prospects for that, you need to carry out scuttlebutt. Just as you wouldn’t hire an employee without examining his academic record and work experience, you shouldn’t buy a stock without poring through the data on its past performance. Spine creases, wear to binding and pages from reading. Fisher and a great selection of similar New, Used and Collectible Books available now at great prices. Today, most sophisticated investors have databases, which provide them with a humongous amount of data at their fingertips. : Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits (9780060321604) by Philip A.
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