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Stock Growth Investing Methods and Tips


education


stock growth investing
There are a number of different ways to approach stock investing, but nearly all of them fall under one of three basic styles: value investing, growth investing, or index investing.

These stock investment strategies follow the mindset of an investor and the strategy they utilize to invest is affected by a number of factors, such as the investor’s financial situation, investing goals, and risk tolerance.

A Guide to Growth Investing

Investors can take advantage of new growth investing strategies in order to more precisely hone in on stocks or other investments offering above-average profit potential.

When it comes to investing in the stock market, there are always a variety of approaches that can be taken. The goal, however, is generally always the same, regardless of the approach – grow your investments and increase your profits.

Growth investors are continually on the hunt for individual stocks or stock-related investments – such as mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETF) – that are poised to grow and offer the potential for greater profit. The investments you make should, of course, always fall in line with your personal short-term and long-term financial goals, risk tolerance, and a number of other factors. Still, there are basic techniques, principles, and strategies that growth investors can follow that suit virtually any individual investing plan.

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The Basics of Growth Investing

Growth investing is essentially the process of investing in companies, industries, or sectors that are currently growing and are expected to continue their expansion over a substantial period of time.

In the investment world, growth investing is typically looked at as offensive rather than defensive investing. This simply means that growth investing is a more active attempt to build up your portfolio and generate more return on the capital that you invest. Defensive investing, in contrast, tends more toward investments that generate passive income and work to protect the capital you’ve already earned – such as bonds or blue chip stocks that offer steady dividends.

Investing in Hot Sectors

One approach growth investors can take is to invest in stocks, mutual funds, and ETF based on specific sectors and industries.

The success of businesses in various sectors changes over time. However, it’s usually fairly easy to identify sectors that are “hot” in the sense of producing above average returns for publicly traded companies.

For example, two sectors that have been particularly hot for a couple of decades or more are healthcare and technology. Companies that deal with technology, technological advances, or are constantly putting out new hardware, software, and devices are good picks for growth investors. The same is true for companies in the healthcare sector. Think about it logically: Everyone, at some point, needs to care for their health and there are companies that are constantly developing new medications, therapies, treatments, and places to go to access this care. The healthcare sector is likely to continue enjoying rapid growth as it serves an aging baby-boomer generation. In fact, these two sectors are related, as many recent technology developments have actually been advances in healthcare technology.

Growth investors can simplify sector investing by taking advantage of investment vehicles such as mutual funds and ETF that contain a basket of stocks linked to specific sectors. ETF are an increasingly popular investment option due to their superior liquidity and lower trading costs as compared to mutual funds.
To learn more, check out all of CFI’s free Trading Guides.

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Understanding Earnings

For growth investors in stocks, understanding a company’s net earnings is essential.

This doesn’t mean simply knowing their current earnings, but also considering their historical earnings as well since this enables an investor to evaluate current earnings relative to a company’s past performance. Also, reviewing a company’s earnings history provides a clearer indication of the probability of the company generating higher future earnings.

A high earnings performance in a given quarter or year may represent a one-time anomaly in a company’s performance, a continuing trend, or a certain point in an earnings cycle that the company continues to repeat over time.

It’s also important to understand that even companies with relatively low, or sometimes even negative, earnings may still be a good pick for a growth investor. Remember that earnings are what’s left over after subtracting all production, marketing, operating, labor, and tax costs from a company’s gross revenue. In many instances, smaller companies attempt to make a breakthrough by funneling more capital toward growing their business, which may negatively impact their earnings in the short run, but in the long run generate higher returns and greater profits for investors. In such a situation, smart investors consider other factors, such as the quality of a company’s management, to ascertain clues as to the company’s true growth potential.

Growth Investing through Value Investing

Growth investors are effectively value investors sometimes, in that they seek out companies whose stock may be currently undervalued due to reasons that may be as simple as the fact that the company is relatively new and has not yet caught the attention of many investment analysts or fund managers.

The goal is to grab up shares at a low price of a company that is well-positioned to enjoy a sizable and continued surge in growth. There are a number of possible ways to approach identifying such companies, one of which we’ve already touched on – looking at companies in hot sectors. Investors who can identify a new, well-managed and well-funded company that is part of a hot sector can often reap substantial rewards. Another possible approach is to examine companies that are on the downslope, such as those that have gone through bankruptcy or reorganization, but that are likely to survive and recover.

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Using the Price-to-Earnings Ratio

The price/earnings (P/E) ratio is a tool that growth investors often use to help them in choosing stocks to invest in.

As the ratio’s name makes evident, you have to understand a company’s earnings before you can effectively use the tool.

Generally speaking, the higher the P/E ratio, the greater the risk investors are willing to take on a company because of its projected earnings and growth rate.

The P/E ratio is particularly useful for growth investors who are trying to compare companies that operate in the same industry. In established industries and sectors, there tend to be average P/E ratios for that particular industry or sector. Knowing such industry or sector averages makes a company’s P/E ratio a much more useful number than simply looking at it in comparison to the market as a whole.

Looking at a company’s P/E ratio remains a useful analytical tool for growth investors but adding consideration of another fundamental financial metric can help to fine tune your investment picks.

Using the Price-to-Book Ratio

The price-to-book ratio – or P/B ratio – is often considered more the basic analytical metric of value investors as opposed to growth investors.

However, the fact is that the P/B ratio can also be utilized as an effective tool in identifying stocks with high growth potential.

The P/B ratio is calculated by dividing a stock’s per share price by the book value per share. In order to determine the book value of a stock, preferred stock that has been issued must be subtracted from the total stockholder equity. The figure calculated from this takeaway must then be divided by all common shares still outstanding. The final number is the company’s book value per share of stock. It is often helpful for investors, especially growth investors, to compare a company’s book value to its market value. This comparison can provide a good indication of whether a stock is undervalued or overvalued. Companies with high growth potential are frequently undervalued due to heftier debt loads and capital expenditures.

Let’s put this ratio to use. For this example, we’re going to use the S&P 500 Index. A growth investor would, in theory, take a look at all of the stocks, calculating or looking up the P/B ratio for each. Regardless of how the stocks are listed, the growth investor could rearrange them according to their P/B ratio, starting with the highest numbers and ending with the lowest. The companies that fall within the top third of the list would be considered potentially good growth stock picks. Keep in mind that this isn’t a precise science, but more of a helpful example that growth investors can employ to identify and add stocks with the greatest potential for growth to their portfolios.

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High-Risk Growth Investments

Growth investing may also extend into investments beyond traditional stock market investing.

Investing in high-risk growth investments – also referred to as speculative investments – is an approach that is not suited for investors with a low threshold for risk. This is a strategy best suited for growth investors who are looking for maximum profits within a relatively short time frame and who have sufficient investment capital to sustain them during possible periods of losses.

High-risk investments include such things as futures, options contracts, foreign currency exchange (forex), penny stocks, and speculative real estate such as land that hasn’t been developed. These investments involve greater risk in that they offer no guaranteed return and their value tends to change quickly (in other words, they’re subject to greater volatility). However, the draw for many investors is that when such investments pay off, they often pay off big.

If you’re considering any of these investments, remember that research is key to success. More so than the average stock or bond investor, you have to know the market you’re investing in very well. Because success is based largely on speculation, we strongly recommend that only experienced investors roll the dice on investment assets such as these.

Index Investing

Index investing is considered as conservative and safer form of investing when compared to that of either value or growth investing.

Consequently, it involves far less work and strategizing on the part of the investor. Index investing diversifies an investor’s money widely among various types of equities, hoping to mirror the same returns as the overall stock market. One of the main attractions of index investing is that many studies have shown that few strategies of picking individual stocks outperform index investing over the long term.

An index investing strategy is usually followed by investing in mutual funds or exchange-traded funds that are designed to reflect the performance of a major stock index such as the S&P 500 or the FTSE 100.

Sources:
www.wikipedia.org / www.corporatefinanceinstitute.com / www.businessdictionary.com / www.readyratios.com / www.moneycrashers.com

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