| User | Post |
|
1:31 pm February 5, 2010
| Peridotic
| | | |
| Member | posts 9 |
|
|
Does anyone find it an accurate tool, what are the pros and cons of it? Other than you can't change growth rates and etc.
|
|
|
3:36 am February 5, 2010
| Jae Jun
| | | |
| Admin
| posts 390 |
|
|
Yes it's another great tool available for free but everything is locked and hidden so it's very hard to modify.
|
|
|
2:06 am February 5, 2010
| Peridotic
| | | |
| Member | posts 9 |
|
|
Post edited 7:09 am – February 5, 2010 by Peridotic
Now I found the f wall street spreadsheet it isn't bad and doesn't need a plug in but I dont think you can change any growth numbers. Has anyone tried it out? btw you can find it by clicking on the blog tab and it is on the right side.
|
|
|
4:44 pm January 26, 2010
| Jae Jun
| | | |
| Admin
| posts 390 |
|
|
the great thing about the book is that it explains all the important aspects of valuing a business. I can't say I liked one part better than than the other because it was all useful.
I have also been reading the F Wall Street blog since it started out and have read every article posted, so I was well aware of F Wall Street concepts from the blog and the book was a more organized and structured form.
|
|
|
3:58 pm January 26, 2010
| Peridotic
| | | |
| Member | posts 9 |
|
|
This book was really good, and it helped me understand business value investing. Especially where he highlights the DCF. This question is for Jae but anyone can chime in. What concepts in the book did you find useful to implement when looking into stocks such as CROIC, owner earnings in DCF, and etc?
|
|