- For years, smart people (Fama, French, et al) have known that companies with low market to book ratios outperform companies with high market to book ratios. This in itself is no doubt a tool that traders look for on their Bloomberg screens.
- Among low M/B (or B/M) stocks, Joseph Piotroski sought to discover some characteristics that separate the winners from the losers. I'm guessing he ran a whopper of a regression with dozens/hundreds of lagging ratios and indicators against prospective stock returns.
- In the end, he came up with the insanely simple F-Score model that Wall Street uses (among many other models) to help allocate their portfolios.
Look at the most current financial statements for a company. Ask yourself the 9 questions listed below. If the answer is "yes" enter a 1, "no" enter a 0:
- Is net income positive?
- Is operating cash flow positive?
- Is operating cash flow > net income?
- Has return on assets increased (from the prior year)?
- Has gross margin improved?
- Has asset turnover improved?
- Has LT Debt / Total Assets decreased?
- Has the current ratio improved?
- Has there been no new equity issuance?
1 comment:
great summation of f-score!
thanks.
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