huge amount, but that is due to other investments.Thanks for sharing this @dana-edwards. I personally am not invested in the stock market a
I have a program that I run which runs a few different equations for an asset that I am looking to invest in, which generally helps me to filter out the good and the bad quite easily, but it is just the first step I take. I then usually do some technical analysis, and a full fundamental analysis of the asset.
I invest based on a series of filters which curate the viability or suitability of a stock. So first I'll apply the initial filter which could just be a formula like the valuation formula in this post. Then I'll look at other aspects such as P/E and dividend payout ratio, then I'll look in even more detail, looking at what the company is doing, whether they have secured good deals, who is the CEO and whether or not that CEO is shareholder friendly, does the company have moats, is it selling a niche product or must have product, etc. I get obsessive in my research, once I have a narrow list of stocks to obsess over, and then I try to buy them when they are cheap.
That's great to hear! I also follow a similar method, especially when finding companies to work with. I am working with an ICO at the moment, and I followed a very similar process when deciding whether to take on the work or not.
Have you used https://finviz.com/ ?
It is a free website that also offers tech. / fundamental analysis, I have used it myself a few times. We need something like it for Crypto.