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Value Investing Checklist

Stocks and Shares ISA , Choosing funds for ISA's, risk factors for funds etc
Investment strategy discussions not dealt with elsewhere.
robertbanking
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Value Investing Checklist

#636430

Postby robertbanking » December 27th, 2023, 12:59 pm

Hello you very wonderful and intelligent individuals that make up these forums. I sincerely hope you had a wonderful Christmas.

I was kindly making a checklist and or investment process for what i need to look at when trying to locate good value stocks, that have good business models and trade below their Total Enterprise value.

I please wondered if you would kindly share your process you go through when investing. Such as screening for stocks with High ROIC using a screener, then what documents you read such as Annual Reports, what are you looking for to determine if the business will grow and how many hours you research a stock please? If you kindly had any thoughts on this, regarding the process you go through when investing please, i would be forever grateful and thankful it would mean the world to me.

Hope you have a fantastic 2024, hope you have great health, wealth and lots of joy and happiness. Very best wishes to you and i truly hope all continues to go well for you. With my every best wish.

monabri
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Re: Value Investing Checklist

#636434

Postby monabri » December 27th, 2023, 1:07 pm

robertbanking wrote:Hello you very wonderful and intelligent individuals that make up these forums. I sincerely hope you had a wonderful Christmas.

I was kindly making a checklist and or investment process for what i need to look at when trying to locate good value stocks, that have good business models and trade below their Total Enterprise value.

I please wondered if you would kindly share your process you go through when investing. Such as screening for stocks with High ROIC using a screener, then what documents you read such as Annual Reports, what are you looking for to determine if the business will grow and how many hours you research a stock please? If you kindly had any thoughts on this, regarding the process you go through when investing please, i would be forever grateful and thankful it would mean the world to me.

Hope you have a fantastic 2024, hope you have great health, wealth and lots of joy and happiness. Very best wishes to you and i truly hope all continues to go well for you. With my every best wish.


Hi RobertBanking
Are you related to this guy?

https://ajws.org/who-we-are/our-team/ex ... bert-bank/

Just curious...

Whatsitworth
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Re: Value Investing Checklist

#636516

Postby Whatsitworth » December 27th, 2023, 7:06 pm

Hi Robert , can I call you rob?
Have you ever invested in cacao?
It’s up over 100 percent within a year!

Whatsitworth
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Re: Value Investing Checklist

#655977

Postby Whatsitworth » March 26th, 2024, 3:31 pm

Whatsitworth wrote:Hi Robert , can I call you rob?
Have you ever invested in cacao?
It’s up over 100 percent within a year!


Proactive investors

Cocoa now costs more per tonne than copper, parents can tell their children when they hand over a smaller Easter egg this weekend.



Futures prices for cocoa today bubbled up above $10,000 per tonne for the first time, following a 130% increase so far this year - more than Nvidia's 95% gain.

The main ingredient in chocolate started the year at below $4,3000 per tonne, but has surged on the back of a dry harvest in key growing areas in West Africa.

Chocolate makers including Cadburys owner Mondelez International Inc (NASDAQ:MDLZ, ETR:KTF) and Hershey Company (NYSE:HSY, ETR:HSY) have warned that the soaring cost of cocoa would hit earnings.

Harvests in West Africa have been poor recently due to prolonged dry weather and traders fear the El Nino will mean another bad year ahead.

"It now costs more for a tonne of cocoa than a tonne of copper," said analyst Kathleen Brooks at XTB.

"Chocolate is the new luxury good in town, and we expect that sweet treats will see their prices surge in response to this massive price rise."

It led to shares in chocolate makers melting, with Mondelez down 1.7% and Hershey falling 1.2%.

Both supply and demand have driven the price of cocoa higher this year, said Brooks, as well as financial market dynamics.

"Reduced supply from West Africa, the main cocoa growing region, along with a boost in demand is putting upward pressure on the price of cocoa. However, the massive $1,500 rally since Friday suggests that momentum and something other than fundamentals are also driving the cocoa price," she said.

Cocoa traders who hold long physical positions tend to hedge their risk by using financial markets to take short positions on the price.

"The hope is that any losses made from the hedge is covered by the price increase in the physical position," said Brooks.

"However, if the cocoa traders are buying their cocoa to hold, and the market is going up almost vertically and setting record highs on a daily basis, then margin calls on the short market positions start to add up.

"For those who can’t service their margin calls, they need to close their short cocoa positions, which adds further upward pressure to cocoa prices.

"Thus, agricultural trading firms that trade in cocoa could also be struggling on the back of this massive rally."

The largest cocoa traders include Touton, Cargill and Olam, according to Bloomberg, with traders likely to keep an eye on closely for any warnings that could exacerbate the price action in cocoa even more.

Although cocoa futures pulled back from the $10,000 level, Brooks there is a chance that this is a "structural shift" higher in the price of cocoa, one that might not be alleviated quickly.

"Although a weak crop yield in west Africa has lowered supply, EU regulations that ban the use of commodities that cause deforestation means that the key European chocolate market now needs to find compliant sources of cocoa, which could add costs to the system.

"This regulation comes at the same time as the supply deficit has reached a record high of more than 400,000 tonnes.

"Thus, the high price of cocoa could be here to stay, and chocolate treats in the future may be considered a luxury and a lucky-to-have, rather than an affordable must-have product. For some of us chocoholics, that is a very depressing thought."


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