Great blog. Ok conclusion. I might sell way out of the money cash secured puts on FB after it bottoms. Having been on FB since 2007 until they lost my pass word and refused to recognize me when I tried to recover it, I’m not a fan. That’s my bias. As an active user of SR and other market services and as a newsletter writer about stock picking and trading covered calls and cash secured puts, I try to be objective and realistic when I look at stocks. My approach is to never fall in love with a stock, because they all disappoint you sooner than later. And keep it simple because too much information gets in the way of decision making. On FB, I look at what the company is doing to its customers and users and how it is doing in the political world. Then I look at whether its options are actively traded, liquid and deep. Next I check the technicals, which forecast nothing but give you a feel for what is happening to a stock at the moment. Finally, I look for forward-looking data and opinions. History tells us little about how to trade, and no one can predict the prices of anything. For me, the key valuation metrics are P/FCF and P/FVE. Then I look at investors’ sentiment and analysts mean target prices, which usually higher than fair value estimates. I also check the calls and puts options in nearby and distant months to see what smart speculators are anticipating. I trust them more than sell side analysts. And I go to SeekingAlpha.com and SR research reports for more information and opinions. The last thing I often do is write an article for my newsletter. That’s like writing a memo to. yourself. It helps clarify your thinking before coming up with a trading plan. My free newsletter is where you can see how I’ve formatted some of my tables in StockRover, which is the retail investors’ Bloomberg Terminal. https://djincometrader.substack.com SR’s marketing manager gave me permission to post images of my SR tables. I am not paid for linking to SR or other services. And my newsletter is free because I make my money trading.
Extremely well written. A great way to show us how to us SR features. One improvement would be to make sure you always show where these charts and tables come from. You do this at the beginning, but tend to not mention the source later (ex: table of EPS estimate trends). I really appreciate the in depth analysis and it helps, in turn, to appreciate SR more!
Good point, I agree. I have updated the article to show where the charts and tables come from in Stock Rover along with links to the associated section in the Stock Rover help pages.
Extremely good analysis and an interesting footprint for analyzing other stocks. I’ve never been a Face Book fan. Some due to my age and an abhorrence for social media in general, but one can’t ignore the numbers and the possible opportunity. As for the name change, it says to me that Zuckerberg is “all in” on virtual reality. I’m not sure he is right, but I also think that this hair trigger market has over-reacted and that there is a profit opportunity at the recent prices. I recently bought a position in the stock. BTW, would it be possible to package your evaluation in to a single click, so that the various segments of your analysis could be applied easily to other stocks?
The Google Trends data for Facebook does not look that great over the last few years. This would indicate decreasing engagement. While the equity may be undervalued assuming consistent engagement, the trend would suggest that users are using it less and less overtime. https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=2019-03-23%202022-04-23&q=%2Fm%2F0nbtf_n,facebook,instagram,twitter,tik%20tok
Great blog. As a long time subscriber to StockRover, I appreciate you doing a walk through on how to use StockRover to do a thorough analysis of an individual stock. You opened my eyes to capabilities in my subscription I wasn’t fully utilizing.
Thanks for completing this analysis. I am new to Stockrover and this was very helpful to see how the information in Stockrover can be used to help make investment decisions. In spite of the quantitative nature of the data it is interesting the final decision is qualitative. I guess if the numbers could always tell the whole story no one would ever make a bad investment. It does make me question whether I am good enough to make decisions that will result in returns that exceed an index fund.
Great inside into Facebook current status. Not mensioned could be seen as tutorial how to use excellent StockRover tools and features while analysisng other stocks.
Excellent analysis. I conclude the price target being overly optimistic considering the short-term challenges you pointed out. All this with no regard for inflation, Fed policy and geo-political turmoil.
Thanks for the informative blog. It’s interesting the conclusion landed on how much belief one has in the founder-CEO, which has been preached by many. I have some doubt over the Stock Rover Price vs. Fundamental Valuation Chart. The price and the earnings are at very different scale, so I’m not sure how one can draw conclusion by simply observing the gap between the price line and the earnings bar. Yet the ratio between the two is already shown in the P/E chart above. What’s the incremental insight from the Price vs. Valuation Chart? Or did I missing something there?
The scales are different but the ratio of the axis are the same, which allows you to see the change in the gap over time very clearly. The incremental insight is the P/E chart shows one line – the P/E as a ratio where as the valuation graph shows both price and earnings over time. This tells you why the P/E line is what it is. In FB case, its because its price has tanked and earnings have flatlined. There are other scenarios that can get you same P/E line, for example earnings increasing and price remaining relatively unchanged or earnings decreasing and price decreasing faster. There is value in knowing the why behind the P/E line.