|
|
|
|
|
by tofukid
1830 days ago
|
|
Nobody knows how much money a company will make in its lifetime. And even for companies with rather stable revenues, dividends and number of shares are not fixed, so it seems rather useless making calculations using those ratios. |
|
It's hard to predict future revenues of a startup.
But it's not that difficult to get pretty close - looking a few years into the future - for big, established companies like Coke and Pepsi and GM.
The Fed gives investors a 2 year outlook on interest rates. In the last 20 years, they have only ever lowered rates by surprise - and that pushes share prices up. You're highly unlikely to lose a lot of money getting surprised by interest rate moves.
Sure - anything can happen, but historically, over a 3-5 year period, Coke's revenue and profit hasn't been very volatile.
But the share price IS much more volatile. This is what you arbitrage on. The people who are investing in the moment, when you're investing for a longer horizon.
Basically, this strategy is that the short term is much harder to predict than the medium term. I think everyone is in agreement that the very long term (for stocks) is pretty hard to predict.