Most folks donât know the first thing about measuring how cheap a stock is. [RiskHedge Report] The one number that can’t lie [Chris Wood] By Chris Wood - RiskHedge Editorâs note: Welcome to Day 3 of Crisis Week. If youâve been following along, you know tech veteran Chris Wood says right now is a rare [opportunity to buy dominant, world-class disruptor stocks at crisis prices](. But which ones? Today, Chris names a couple of top stocks to buy at bargain prices⦠and shows us the unique way he determines if a stock is truly cheap⦠*** The one number that canât lie  Forgive me for being blunt, but⦠Most folks donât know the first thing about measuring how cheap a stock is. Which is a shame⦠because buying dominant stocks on the cheap is probably the easiest and lowest-risk way to grow your wealth in the markets. Especially today. Because many dominant disruptors are trading for multiyear-low valuations. If youâve ever been bewildered by stock market valuations, itâs not your fault. Few things are more confusing than stock market valuation metricsâwhich are supposed to tell us how expensive or cheap stocks are. Problem is, there are dozens of valuation metrics. And they all give different answers. The âBuffett indicator,â which compares stock prices to US Economic Output, says stocks are very expensive right now. The CAPE ratio, which considers companiesâ long-term earnings, says stocks are reasonably priced right now. The marketâs price/earnings (P/E) ratio gives a different perspective. Its price/revenue (P/R) ratio gives yet another. Itâs a lot of conflicting information. And it tends to paralyze investors into doing nothing. I suggest you set all that aside and instead focus on the one number that canât lie⦠- Cold, hard cash is like truth serum for stocks. Free cash flow (FCF) tells us the amount of cold, hard cash coming into a business. It measures how much cash flows into a companyâs coffers after it pays the bills and makes investments. Unlike earnings, FCF is nearly impossible to fake, massage, or manipulate. If youâre not familiar with FCFâthatâs okay. It gets completely overshadowed by earnings in the financial press. Earnings, also called Net Income, are the accounting profit earned by a business. Earnings are similar to free cash flow. But thereâs one big difference. Earnings are subject to dozens of adjustments, set forth by accounting rules. Although these rules mean well, they give a companyâs accountants leeway to apply âcreativeâ assumptions and judgment to the numbers. Long story short, earnings are subjective. They can lie. FCF is objective. Cash always tells the truth. - So why doesnât everyone focus on FCF? Simply put: cash flow is lumpy. Unlike earnings growth, which tends to follow a smoother path, cash flow often jumps around. Part-time investors who casually follow a stock have a hard time making sense of cash flow, so they usually ignore it. Take Amazon (AMZN), for example. Amazon is an all-time great company. It dominates e-commerce and cloud computing, two pillars of the modern economy. It was also a âfinal cutâ in [my 2022 Crisis Report](. It ranked just outside my top 10 no-brainer buys at todayâs crisis prices. Look at this chart of Amazonâs free cash flow. After years of steady growth, its cash flow plunged to negative last year. And has plunged even further this year. Based on this data alone, youâd think something was seriously wrong with the company. But what the chart doesnât show is that Amazon recently made huge investments. Itâs added 150 million sq. ft. of warehouse space since 2020. And itâs spent record amounts of money building new data centers for its cloud computing business. In fact, Amazon has invested nearly twice as much money in its business in the past 10 quarters than it did in its entire 25-year history before that. All this investmentâabout $132 billion over the past two and a half yearsâblew a hole in its FCF. That looks bad on a chart, without context. But itâs actually a great thing, because Amazon will reap the benefits of faster delivery and more cloud computing power for years to come. Amazon is also winding down its record spending. So FCF should surge in the coming years. My point is⦠you wouldnât realize any of this unless you were extremely familiar with the company. FCF is an extremely powerful metric⦠but its lumpiness frustrates the vast majority of investors from using it effectively. - Their frustration is our edge. Once you truly understand a companyâs FCF, youâre already ahead of 99% of investors. From there, you can compare its FCF to the price of its stockâto get the P/FCF ratio. This is, hands down, the most powerful valuation metric for large stocks. Look at Alphabet (GOOGL), the parent company of Google. Its stock is down more than 23% from its split-adjusted 52-week high as I write. As a result, its P/FCF ratio has fallen to 22.2. Thatâs cheap. In fact, GOOGL hasnât been this cheap since mid-2019. Had you bought it then, youâd be sitting on a profit of about 95%. - Of course, determining a great stock is cheap is just a starting point. A cheap dominant stock must also be growing, innovating, and beating the competition. Thatâs where the âdominance factorâ comes into play. More on that tomorrow⦠Chris Wood
Editor, Project 5X P.S. In my new[2022 Crisis Report](, I lay out my top 10 dominant stocks to buy right away. These industry titans are growing, innovating, and selling at a major discount today. Simply put, buying these stocks gives you 300%â500% upside⦠with relatively low risk. Inside my report, youâll get a rundown of each business... My outlook on where theyâre headed in the next few years... And why theyâre a perfect way to exploit todayâs market âimbalance.â Plus, youâll get simple, easy-to-follow instructions on how to buy them if you choose. [Discover more here](. This email was sent to {EMAIL} as part of your subscription to RiskHedge Report.
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