Home Investment Key Metrics to Check Before Buying Any U.S. Stock

Key Metrics to Check Before Buying Any U.S. Stock

Introduction

In January 2021, shares of GameStop soared from roughly $17 to $483 in a matter of days. Thousands of retail investors piled in based on Reddit hype, short-squeeze mechanics, and sheer momentum — most of them without glancing at a single financial metric. Within weeks, the stock collapsed back below $50, and billions of dollars in paper gains evaporated. The painful lesson? Excitement is not a strategy, and price alone tells you almost nothing about whether a stock is worth buying.

Here is the uncomfortable truth that Wall Street professionals rarely say out loud: picking stocks without understanding fundamental metrics is no different from gambling. You might win occasionally, but over a long enough timeline, the math catches up with you. The good news is that you do not need a finance degree or a Bloomberg terminal to evaluate a stock properly. A handful of key metrics — most of them freely available on any financial website — can tell you whether a company is overpriced, underpriced, profitable, growing, drowning in debt, or generating real cash for shareholders.

This guide walks you through the essential metrics every investor should check before buying any U.S. stock. For each one, you will learn exactly what it measures, how to calculate it, what “good” looks like across different sectors, and which red flags should make you walk away. By the end, you will have a one-page cheat sheet you can reference every time you evaluate a new investment opportunity.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or a solicitation to buy or sell any security. Always conduct your own research and consider consulting a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Valuation Metrics — Is the Price Right?

The single biggest mistake new investors make is confusing a stock’s price with its value. A stock trading at $500 per share can be cheap, and a stock trading at $5 can be wildly overpriced. What matters is the relationship between price and the underlying business fundamentals. That is exactly what valuation metrics measure.

Price-to-Earnings Ratio (P/E)

The price-to-earnings ratio is the most widely quoted valuation metric on the planet, and for good reason — it answers a simple question: how much are investors willing to pay for each dollar of a company’s earnings?

How to calculate it:

P/E Ratio = Current Share Price / Earnings Per Share (EPS)

There are two versions you need to know:

  • Trailing P/E (TTM): Uses actual earnings from the past 12 months. This is backward-looking and based on real, reported numbers.
  • Forward P/E: Uses analyst estimates for the next 12 months of earnings. This is forward-looking and incorporates growth expectations.

A trailing P/E of 20 means investors are paying $20 for every $1 of earnings the company generated over the past year. A forward P/E of 15 means they expect earnings to grow, making the stock cheaper on a future-earnings basis.

What “good” looks like by sector:

Sector Typical P/E Range Notes
Technology 25–45 Higher due to growth expectations
Financials (Banks) 10–18 Cyclical, regulated industry
Healthcare 18–30 Wide range — biotech vs. pharma
Utilities 14–22 Stable, slow-growth businesses
Consumer Staples 18–28 Defensive, consistent earnings
Energy 8–16 Highly cyclical, commodity-driven
S&P 500 Average 18–25 Historical long-term average ~20

 

Red Flag: A P/E ratio above 50–60 in a mature, slow-growth industry is usually a sign of overvaluation. Conversely, a very low P/E (under 5) can signal that the market expects earnings to collapse — it is not always a bargain.
Tip: Always compare a stock’s P/E to its own historical average, its sector average, and the broader market. A P/E of 30 might be cheap for a fast-growing SaaS company but expensive for a regional bank.

PEG Ratio — P/E Adjusted for Growth

The P/E ratio has a glaring blind spot: it ignores growth. A company growing earnings at 40% per year deserves a higher P/E than one growing at 5%. The PEG ratio fixes this.

How to calculate it:

PEG Ratio = P/E Ratio / Annual EPS Growth Rate (%)

For example, a stock with a P/E of 30 and an expected EPS growth rate of 30% has a PEG of 1.0. Peter Lynch, the legendary Fidelity fund manager, popularized the rule that a PEG below 1.0 suggests a stock may be undervalued relative to its growth, while a PEG above 2.0 suggests it may be overpriced.

What good looks like: A PEG between 0.5 and 1.5 is generally considered attractive. Below 0.5 is extremely cheap (but verify the growth estimate is credible). Above 2.0 means you are paying a premium that growth alone may not justify.

Key Takeaway: The PEG ratio is most useful for growth stocks. It is less meaningful for mature, slow-growth companies or for companies with negative earnings.

Price-to-Book Ratio (P/B)

The price-to-book ratio compares a stock’s market price to its book value — essentially, what the company’s assets would be worth if it were liquidated today after paying off all debts.

How to calculate it:

P/B Ratio = Current Share Price / Book Value Per Share

Book Value Per Share = (Total Assets - Total Liabilities) / Shares Outstanding

A P/B of 1.0 means you are paying exactly what the company’s net assets are worth on paper. A P/B below 1.0 could mean you are getting the assets at a discount — or it could mean the market believes those assets are impaired.

Where it matters most: P/B is most useful for asset-heavy industries like banking, insurance, real estate, and manufacturing. It is less meaningful for tech companies where the real value lies in intellectual property, brand, and human capital — things that do not show up on the balance sheet.

Sector Typical P/B Range
Banks / Financial Services 0.8–2.0
Real Estate / REITs 0.9–2.5
Technology 5–20+ (often irrelevant)
Industrials / Manufacturing 2–5

 

Enterprise Value to EBITDA (EV/EBITDA)

If you only learn one valuation metric beyond P/E, make it EV/EBITDA. Many professional investors consider it superior to P/E because it accounts for debt, strips out non-cash accounting items, and allows you to compare companies regardless of their capital structure.

How to calculate it:

Enterprise Value (EV) = Market Cap + Total Debt - Cash and Cash Equivalents

EBITDA = Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization

EV/EBITDA = Enterprise Value / EBITDA

Think of EV as the total price tag to acquire the entire business — not just the equity, but the debt that comes with it, minus the cash already in the coffers. EBITDA represents the operating earnings before financing decisions and accounting adjustments muddy the picture.

What good looks like: An EV/EBITDA between 8 and 15 is typical for most established companies. Below 8 is potentially cheap. Above 20 is expensive unless justified by rapid growth. For context, the S&P 500 average typically hovers around 13–16.

Red Flag: Be cautious with EV/EBITDA for companies that have massive capital expenditure requirements (like telecom or airlines). EBITDA ignores capex, so the metric can make capital-intensive businesses look cheaper than they actually are. In those cases, also check EV/EBIT or free cash flow-based metrics.

Profitability and Growth — Is the Business Healthy?

A stock can look cheap on valuation metrics and still be a terrible investment if the underlying business is shrinking, bleeding money, or earning thin margins that one bad quarter could wipe out. Profitability and growth metrics tell you whether the business engine is actually running well.

Earnings Per Share (EPS) and EPS Growth

Earnings per share is the foundation of most valuation metrics. It tells you how much profit the company earns for each outstanding share of stock.

How to calculate it:

Basic EPS = Net Income / Weighted Average Shares Outstanding

Diluted EPS = Net Income / (Shares Outstanding + Convertible Securities + Options)

Always use diluted EPS — it accounts for stock options, warrants, and convertible bonds that could increase the share count and dilute your ownership.

What to look for: A single EPS number means little on its own. What matters is the trend. Is EPS growing consistently over time? Year-over-year EPS growth of 10–15% is solid for a large-cap company. Growth stocks might show 20–40%+ EPS growth. The key is consistency — one-time spikes from asset sales or tax windfalls do not count.

Tip: Look at EPS growth over 3-year and 5-year periods, not just the most recent quarter. A company that has grown EPS at 15% annually for five straight years is far more compelling than one that posted a single blowout quarter after years of stagnation.

Revenue Growth Rate

Revenue is the top line — total sales before any expenses are subtracted. While EPS can be manipulated through cost-cutting, share buybacks, and accounting tricks, revenue growth is harder to fake. If revenue is not growing, the company eventually runs out of ways to grow earnings.

How to calculate it:

Revenue Growth Rate = ((Current Period Revenue - Prior Period Revenue) / Prior Period Revenue) × 100

What good looks like:

Company Stage Typical Revenue Growth Example
High-growth startup/IPO 30–100%+ YoY Early-stage SaaS companies
Growth company 15–30% YoY Mid-stage tech firms
Mature large-cap 5–15% YoY Apple, Microsoft
Mature / Slow-growth 0–5% YoY Utilities, consumer staples
Declining Negative Legacy businesses losing market share

 

Red Flag: If a company shows flat or declining revenue for two or more consecutive years, proceed with extreme caution. Revenue shrinkage is one of the hardest problems for management to reverse, and it often signals structural challenges in the business model.

Profit Margins — Gross, Operating, and Net

Revenue tells you how much money is coming in. Margins tell you how much the company actually keeps. There are three margin levels, each revealing something different about the business.

How to calculate them:

Gross Margin = ((Revenue - Cost of Goods Sold) / Revenue) × 100

Operating Margin = (Operating Income / Revenue) × 100

Net Profit Margin = (Net Income / Revenue) × 100

Gross margin shows how efficiently a company produces its goods or delivers its services. A software company might have a gross margin of 75–85% because digital products cost very little to replicate. A grocery chain might have 25–30% because the cost of inventory is high relative to selling prices.

Operating margin factors in selling, general, and administrative expenses (SGA), research and development (R&D), and other operating costs. This is where you see how well management controls overhead. A company with high gross margins but low operating margins is spending too much on operations.

Net margin is the bottom line — what remains after everything, including interest, taxes, and one-time charges. This is the profit that ultimately flows to shareholders.

Sector Gross Margin Operating Margin Net Margin
Software / SaaS 70–85% 20–40% 15–30%
Pharmaceuticals 65–80% 20–35% 15–25%
Financial Services N/A (use net interest margin) 25–40% 20–30%
Retail 25–45% 3–10% 2–7%
Airlines 35–50% 3–10% 1–5%
Grocery / Supermarkets 25–30% 2–5% 1–3%

 

Key Takeaway: Margin trends matter more than absolute numbers. A company whose operating margin has expanded from 15% to 22% over three years is demonstrating operating leverage — the ability to grow profits faster than revenue. That is a powerful signal.

Financial Strength — Can It Survive a Storm?

The 2008 financial crisis taught a brutal lesson: companies with strong revenue and high margins can still go bankrupt if they carry too much debt. Financial strength metrics tell you whether a company has the balance sheet to weather recessions, industry downturns, or unexpected shocks.

Free Cash Flow (FCF) and FCF Yield

If there is one metric that separates great businesses from mediocre ones, it is free cash flow. Earnings can be manipulated through accounting choices. Cash flow cannot. Free cash flow represents the actual cash a business generates after paying for everything it needs to maintain and grow operations.

How to calculate it:

Free Cash Flow (FCF) = Operating Cash Flow - Capital Expenditures

FCF Yield = (Free Cash Flow Per Share / Current Share Price) × 100

FCF yield is like an earnings yield but based on actual cash rather than accounting profits. A company with a 7% FCF yield is generating $7 of real cash for every $100 of market value — that is cash that can be used for dividends, buybacks, debt reduction, or reinvestment.

What good looks like: Positive and growing FCF is the baseline expectation for any mature company. An FCF yield above 5% is generally attractive. Above 8% is very compelling, assuming the cash flow is sustainable. The S&P 500 average FCF yield tends to hover around 3–5%.

Red Flag: A company reporting positive net income but consistently negative free cash flow is a major warning sign. This disconnect often means earnings are being propped up by aggressive accounting while the actual business is consuming cash. Enron is the textbook example — the company reported profits for years while burning through cash at an alarming rate.

Some legitimate exceptions exist: high-growth companies like early Amazon intentionally sacrificed FCF to fund massive capital investments. But for mature businesses, negative FCF should demand a very good explanation.

Debt-to-Equity Ratio (D/E)

The debt-to-equity ratio measures how much a company relies on borrowed money versus shareholder equity to finance its operations. Some debt is healthy — it can amplify returns when used wisely. Too much debt becomes a ticking time bomb.

How to calculate it:

Debt-to-Equity Ratio = Total Liabilities / Total Shareholders' Equity

Some analysts use only long-term debt instead of total liabilities for a more conservative view. Both approaches are valid — just be consistent when comparing companies.

What good looks like by sector:

Sector Typical D/E Notes
Technology 0.1–0.8 Often cash-rich, low debt
Healthcare 0.3–1.0 Varies by sub-sector
Utilities 1.0–2.5 Capital-intensive, debt is normal
Real Estate / REITs 0.5–2.0 Leveraged by nature
Financial Services 2.0–10.0+ Banks use leverage as core business model
Consumer Discretionary 0.5–1.5 Varies widely by sub-sector

 

Tip: When evaluating debt, also look at the interest coverage ratio (EBIT / Interest Expense). A company might have a high D/E ratio but still be safe if its earnings comfortably cover interest payments. An interest coverage ratio below 2.0 is a warning sign — the company is dangerously close to not being able to service its debt.

Dividend Yield and Payout Ratio

For income-focused investors, dividends are a critical part of total returns. But not all dividends are created equal. A high yield that is unsustainable is worse than a modest yield that grows every year.

How to calculate them:

Dividend Yield = (Annual Dividends Per Share / Current Share Price) × 100

Payout Ratio = (Annual Dividends Per Share / Earnings Per Share) × 100

FCF Payout Ratio = (Annual Dividends / Free Cash Flow) × 100

The payout ratio tells you what percentage of earnings is being paid out as dividends. A payout ratio of 40% means the company is distributing 40 cents of every dollar it earns and retaining 60 cents for growth, debt reduction, or buybacks.

What good looks like:

  • Dividend yield: 1.5–4% is a healthy range for most dividend-paying stocks. Below 1% is modest. Above 5–6% demands scrutiny — the market may be pricing in a dividend cut.
  • Payout ratio: 30–60% is the sweet spot for most industries. It leaves room for dividend growth and provides a buffer during earnings dips.
  • FCF payout ratio: Ideally below 70%. If a company is paying out more in dividends than it generates in free cash flow, that dividend is being funded by debt or asset sales — not sustainable.
Red Flag: A payout ratio above 90–100% means the company is paying out more than it earns. Unless you are looking at REITs (which are required by law to distribute most of their income), this is unsustainable. Also beware of companies that borrow money to maintain dividend payments — it is a classic sign of a management team prioritizing optics over financial health.

Efficiency and Returns — Is Management Doing Its Job?

A company can be profitable and growing, but if management is not deploying capital efficiently, shareholders are leaving money on the table. Efficiency metrics measure how well management converts assets and invested capital into returns.

Return on Equity (ROE)

Return on equity measures how much profit a company generates with the money shareholders have invested. It answers the question: for every dollar of equity, how many cents of profit does management produce?

How to calculate it:

ROE = (Net Income / Shareholders' Equity) × 100

What good looks like: An ROE above 15% is generally considered strong. Above 20% is excellent. Warren Buffett has long used ROE as one of his primary screens — he typically looks for companies with consistently high ROE, ideally above 15% over a multi-year period.

The debt trap: Here is the catch with ROE — it can be artificially inflated by high leverage. If a company takes on massive debt and uses the proceeds to buy back shares, shareholders’ equity shrinks, and ROE goes up even if profitability has not improved. This is why you should always look at ROE alongside the debt-to-equity ratio.

ROE Level Interpretation
20%+ Excellent — strong competitive advantages
15–20% Good — above average management efficiency
10–15% Average — acceptable for most industries
Below 10% Below average — may indicate inefficiency or structural issues
Negative Company is losing money or has negative equity

 

Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)

If ROE has a more sophisticated sibling, it is ROIC. Return on invested capital measures how efficiently a company uses all the capital invested in its operations — both equity and debt — to generate profits. Many professional investors consider ROIC the single best measure of business quality.

How to calculate it:

ROIC = (Net Operating Profit After Tax (NOPAT)) / Invested Capital × 100

NOPAT = Operating Income × (1 - Tax Rate)

Invested Capital = Total Equity + Total Debt - Cash and Equivalents

ROIC strips away the distortions that leverage creates in ROE. A company with 10% ROIC and low debt is arguably a better-quality business than one with 25% ROE fueled by massive borrowing.

What good looks like: An ROIC above 10% is generally considered good. Above 15% is excellent and usually indicates a durable competitive advantage (or “moat”). The key benchmark is the company’s weighted average cost of capital (WACC) — if ROIC consistently exceeds WACC, the company is creating value. If ROIC is below WACC, it is destroying value regardless of what the income statement shows.

Key Takeaway: Companies that maintain ROIC above 15% for a decade or more almost always possess structural advantages — brand power, network effects, switching costs, or proprietary technology. These are the types of businesses Warren Buffett calls “wonderful businesses at fair prices.” Think Apple, Visa, or Costco.
Tip: When comparing two companies in the same industry, ROIC is often the best tiebreaker. The company with consistently higher ROIC is almost always the better operator, regardless of which one has the higher stock price or the flashier growth rate.

One-Page Cheat Sheet — Every Metric at a Glance

Here is the reference table you can come back to every time you evaluate a stock. Print it, bookmark it, save it to your phone — whatever works. This single table summarizes everything we have covered.

Metric Formula Good Range Red Flag
P/E Ratio (Trailing) Price / EPS (TTM) 10–25 (varies by sector) Above 50 in mature industry
P/E Ratio (Forward) Price / Estimated Future EPS Lower than trailing P/E Higher than trailing (earnings expected to shrink)
PEG Ratio P/E / EPS Growth Rate (%) 0.5–1.5 Above 2.0
Price-to-Book (P/B) Price / Book Value Per Share 0.8–3.0 (asset-heavy sectors) Below 0.5 (possible value trap)
EV/EBITDA Enterprise Value / EBITDA 8–15 Above 25 without high growth
EPS Growth (5Y) CAGR of EPS over 5 years 10–25% annually Negative or highly erratic
Revenue Growth (Current Rev – Prior Rev) / Prior Rev 5–30% (stage-dependent) Declining for 2+ years
Gross Margin (Rev – COGS) / Rev Sector-dependent, stable or rising Declining steadily over 3+ years
Operating Margin Operating Income / Rev 10–30% (sector-dependent) Below 5% in non-retail sectors
Net Profit Margin Net Income / Rev 5–20% (sector-dependent) Negative for 2+ consecutive years
Free Cash Flow Operating CF – CapEx Positive and growing Negative while net income is positive
FCF Yield FCF Per Share / Share Price Above 5% Below 1% for non-growth stocks
Debt-to-Equity Total Liabilities / Equity 0.3–1.5 (sector-dependent) Above 2.0 in non-financial sectors
Dividend Yield Annual Div / Share Price 1.5–4% Above 7% (unsustainable risk)
Payout Ratio Dividends / EPS 30–60% Above 90% (except REITs)
ROE Net Income / Equity Above 15% Below 10% (check for high leverage if above 25%)
ROIC NOPAT / Invested Capital Above 10%, ideally 15%+ Below WACC (value destruction)

 

Tip: No single metric tells the whole story. The best investors look at these metrics together as a system. A stock with a low P/E, high ROE, growing FCF, and manageable debt is far more compelling than one that scores well on just one or two measures.

Where to Find Every Metric for Free

You do not need a $24,000-per-year Bloomberg terminal or a premium brokerage subscription to access the metrics in this guide. Here are the best free resources, each with their strengths.

Source What You Get Best For
Yahoo Finance (finance.yahoo.com) P/E, EPS, P/B, D/E, dividend yield, payout ratio, margins, FCF Quick overview of all key metrics on one page (Statistics tab)
Macrotrends (macrotrends.net) 10+ years of historical financial data, revenue, margins, ratios Historical trends and long-term charts of any metric
Finviz (finviz.com) P/E, forward P/E, PEG, P/B, EV/EBITDA, ROE, ROI, margins Stock screener and snapshot — all metrics on one visual page
Wisesheets / Gurufocus ROIC, FCF yield, Piotroski F-Score, quality metrics Advanced value investing metrics and scoring models
SEC EDGAR (sec.gov/edgar) Official 10-K and 10-Q filings, raw financial statements Primary source for calculating metrics yourself
Stockanalysis.com Financials, ratios, EPS estimates, FCF, ROIC Clean interface with 10 years of data, good for comparisons
Google Finance Basic P/E, market cap, dividend yield, revenue, EPS Quick glance — minimal but fast

 

A practical workflow for checking metrics: Start with Finviz or Yahoo Finance for a quick snapshot of all key ratios. If the numbers look promising, head to Macrotrends or Stockanalysis.com to check 5–10 year historical trends. Finally, if you are considering a serious position, read the actual 10-K filing on SEC EDGAR — there is no substitute for reading management’s own words about risks, strategy, and outlook.

Key Takeaway: The data you need is completely free. What separates good investors from mediocre ones is not access to information — it is the discipline to actually check these numbers before every purchase, not just the first one.

Putting It All Together — A Practical Example

Let us walk through how you might use these metrics together to evaluate a hypothetical stock. Imagine you are considering buying shares of a mid-cap technology company. Here is what the metrics tell you:

Metric Company Value Assessment
Trailing P/E 28 Reasonable for tech
Forward P/E 22 Good — earnings expected to grow
PEG 1.2 Fairly valued relative to growth
Revenue Growth (3Y avg) 18% Strong and consistent
EPS Growth (5Y avg) 22% Excellent
Gross Margin 72% Very strong for software
Operating Margin 24% Healthy, room for expansion
Free Cash Flow $420M (growing) Positive and growing
FCF Yield 4.2% Acceptable for a growth stock
D/E Ratio 0.35 Conservative, low leverage
ROE 21% Excellent
ROIC 17% Above 15% — strong moat signal

 

This hypothetical company passes the test across the board: reasonable valuation supported by strong growth, high margins, positive and growing cash flow, low debt, and excellent returns on capital. This is the type of company worth adding to a deeper due diligence shortlist.

Now contrast this with a stock that has a P/E of 8 — looks cheap at first glance. But when you dig in, you find declining revenue, shrinking margins, negative free cash flow, a D/E ratio of 3.2, and an ROE of 4%. That “cheap” stock is cheap for a reason — the market is pricing in deterioration that the P/E alone does not reveal. This is what value investors call a “value trap,” and it is one of the most common mistakes in investing.

Common Mistakes When Using Metrics

Before you start running these numbers on every stock in your watchlist, here are the most common pitfalls investors fall into — even experienced ones.

Comparing across sectors without context. A P/E of 12 is expensive for a bank but cheap for a cloud software company. Always compare within the same industry. A tech stock’s margins, growth rates, and valuation multiples exist in a completely different universe than a utility or a retailer.

Relying on a single metric. No metric is complete on its own. P/E ignores debt. ROE can be inflated by leverage. FCF can be volatile quarter to quarter. The power comes from looking at the full picture. If you only check one number, you are flying blind in one eye.

Ignoring the trend. A snapshot of today’s numbers is useful, but the trajectory matters more. Is the operating margin expanding or compressing? Is debt growing or shrinking? Has revenue growth been accelerating or decelerating? Three to five years of data reveals patterns that a single quarter cannot.

Chasing outlier numbers without investigation. When a metric looks unusually good — like an FCF yield of 15% or an ROE of 45% — do not celebrate. Investigate. Extreme outliers often result from one-time events (asset sales, tax benefits, restructuring charges) that will not repeat. Read the footnotes in the 10-K filing before drawing conclusions.

Forgetting qualitative factors. Numbers tell you what has happened and what the market expects. They do not tell you about competitive dynamics, management integrity, regulatory risks, or technological disruption. The best stock pickers combine quantitative analysis with qualitative judgment. Metrics are a necessary but not sufficient condition for a good investment.

Key Takeaway: Metrics are guardrails, not GPS. They tell you when something does not make sense and help you avoid expensive mistakes. But the final investment decision should always incorporate broader context — the industry, the management team, the competitive landscape, and your own risk tolerance.

Conclusion

You do not need to memorize a finance textbook to invest intelligently in U.S. stocks. But you do need a systematic approach to evaluating companies before you put real money on the line. The twelve metrics covered in this guide — from P/E and PEG ratios to free cash flow, ROIC, and dividend safety — give you a comprehensive framework for separating good businesses from mediocre ones, and fair prices from dangerous ones.

Start simple. The next time you are tempted to buy a stock because of a headline, a tip from a friend, or a chart pattern that looks bullish, pause and run through the checklist. Check the valuation: is the price reasonable relative to earnings, growth, and assets? Check the profitability: is the business actually making money, and are margins stable or improving? Check the financial strength: can the company survive a downturn without a capital raise? Check the efficiency: is management creating value with the capital entrusted to them?

If a stock passes all four checks, you have found a company worth researching further. If it fails on multiple dimensions, no amount of hype or momentum makes it a good investment. This discipline will not make you rich overnight — nothing will — but over years and decades, it will keep you out of the disasters that destroy most individual investors’ portfolios.

The data is free. The metrics are straightforward. The only thing that separates you from making better investment decisions is the willingness to actually check the numbers before you click “buy.”

Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or a solicitation to buy or sell any security. Always conduct your own due diligence and consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.

References

  • U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission — EDGAR Filing System: sec.gov/edgar
  • Yahoo Finance — Stock Statistics and Financial Data: finance.yahoo.com
  • Finviz — Financial Visualizations and Stock Screener: finviz.com
  • Macrotrends — Historical Financial Data and Charts: macrotrends.net
  • Damodaran, Aswath. Investment Valuation: Tools and Techniques for Determining the Value of Any Asset. 3rd ed., Wiley, 2012.
  • Lynch, Peter. One Up on Wall Street. Simon & Schuster, 1989.
  • Buffett, Warren. Berkshire Hathaway Annual Letters to Shareholders: berkshirehathaway.com
  • Greenblatt, Joel. The Little Book That Beats the Market. Wiley, 2006.
  • Stockanalysis.com — Free Financial Data and Stock Analysis: stockanalysis.com

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