Saturday, December 4, 2010

CANSLIM method - William O'Neil

This is a quick review of the CANSLIM method of stock selection or stock picking as described in the book by William O'Neil:
How to Make Money in Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times and Bad, Fourth Edition


The interesting thing I found about this method is that it is neither pure fundamental nor technical analysis but a combination with elements of both. Here is a quick brief on who William is.

William J. O'Neil (born March 25, 1933) is an American entrepreneur, stockbroker and writer, who founded the business newspaper Investor's Business Daily and the stock brokerage firm William O'Neil + Co. Inc. He is the author of the books How to Make Money in Stocks and 24 Essential Lessons for Investment Success and is the creator of the CAN SLIM investment strategy. He holds one of the highest performing track records in the stock market --- Wikipedia

Now on to the CAN-SLIM method. This article is not a book review, rather a summary of the CAN-SLIM method for quick reference for users of this blog.


C - Current quarter growth 30%- compare to last quarter, for four qtrs, sales growth. This indicates strong short term growth. Finding such a criteria for stock whose price has not shot up may be good as this may indicate a company which is overlooked and ready for appreciation.

A - Annual earnings growth 25% - last three years. Roe > 17%. Check earnings stability, i.e. this ensures that good earnings is not just a fluke, but is due to good business and can be sustained.

N - New things in company, products, management - fundamental. New highs off properly formed bases, such as stock price shooting up recently from a long inactive period.

S - Supply an demand. Low debt to equity. These are typical fundamental criteria. The first represent the core of any business for without a favourable supply and demand, the business would not survive. The second is fundamental on how the business is run in terms of debt level. Many large corporate failures can be traced to too high debt.

L - Laggards and leaders. Do not buy when price drop big, with big volume , even though look cheap. This will trap most amateur and even professionals like fund managers and so called fundamental investors. Get out of laggards if drop 8% or more.

I - Institution investors - buy stocks with a few institutional sponsor that have good performance, or more coming in. Avoid those with too big proportion held by institutions as this will lessen liquidity.

M - Market direction. Major top when small price up, large volume, big range. Market bottom begin with rally attempt which closes higher after day's decline. From fourth day, look for follow through with higher price and strong volume. After confirmed , buy quality stocks with strong sales and earnings . Also look for divergence in major indices and ratio of call to put options volumes.

A few more notes which I would try to remember for myself are:
- look for Cup handle pattern. This is when the stock price has not moved up or down for a long time and just recently starting to spike up.
- Buy when stock is going up, on increasing volume, not when going down.
- Buy companies with low debt to equity.





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