This is a terrific video. I didn't go to business school, read Warren Buffett extensively. These rules were always mentioned but never really explained. What might make a good video would be to look at Apple after the introduction of the iPhone in 2007. I invested in 2008, rode out the crash no problem, did great over many years. The first few years of my investment in Apple ALL the business news I found just repeated over and over again, "Apple has almost the entire 35% of the high end cell phone business in the U.S. Who else can they sell iPhones to? As though they'd saturated the entire potential market. I still had a Finnish Nokia. This just seemed odd. I wondered, am I missing something? One of my main reasons for investing in Apple was I expected them to expand iPhone sales around the world. (I had no clue about how to analyze their balance sheet.) So then Buffett and Berkshire in 2012 invested in IBM. Did that follow these rules of thumb? (My reaction was to wonder, did I miss something? Then I thought, no, maybe that's business computers which was separate from smartphones.) In 2016 Buffett said IBM had been a mistake, sold their position off at a loss, and then invested in Apple. (Did the Rules apply to either of these?) And in about 2019 Buffett said he wished Berkshire could buy all of Apple. And the recent Berkshire sell off of a significant portion of their position in Apple. Did that follow the Rules? In no way am I trying to say these Rules aren't powerful, just that until now I didn't have a clue how to apply them.
Stock buy backs just seems like a lazy strategy to increase value, after completion it leaves the market available stock reduced, increasing positive and negative market swings, see Arm as an extreme example (re limited stock available to market), and shows the amount of cash no longer available to deliver strategic investment in future products and services, the cash was invested in stock, not invested in future growth initiatives, be it R&D or other investments, like staff, yes they create value, not just an expense line to reduce.
In my opinion it's really hard to analyze that. I'll make it stick to traditional if you have a go signal. Lending with collateral... even government officials is welcome.
@@Vvvrrrmmm HES LIKEA a eazyh stadliehnh.. ... If wanth BIGH CLOESH all ABHOUHT FREE, DEMO. ALL. THATS HUKUM PASAR. EXPANSIVEH .. FOOO WHATH MADE FREEDEM,O CRAYZH.
1.Cash to debt: more cash than debt 2.Debt to equity ratio : below 0.8 Preferred stock is zero 4. Retained earnings growing consistently ( even during recessions) 5. Has treasury stock ( cumulative sharebuy backs)
About Rule #5: but there are companies with buybacks and no treasury stock. What does it mean? Shouldn't we look instead for the amount of repurchases in the cash flow statement?
@@piercarlotalenti4044 it starts with the annual report. Buffett says if it doesn’t answer all questions, they are hiding something. Then he would interview management
In his early years, Warren Buffett concentrated heavily on balance sheet fundamentals, often seeking undervalued companies with strong assets relative to their market price. Over time, his approach evolved to more focus on the quality of businesses and their long-term earnings power, recognizing that sustainable competitive advantages and robust cash flows are key drivers of superior investment returns. This shift reflects Buffett as an investor was primarily due to Charlie Munger influence and also larger amount of money under management.
This. He started strongly based on ideas of his tutor Ben Graham. But shifted into emphasizing the business value of a company. Never only rely on fundamentals because they only reflect the past. It is only one column in evaluating a business. Buffet is addressing business value with his "moat" theory and also with his "stay in your field of competence".
Common Stock: If you have common stock, you get a slice of pizza whenever the pizza shop makes profits, but the size of your slice depends on how well the shop does. If the shop doesn’t make enough money, you might not get anything. Preferred Stock: This is a little different. If you own preferred stock, it’s like having a special ticket that guarantees you a certain-sized slice of pizza, no matter how well or poorly the pizza shop does. Even if the shop isn't making much money, you'll still get your slice first, before the people with common stock
I'm new to your channel, and I just subscribed because you got right to the point and kept your video under 10 minutes which is exactly the way to do it! Thank you!
As Warren Buffet I would definitely recommend to look at a company's annual reports before making any investment decisions, but these 5 measures are just a tiny fraction of the information that you need to make informed decisions.
I had AI design rank and design a scorecard on these metrics Based on 100 Pts total a score of 70+ is worth looing into for investment. Retained Earnings Growing Consistently: 30 points Debt to Equity Ratio < 0.8: 25 points Cash to Debt Ratio (More Cash than Debt): 20 points Preferred Stock is Zero: 15 points Has Treasury Stock (Share Buybacks): 10 points
I really love this kind of no BS straight to the point content. I am always confused what the different US balance sheet terms mean and this brought me a step closer to understanding. Thank you!
Very informative. I took a course on this in uni but only understood it in theory. Now after having worked for others and started my own business, I can appreciate it for what it is.
It is a little confusing that in your analysis of Chipotle , in Item. #1, you use a value of 0 for debt, but for Item #2, there is a large number for debt.
I think he is referring to debt as actual loans that come due in his example #1. In number #2 he includes liabilities which includes items purchased on credit or have different payment terms that are considered liabilities
Thank you very much. I enjoy your videos. I would ask this though. In Chipotle example, I would posit that the Long-term Leases are quasi debt payment. Instead of buying the land and having mortgage debt, they enter into LT leases. Someone else owns the land and buildings, but none of the revenue and profits could be possible unless Leases are paid.
Sure. I get that. But, that's kind of like saying hiring an employee is 'debt' since you owe that employee salary in the future. Would you consider that debt? The same with leases. Yes, signing a lease obligates you to pay rent in the future. But, you can always cancel the lease. There might be a fee to do so, but you can cancel it. I don't view this as 'debt'....but others feel differently!
I bought CMG recently on its latest pullback because I always thought it was overvalued. I was tired of missing owning a great company so I pulled the trigger and I’m up 12%-15%, however, I bought PLTR shortly after the DPO in 2022 and added multiple times since then and I’m up 97% since April and 295% since November 2022.
ok I am taking up the lulu challenge. Give me a minute..PE ratio is low, on the very low end of its annual price range, earnings growing each year, net profit margin is 16% (firat thing i dont like, it means there is no monopoly), ROC and ROA are very high. I would say this a strong buy, amd you can set a target of usd500 per share.
You said on rule one that Chipotle has no debt, but then turn around and use the liabilities and debt/equity ratio line item for rule two. Could you explain that?
Yeah I thought about that too .. unless he specifically defines what type of debt we are talking about ! Btw, in a diff comment he replied to another user mentioning that debt is "borrowings" .. so I guess he jyst means loans etc..
Chipotle’s “debt” is operating least liabilities. While that is a liability. I don’t consider it to be debt. Hence, why I excluded it from one, but included it in the other.
@@gojo252seems to me like they would just however you look at it it shows that a company is confidently looking to maintain its property’s therefore expanding so that would mean growth, i assume that’s why he doesn’t count that as an actual “liability”
GameStop has almost $5B in the bank and no long term debt except the leases on its stores. I can’t wait to look at the other metrics. It even turned a profit last year…not a big one…but still had one! 😊
Life is short, you should enjoy it while you are here. The other life does not depend on you, nor do you know if you will be able to enjoy it. In fact, no one can say for sure.
Very good series. This is along with income statement analysis and cash flow statement analysis help to figure out the value stocks with strong Moat. Thanks.
Don't know if you have done a video on this before, but how about one on minimum cash to invest to use an investment advisor, how to identify a good one and reasonable fees to expect to pay. Great presentations, by the way!
So is leases seen as debt because you use the thing before fully playing for it? Does it also add to the assets over time? And does rent for buildings fall under this? To me rent seems more like cost of production. Since the product (buildings) will not be owned.
Lease is considered debt because you sign a contract to obligate your self to pay for it. I understand why they made this accounting change, but I personally don’t consider these to be debt anymore than I would consider future employee salary expenses to be debt
What is the difference in debts and liabilities in this case? Usually they are both the same and i've never seen a balance sheet that lists them differently.
Buffett owns regulated energy utilities. In my experience (New England and nuclear electrics), they typically have high debt to equity, have issued some preferred stock, and haven’t had much in the way of stock buy-backs.
I'm confused about the part where you said Chipotle had no debt, It states they did have an accounts payable of 197.6 in Dec 23. Accounts Payable is a type of short term debt that is owed to suppliers etc.
Yes but it's short term plus 203 million is a drop in the bucket of 5.2 billion so even taking that into account the cash & equivalents would still be greater than this short term debt
Current debt & liabilities (due in a year or less) pertain to the daily operations of the business (like a payroll loan for example). Long-term debt is considered a financing activity in a business. Although in this video long-term leases shown at 5:05 is debt and attributes to the 1.2 D/E ratio edit* op does say he doesn't consider long-term leases debt in this scenario, but in larger corporate finance we normally do.
Nice video. It would be great to see a similar analysis for other business forms such as cooperatives, nonprofits, etc. so that their members can analyze how well their cooperative is being run. Obviously, not quite the same as an investor perspective, but I suspect most of the same rules apply just different terms on the balance sheet.
@@BrianFeroldiYT I admit to having an ulterior motive with this request. I am a board member of an electric cooperative who was elected just before retiring from a long career in a technology company. I worked in R&D, engineering and product development - not finance, but I learned enough along the way to be fairly proficient in things finance and accounting related. I am appalled at how most cooperatives are measured and managed. They seem to be controlled mainly by their lenders. I simply can’t imagine a traditional company or corporation who would use as one of its primary metric a ratio like MDSC. When you primary financial metric is your ability to pay back your loans, it really says who is running the cooperative, yet this is considered completely normal in the cooperative world, well in the electric cooperative world anyway. I can’t speak to cooperatives in other industries. It would be interesting to see another opinion on this as it seems that most traditional corporate finance people have no reason to even look at cooperatives and I’ve seen only one article that discusses nonprofit debt and that was from Harvard many years ago and it seems nobody ever paid attention to it. It showed clearly that carrying large debt wasn’t a financial advantage, as most cooperative manager’s claim, yet nobody pays attention. I wish someone like Warren Buffet would take a close look at cooperative financials and offer an assessment. I may be full of crap, not being a finance professional, but it just seems to me that having interest expense consume the lion’s share of your margins simply isn’t wise.
00:00 Introduction and Purpose 00:32 Understanding the Balance Sheet 00:54 Rule of Thumb #1: Cash vs. Debt 01:33 Rule of Thumb #2: Debt to Equity Ratio 02:16 Rule of Thumb #3: Preferred Stock 03:00 Rule of Thumb #4: Retained Earnings Growth 03:50 Rule of Thumb #5: Treasury Stock 04:35 Analyzing Chipotle's Balance Sheet 07:01 Final Evaluation of Chipotle by GPT Breeze
You are missing one of the most important fact which is „how long did it take to get the balance done and the get the auditors opinion.‘ if it takes longer than usual there are issues that most likely are not shared with the public
I have a question. When assesing cash vs debt, there may not be the word "debt" mentioned but there are certain items like accounts payable, accrued expenses, current portion of leases which i assume have to be paid this year. Hence, should we look at current liabilities instead of looking for debt and compare it to cash and short term investments? Thanks for this comprehensive video btw. Please keep up the good content!
Hi, Thanks for making the video. What's the source of these 5 rules of thumb? How have you been able to attribute these to Buffett? Which book? Which letter? Which interview? Thanks,
it helped alot thank you so much for sharing this information i hope you earn millions of subscribers just because you are doing a great job by providing such informative knowledge
Thx Brian - just got into investment and this will make my decision more intelligent and confirm some of my predictions. You just earned a new subscriber!
very extremely important rule of investing: if a statement is part of a filing submitted to the SEC, it's quite possibly a lie. if it isn't? it is CERTAINLY a lie.
About no5, when a company buys back stocks, treasury stocks, shouldn't it show with a negative figure on the balance sheet? Suppose a company repurchases 10,000 shares of its stock at $20 per share. The treasury stock entry on the balance sheet would be: Treasury Stoc k= (10,000 shares×$20)=−$200,000 (minus) - This amount shouldn't be subtracted from the total shareholders' equity?
This was very interesting stuff, for someone like me who’s new to investing. One question: In the Chipotle example you said they had no debt - however you later jumped to a point in their balance sheet where it showed a debt value and some debt ratios. Am I missing a subtlety in balance sheet interpretation, here?
Yea… this is an example of how accounting can be confusing. There’s a term called operating police liability, which many financial aggregators consider to be “debt”, hence why it’s listed as a liability. Since these are future at least payments, I do not consider them to be debt, just like I wouldn’t consider future salary payments to employees to be debt. Hope that helps.
@@BrianFeroldiYT When we looked for the cash vs debt, we determined that there was no debt, but the debt/ equity ratio takes into account debt that wasn't considered for cash vs debt metric.
Hey i just wanna know taht these rule of thumbs are of warren buffet really or not because i do not find him revealing these rules of thumb publicly (please reply)
Thanks for watching! Download a free copy of Buffett’s rules of thumb here: longtermmindset.co/buffett
This is a terrific video. I didn't go to business school, read Warren Buffett extensively. These rules were always mentioned but never really explained.
What might make a good video would be to look at Apple after the introduction of the iPhone in 2007.
I invested in 2008, rode out the crash no problem, did great over many years. The first few years of my investment in Apple ALL the business news I found just repeated over and over again, "Apple has almost the entire 35% of the high end cell phone business in the U.S. Who else can they sell iPhones to? As though they'd saturated the entire potential market. I still had a Finnish Nokia. This just seemed odd. I wondered, am I missing something? One of my main reasons for investing in Apple was I expected them to expand iPhone sales around the world. (I had no clue about how to analyze their balance sheet.)
So then Buffett and Berkshire in 2012 invested in IBM. Did that follow these rules of thumb? (My reaction was to wonder, did I miss something? Then I thought, no, maybe that's business computers which was separate from smartphones.)
In 2016 Buffett said IBM had been a mistake, sold their position off at a loss, and then invested in Apple. (Did the Rules apply to either of these?) And in about 2019 Buffett said he wished Berkshire could buy all of Apple.
And the recent Berkshire sell off of a significant portion of their position in Apple. Did that follow the Rules?
In no way am I trying to say these Rules aren't powerful, just that until now I didn't have a clue how to apply them.
Stock buy backs just seems like a lazy strategy to increase value, after completion it leaves the market available stock reduced, increasing positive and negative market swings, see Arm as an extreme example (re limited stock available to market), and shows the amount of cash no longer available to deliver strategic investment in future products and services, the cash was invested in stock, not invested in future growth initiatives, be it R&D or other investments, like staff, yes they create value, not just an expense line to reduce.
In my opinion it's really hard to analyze that. I'll make it stick to traditional if you have a go signal. Lending with collateral... even government officials is welcome.
@@Vvvrrrmmm
HES LIKEA a eazyh stadliehnh..
... If wanth BIGH CLOESH all ABHOUHT FREE, DEMO. ALL. THATS HUKUM PASAR. EXPANSIVEH .. FOOO WHATH MADE FREEDEM,O CRAYZH.
1.Cash to debt: more cash than debt
2.Debt to equity ratio : below 0.8
Preferred stock is zero
4. Retained earnings growing consistently ( even during recessions)
5. Has treasury stock ( cumulative sharebuy backs)
You missed 3 lol
Thank you...🇺🇸 👍☕
@@slewcharles926too busy to watch vid rn what were they?
@@slewcharles926 3. Preferred stock is zero. (he forgot to number it.)
About Rule #5: but there are companies with buybacks and no treasury stock. What does it mean? Shouldn't we look instead for the amount of repurchases in the cash flow statement?
You left his other prime rules 1. Read the footnotes 2. Find out about off balance sheet debt, the most diabolical financial shenanigan
Good additions
Where would one find that info on a company?
@@piercarlotalenti4044 it starts with the annual report. Buffett says if it doesn’t answer all questions, they are hiding something. Then he would interview management
@@alexandermayer2026excellent !!
😂😂😂
In his early years, Warren Buffett concentrated heavily on balance sheet fundamentals, often seeking undervalued companies with strong assets relative to their market price. Over time, his approach evolved to more focus on the quality of businesses and their long-term earnings power, recognizing that sustainable competitive advantages and robust cash flows are key drivers of superior investment returns. This shift reflects Buffett as an investor was primarily due to Charlie Munger influence and also larger amount of money under management.
Yup. Very true
This. He started strongly based on ideas of his tutor Ben Graham. But shifted into emphasizing the business value of a company. Never only rely on fundamentals because they only reflect the past. It is only one column in evaluating a business. Buffet is addressing business value with his "moat" theory and also with his "stay in your field of competence".
@@rokker333 in the past he was more quantitative but now prefers more quality investing.
Common Stock: If you have common stock, you get a slice of pizza whenever the pizza shop makes profits, but the size of your slice depends on how well the shop does. If the shop doesn’t make enough money, you might not get anything.
Preferred Stock: This is a little different. If you own preferred stock, it’s like having a special ticket that guarantees you a certain-sized slice of pizza, no matter how well or poorly the pizza shop does. Even if the shop isn't making much money, you'll still get your slice first, before the people with common stock
Good explanation
Put simply, a clear illustration that makes it better. Good job Brian.
I'm new to your channel, and I just subscribed because you got right to the point and kept your video under 10 minutes which is exactly the way to do it! Thank you!
Awesome! Thank you!
As Warren Buffet I would definitely recommend to look at a company's annual reports before making any investment decisions, but these 5 measures are just a tiny fraction of the information that you need to make informed decisions.
I had AI design rank and design a scorecard on these metrics
Based on 100 Pts total a score of 70+ is worth looing into for investment.
Retained Earnings Growing Consistently: 30 points
Debt to Equity Ratio < 0.8: 25 points
Cash to Debt Ratio (More Cash than Debt): 20 points
Preferred Stock is Zero: 15 points
Has Treasury Stock (Share Buybacks): 10 points
AI is useful for a first pass
@@BrianFeroldiYT Like any tool it has a time and place and must be used with care.
I really love this kind of no BS straight to the point content. I am always confused what the different US balance sheet terms mean and this brought me a step closer to understanding. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful
@@BrianFeroldiYT No bs with real time examples is 💯🔥
People pay hundreds and even thousands for this information
Thanks for the straight to the point explanation. For for someone with no idea of accounting, this short video is extremely helpful.
Cheers!
Very informative. I took a course on this in uni but only understood it in theory. Now after having worked for others and started my own business, I can appreciate it for what it is.
Glad it was helpful!
Love this format! Please make more financial statements analysis content !
Will do!
@@BrianFeroldiYTand create a playlist so we can go directly to it highlight 10 ten companies and some with great potienal.
It is a little confusing that in your analysis of Chipotle , in Item. #1, you use a value of 0 for debt, but for Item #2, there is a large number for debt.
Yeah. He says Chipotle has a debt free balance sheet, yet there is a debt to equity ratio of>1. LOL.
I think he is referring to debt as actual loans that come due in his example #1. In number #2 he includes liabilities which includes items purchased on credit or have different payment terms that are considered liabilities
Everyone likes to put "Warren Buffet" in their videos. It guarantees views.
i think this is the most important to start looking at because it gives a good picture of the company debt + equity to asset ratios before buying in
lol. Do you need some educational knowledge before you speak stupidity?
Thank you for making this process so easy to follow
You are so welcome!
Gute Erklärung, leicht verständlich.
Thank you very much. I enjoy your videos. I would ask this though. In Chipotle example, I would posit that the Long-term Leases are quasi debt payment. Instead of buying the land and having mortgage debt, they enter into LT leases. Someone else owns the land and buildings, but none of the revenue and profits could be possible unless Leases are paid.
Sure. I get that. But, that's kind of like saying hiring an employee is 'debt' since you owe that employee salary in the future. Would you consider that debt? The same with leases. Yes, signing a lease obligates you to pay rent in the future. But, you can always cancel the lease. There might be a fee to do so, but you can cancel it. I don't view this as 'debt'....but others feel differently!
One of the best videos I've watched on TH-cam. Great info !
Glad it was helpful!
I like this content a lot! I am learning all about finance and this helps so much, specially learning from buffet strategies! Thanks!
Glad you like them!
I bought CMG recently on its latest pullback because I always thought it was overvalued. I was tired of missing owning a great company so I pulled the trigger and I’m up 12%-15%, however, I bought PLTR shortly after the DPO in 2022 and added multiple times since then and I’m up 97% since April and 295% since November 2022.
what other stocks you owned recently?
Very clean explanations
Glad you think so!
Just ran through lululemon's balance sheet with Buffett's rules of thumb and my conviction just got stronger. Thanks for the video!
Great job!
Long lululemon?
I’m looking at the same stock. I have lululemon undervalued. Their balance sheet and return on capital is strong
@edsontrujillo2247 Yes. My target is around $300-$320
ok I am taking up the lulu challenge. Give me a minute..PE ratio is low, on the very low end of its annual price range, earnings growing each year, net profit margin is 16% (firat thing i dont like, it means there is no monopoly), ROC and ROA are very high. I would say this a strong buy, amd you can set a target of usd500 per share.
It was pretty good trying to get better at stock analysis. Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it
What’s the website you use for checking financial data, fincheck?
Finchat
Finchat I believe.
Yes
loved this one! thanks, Brian!
Awesome
Hey Brian, just wanted to say great video, and thank you for providing the little working example at the end, liked and new subscriber lol
You said on rule one that Chipotle has no debt, but then turn around and use the liabilities and debt/equity ratio line item for rule two. Could you explain that?
Yeah I thought about that too .. unless he specifically defines what type of debt we are talking about !
Btw, in a diff comment he replied to another user mentioning that debt is "borrowings" .. so I guess he jyst means loans etc..
Chipotle’s “debt” is operating least liabilities. While that is a liability. I don’t consider it to be debt. Hence, why I excluded it from one, but included it in the other.
I dont undestend, they dont have to pay off long term liabilities?
@@BrianFeroldiYT, Hi, please whete did you find information that is lease liabilities? Whete i can find or look that information? Thank you
@@gojo252seems to me like they would just however you look at it it shows that a company is confidently looking to maintain its property’s therefore expanding so that would mean growth, i assume that’s why he doesn’t count that as an actual “liability”
GameStop has almost $5B in the bank and no long term debt except the leases on its stores. I can’t wait to look at the other metrics. It even turned a profit last year…not a big one…but still had one! 😊
Great video man, love this stuff and the simplicity of your explanations. Keep it up!
Thanks, will do!
Thank you for sharing this useful video message 🙏 !
Glad it was helpful!
Most important to ensure good cash flow: LOW DSO (low 'days sales outstanding')
Accounts Receivable as low and short-duration as possible.
Any interest in me making a video about this?
Life is short, you should enjoy it while you are here. The other life does not depend on you, nor do you know if you will be able to enjoy it. In fact, no one can say for sure.
Really excellent video, easy to the point. I learned something.
Yup
These videos are just amazing! I’m definitely a huge fan! Learning a lot! Many thanks 😊
Great to hear!
Extremely well explained! Bless you
Glad it was helpful!
Awesome video.
I own a few Chipotle shares; so bonus points for the analysis!
Very good series. This is along with income statement analysis and cash flow statement analysis help to figure out the value stocks with strong Moat. Thanks.
Glad you enjoy it!
Can someone suggest a good stock screener that can be programmed to pick stocks that meet these criterias
Finchat.io/brian
Please explain how do you agree with debt to equity of the company according to Buffet"s rule
I think it’s a good rule of thumb
Thanks for this. Very useful for beginner investors like me
Glad it was helpful!
@@MoneyMathai It’s always good to return to basic fundamentals in just about anything we can. For an older investor like myself, it was refreshing.
Great video, mate! Cheers from the UK.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Which tool/website that you’ve used for chipotle balance sheet
Finchat
Don't know if you have done a video on this before, but how about one on minimum cash to invest to use an investment advisor, how to identify a good one and reasonable fees to expect to pay. Great presentations, by the way!
Noted!
So is leases seen as debt because you use the thing before fully playing for it? Does it also add to the assets over time?
And does rent for buildings fall under this? To me rent seems more like cost of production. Since the product (buildings) will not be owned.
Lease is considered debt because you sign a contract to obligate your self to pay for it. I understand why they made this accounting change, but I personally don’t consider these to be debt anymore than I would consider future employee salary expenses to be debt
What is the difference in debts and liabilities in this case? Usually they are both the same and i've never seen a balance sheet that lists them differently.
Debt is what is borrowed and has to be paid back. Liabilities are bills that have to be paid.
Buffett owns regulated energy utilities. In my experience (New England and nuclear electrics), they typically have high debt to equity, have issued some preferred stock, and haven’t had much in the way of stock buy-backs.
I'm confused about the part where you said Chipotle had no debt, It states they did have an accounts payable of 197.6 in Dec 23. Accounts Payable is a type of short term debt that is owed to suppliers etc.
Yes but it's short term plus 203 million is a drop in the bucket of 5.2 billion so even taking that into account the cash & equivalents would still be greater than this short term debt
Yes. And the debt/equity ratio was 1.2; which in my ignorant eyes doesn’t compute with a ZERO debt.. very confusing
By debt in that context he means cash borrowings
Current debt & liabilities (due in a year or less) pertain to the daily operations of the business (like a payroll loan for example). Long-term debt is considered a financing activity in a business. Although in this video long-term leases shown at 5:05 is debt and attributes to the 1.2 D/E ratio
edit* op does say he doesn't consider long-term leases debt in this scenario, but in larger corporate finance we normally do.
Excellent piece. Informative and succinct.
Glad you liked it!
Thank you this is educating ❤
Thanks for watching
Nice video. It would be great to see a similar analysis for other business forms such as cooperatives, nonprofits, etc. so that their members can analyze how well their cooperative is being run. Obviously, not quite the same as an investor perspective, but I suspect most of the same rules apply just different terms on the balance sheet.
Thanks for the suggestion!
@@BrianFeroldiYT I admit to having an ulterior motive with this request. I am a board member of an electric cooperative who was elected just before retiring from a long career in a technology company. I worked in R&D, engineering and product development - not finance, but I learned enough along the way to be fairly proficient in things finance and accounting related. I am appalled at how most cooperatives are measured and managed. They seem to be controlled mainly by their lenders. I simply can’t imagine a traditional company or corporation who would use as one of its primary metric a ratio like MDSC. When you primary financial metric is your ability to pay back your loans, it really says who is running the cooperative, yet this is considered completely normal in the cooperative world, well in the electric cooperative world anyway. I can’t speak to cooperatives in other industries.
It would be interesting to see another opinion on this as it seems that most traditional corporate finance people have no reason to even look at cooperatives and I’ve seen only one article that discusses nonprofit debt and that was from Harvard many years ago and it seems nobody ever paid attention to it. It showed clearly that carrying large debt wasn’t a financial advantage, as most cooperative manager’s claim, yet nobody pays attention. I wish someone like Warren Buffet would take a close look at cooperative financials and offer an assessment. I may be full of crap, not being a finance professional, but it just seems to me that having interest expense consume the lion’s share of your margins simply isn’t wise.
Great video. Learned something new today
Glad it was helpful!
Warren Buffett really has impressive know-how
Most investors would agree
00:00 Introduction and Purpose
00:32 Understanding the Balance Sheet
00:54 Rule of Thumb #1: Cash vs. Debt
01:33 Rule of Thumb #2: Debt to Equity Ratio
02:16 Rule of Thumb #3: Preferred Stock
03:00 Rule of Thumb #4: Retained Earnings Growth
03:50 Rule of Thumb #5: Treasury Stock
04:35 Analyzing Chipotle's Balance Sheet
07:01 Final Evaluation of Chipotle
by GPT Breeze
Great video...
Glad you enjoyed it
great video. Perfectly explained and very helpful, in my case, for my soon to be degree in business adm.
Fantastic!
You are missing one of the most important fact which is „how long did it take to get the balance done and the get the auditors opinion.‘ if it takes longer than usual there are issues that most likely are not shared with the public
Hello sir, would you consider Common Stocks, Bonds, Total Fixed Income Securities and/or Total Equity Securities as Cash Equivalents?
Good luck with the analysis
I'm going fishing!
Good luck!
Thanks for the elegant explanation :)
Glad it was helpful!
Hello everyone 👋🏼 may anybody tell me which program or website he uses to look the figures? Thanks in advance
Finchat.io/brian
The liability to equity ratio would depend on the type of company, some companies need to have higher liabilities, would consider it as negative
great watch!
Glad you did!
I have a question. When assesing cash vs debt, there may not be the word "debt" mentioned but there are certain items like accounts payable, accrued expenses, current portion of leases which i assume have to be paid this year. Hence, should we look at current liabilities instead of looking for debt and compare it to cash and short term investments? Thanks for this comprehensive video btw. Please keep up the good content!
That’s an option. In the free e-book I linked to in the video. I have a list of all the words you might see used instead of Debt
Very helpful video. Thanks for posting!
Glad it was helpful!
Excellent, thanks Brian.
Glad you enjoyed it
Hi,
Thanks for making the video.
What's the source of these 5 rules of thumb? How have you been able to attribute these to Buffett?
Which book? Which letter? Which interview?
Thanks,
it helped alot thank you so much for sharing this information i hope you earn millions of subscribers just because you are doing a great job by providing such informative knowledge
Wow, thanks!
Thx Brian - just got into investment and this will make my decision more intelligent and confirm some of my predictions. You just earned a new subscriber!
Excellent!
I tried to do this for UAMY but their balance sheet has so many items that I went crosseyed. Can you help me to see if they pass all these tests?
Great video, thank you so much!
Thanks for watching!
Love this video
Awesome! thanks for watching.
Out of the big magnificent 7 stocks which two stock do you think has the best longterm growth outlook?
Hard to say. Depends on if you believe in AI or not.
If we're talking real world AI and long term growth than it's probably Tesla. But I'm also a bit biased.
@@BrianFeroldiYT I'm half way believing in AI lol
@@jumbothompsonElon is unpredictable and the other EV manufacturers are catching up. Tesla feels risky.
Hi. Can I ask what financial website you get your data from in the video? I didn't catch the name so I couldn't Google it. Thank you very much.
very extremely important rule of investing: if a statement is part of a filing submitted to the SEC, it's quite possibly a lie. if it isn't? it is CERTAINLY a lie.
Amazing content !
Thanks!
Great info, thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
This video goes really well up to 4:29, after that the author of this video just f.... Warren's rule of thumb 👍
How?
About no5, when a company buys back stocks, treasury stocks, shouldn't it show with a negative figure on the balance sheet?
Suppose a company repurchases 10,000 shares of its stock at $20 per share. The treasury stock entry on the balance sheet would be:
Treasury Stoc k= (10,000 shares×$20)=−$200,000 (minus) - This amount shouldn't be subtracted from the total shareholders' equity?
Correct. Treasury stock is contra-equity.
Thanks Brian very helpful South Africa
Thanks for watching
Whice application you use for analyze in this video?
finchat.io/brian
Very good job !!!
Thank you! Cheers!
Hi there! May I know what website do you use to check any company balance sheet
Finchat.io/brian
Easy if information is accurate: Only inside connexions can truly validate a balance sheet? Payola?
Where did you load Chipotle's stock code? Fincheck????
Finchat.io
@@BrianFeroldiYT thank you, I enjoyed the video
alot of balance sheets dont show exactly cash amount, so does current assets work as cash?
Which app were you using? To see the financial statement of a company.
finchat.io/brian/
Thank you.
Welcome!
This was very interesting stuff, for someone like me who’s new to investing. One question: In the Chipotle example you said they had no debt - however you later jumped to a point in their balance sheet where it showed a debt value and some debt ratios. Am I missing a subtlety in balance sheet interpretation, here?
Yea… this is an example of how accounting can be confusing. There’s a term called operating police liability, which many financial aggregators consider to be “debt”, hence why it’s listed as a liability. Since these are future at least payments, I do not consider them to be debt, just like I wouldn’t consider future salary payments to employees to be debt. Hope that helps.
Why does the debt used to calculate the debt/equity ratio not appear on the balance sheet used to calculate the cash vs debt metric?
Do you mean why do the ratios not appear on the balance sheet themselves?
@@BrianFeroldiYT When we looked for the cash vs debt, we determined that there was no debt, but the debt/ equity ratio takes into account debt that wasn't considered for cash vs debt metric.
1:15 Hello sir, for Rule 1, you only take the lines "short term debt" and "long term debt" but ignore the other lines?
All debt should be included - what was missed?
Why didnt you include accounts payable and other long-term liabilities? Is it just interest bedring debt you account for?
Hello, in which website you see the balance sheey?
Finchat.io
Hey i just wanna know taht these rule of thumbs are of warren buffet really or not because i do not find him revealing these rules of thumb publicly (please reply)
From the book “Warren Buffett & interpretation of financial statements”
@@BrianFeroldiYT thanks bro
what website do you use to search for that type of information? thank you
Finchat.io/brian
Thank you, very interesting!
Thanks! Great! Why do you say “expecially" instead of "especially" ?
One of my many flaws….
Can you analyze Microsoft and Palantir using these principles?
You sure can.
Amazing
:)
Very helpful, thank you
Glad it was helpful!
thank you 🤝
Welcome 👍