30-03-2011, 12:22 PM
Presented by:
SHAFIA AHMAD
38064451-Reliance-Communications-Ltd.pdf (Size: 1.01 MB / Downloads: 387)
INTRODUCTION
Fundamental analysis is the examination of the underlying forces that affect the well being of the company, industry groups and companies. As with most analysis the goal is to develop a forecast of future price movement and profit from it. At the company level, fundamental analysis may involve examination of financial data, management, business concept and competition. At the industry level their might be an examination of supply and demand forces of the products. For the national economy fundamental analysis might focus on economic data to asses the present and future growth of the economy.
Fundamental analysis is a method of evaluating a security by attempting to measure its intrinsic value by examining related economy, financial and other qualitative and quantitative factors. Fundamental analysis attempt to study every thing that can effect the securities value including macro economic factors and individual specific factors.
Three phase of the fundamental analysis
A. Understanding of the Macro Economic environment and developments (Economy analysis)
B. Analyzing the prospectus of the industry to which the firm belongs(Industry analysis)
C. Assessing the projected performance of the company( Company analysis)
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
Introduction: The fiscal year 2009-10 began as a difficult one. There was a significant slowdown in the growth rate in the second half of 2008-09, following the financial crisis that began in the industrialized nations in 2007 and spread to the real economy across the world. The growth rate of the gross domestic product (GDP) in 2008-09 was 6.7 per cent, with growth in the last two quarters hovering around 6 per cent. There was apprehension that this trend would persist for some time, as the full impact of the economic slowdown in the developed world worked through the system. It was also a year of reckoning for the policymakers, who had taken a calculated risk in providing substantial fiscal expansion to counter the negative fallout of the global slowdown. Inevitably, India’s fiscal deficit increased from the end of 2007-08, reaching 6.8 per cent (budget estimate, BE) of GDP in 2009-10. A delayed and severely subnormal monsoon added to the overall uncertainty. The continued recession in the developed world, for the better part of 2009-10, meant a sluggish export recovery and a slowdown in financial flows into the economy. Yet, over the span of the year, the economy posted a remarkable recovery, not only in terms of overall growthfigures but, more importantly, in terms of certain fundamentals, which justifyoptimism for the Indian economy in the medium to long term.