Fundamental Analysis: P/E Ratio, Debt and Growth

What is fundamental analysis?

Fundamental analysis evaluates a company's intrinsic value using financial metrics: How profitable is it? How fast is it growing? How much debt does it carry? A solid fundamental profile significantly reduces the risk of entering a momentum-driven trade.


The 4 core metrics

P/E Ratio — Price-to-Earnings

The P/E ratio shows how much investors are willing to pay per dollar of earnings.

P/E Interpretation
< 15 Cheap — potential value trade
15 – 30 Market average
> 30 Expensive — growth must justify the valuation
Negative Company is running at a loss

Note: candidates from the selection universe often have very high or negative P/E ratios — here the P/E is a risk indicator, not a disqualifying factor.


Revenue growth

Is the company growing? Growth justifies higher valuations.

Growth (YoY) Signal
> 20 % Strong — long bias
5 – 20 % Healthy — neutral
0 – 5 % Stagnating
Negative Shrinking — short bias

Profit margin

The net margin shows how much of revenue is left as profit.

  • 20 % → Highly profitable business model

  • 5 – 20 % → Solid
  • < 5 % → Thin margins — vulnerable to cost increases

Debt ratio (Debt-to-Equity)

High debt increases bankruptcy risk — especially when interest rates are rising.

D/E Assessment
< 0.5 Conservatively financed
0.5 – 2.0 Normal
> 2.0 Highly leveraged — elevated risk

How 360° scores fundamentals

Each metric generates a partial score. The total fundamental score determines Long / Neutral / Short:

P/E score + growth score + margin score + debt score
→ Weighted average
→ Long (positive), Short (negative), Neutral

An instrument with strong momentum but poor fundamentals gets a penalty in the aggregation — this is intentional.


Limitations of fundamental analysis

  • Fundamental data is retrospective — quarterly reports arrive with a delay
  • For early-stage growth companies (pre-revenue), the P/E ratio is irrelevant
  • Short-term momentum often ignores fundamentals — the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent
  • Accounting tricks (goodwill write-offs, non-GAAP metrics) can distort figures

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