
The two most important factors when selecting large-cap stocks for investment portfolios are revenue growth and profit margins. If those are healthy, shareholders can expect good gains over time.
For starters, note that we limit the search for new investments to large-caps, as we are not interested in start-ups, regional players, mid-caps, or anything small fry. Nothing unlisted, and nothing worth less than $100 billion. Thanks for coming.
Top-line revenue growth tells you where a company is in its lifecycle. Ideally, sales should be accelerating. One might have to ignore a few bad quarters, but the medium-term trend should be clear.
When quarterly results are published, we look to see which segments of the business are producing the goods, and whether more revenue is coming from new customers, or higher prices. We obviously prefer to see organic growth, not bolt-on sales from acquisitions.
We hold stocks for decades, so we really need sustained advances. We may glance at management's outlook statements for the year ahead, but we depend more on our own assumptions and long-term thinking. How big could the business be in a decade from now? We are not fortune tellers, so there is some wishful thinking here.
Next, we'd do some investigation of profit margins. Sales growth is one thing, but margins are a function of pricing power, cost discipline, and how well the model scales. We like to see price increases, in the face of strong demand.
Companies like Nvidia, Amazon, Visa, Apple and Netflix score really well by these criteria. That's why we own them.