To sustain a long-term growth, a company has to select and fine-tune a business model to fit with its underlying marketable products – whether there were designed in response to a market-pull or a technology-push. Here I attempt to throw together a long list of business models that I have recently come across.
At the end of Trinity Term 2019, I attended a bootcamp hosted by the Oxford Alpha Fund. Here is my first set of slide stacks based on something that I have learnt from the course and further readings across the web:
Fundamental investors use various discounting models to measure the intrinsic value of a company at its current time and in the future. To compare among companies, the multiples / financial ratios are useful indicators for the like-for-like comparisons. Here is a notebook with some codes that help complete the financial projection using the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model with Leveraged Buyout (LBO) model, and a few words and useful links for the all-rounded analysis required for a pitch deck.
Fundamental analysis inspects the financial health of the company. Here I put together a notebook with web scrapers and some simple financial ratios to analyse the cash flow, income statement and balance sheet, of companies within the same industry.
The stock market is undoubtedly one of the most challenging datasets to model. I had a look at some common packages, technical indicators, trading strategies and evaluation tools. This notebook contains a number of snippets that helped me get started.