How to Pick Stocks: Fundamentals vs. Technicals

Fundamental and technical analysis are two common ways to sort and pick stocks. How and when to use them can be a matter of personal style, but each has its strengths.

Fundamental analysis attempts to identify stocks offering strong growth potential at a good price by examining the underlying company's business, as well as conditions within its industry or in the broader economy. Investors have traditionally used fundamental analysis for longer-term trades, relying on metrics like earnings per share (EPS), price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, P/E growth, and dividend yield.

Technical analysis, on the other hand, bypasses the underlying company's fundamentals and instead looks for statistical patterns on stock charts that might foretell future price moves. The idea here is that stock prices already reflect all the publicly available information about a particular company, so there's nothing to be gained from poring over a balance sheet, income statement, or other financial information. Given the focus on price and volume moves, traders have traditionally used technical analysis for shorter-term trades or to help identify entry prices on stocks where fundamental analysis has already been performed.

But does it have to be an either/or proposition?

Which type of analysis is right for you?

Both fundamental and technical analysis can reveal potentially valuable information, and focusing on just one style could cause you to miss important clues about a stock's prospects. And because the intended duration of an investment or trade may change, using both forms of analysis is an approach you might consider.

Why not deploy them so their strengths complement each other? For example, a trader might use fundamental factors to select the candidate and technical factors to identify a specific entry or exit price.

Growth investor's strategy

Growth investors focus on the future prospects of a particular company. Corporations are generally built to grow and turn a profit—and eventually return some of that profit to shareholders. Very few new companies are immediately profitable. But if a company reports strong revenue growth initially—even if it fails to turn a profit in its early days—growth investors may still decide it's a good prospect for the future. When investors decide a young company has an innovative product or compelling competitive advantage, they may start to drive the stock's price higher. The more investors who join the party, the higher the company's stock price is likely to rise. Such investors typically focus on metrics like a company’s historical and projected revenue growth rates when buying shares of relatively new companies.

Value investor's strategy

Value investors focus on whether the current stock price makes sense given the health of a particular company and typically seek companies that appear to be priced below what their revenues, EPS, or other fundamental metrics suggest. Such investors often focus on industry-leading companies, which are generally past their peak revenue growth years, because these companies often pay steady dividends. Value stocks tend to have low P/E ratios and pay above-average dividends, but they might trade at a price that is very low or below their book value (total tangible assets minus total liabilities). Sometimes value investing is described as investing in great companies at a good price, not simply buying cheap stocks.

Screening for growth or value

Schwab clients can use a stock screening tool on schwab.com under Research to help narrow a collection of stocks to a manageable list of quality growth or value candidates.

The Research Tools subtab under Research on Schwab.com includes a Stock Screener in the Stocks section.

When screening for fundamental factors, consider focusing on stocks rated A or B by Schwab Equity Ratings ® because these are considered "buy" candidates relative to the other rated securities (C-F). In the example below, this step alone narrows the list of possible stocks from 2,800 candidates to 814 candidates.

Schwab equity ratings A and B are the highest among the available ratings A through F.

Growth screening

Because Schwab Equity Ratings already takes many fundamental factors into account, investors searching for growth stocks could seek out stocks that have delivered strong revenue growth in the past and that appear set to deliver both strong revenue and profit growth in the future. In the example below, which screens for revenue growth over the last three years, current year earnings growth, and current year EPS growth, selecting these three additional criteria narrows the list of 814 candidates to just five.

An example of a screen that identifies companies with revenue growth over the last three years of more than 25%, current year earnings growth of more than 25%, and current year EPS growth of more than 25%.

Value screening

You can use several other metrics when searching for value stocks, though a simple approach would be to consider those with:

In the example below, selecting these three additional criteria shrinks the list of 814 down to 25.

An example of a screen that identifies companies with annual dividend yields greater than 3%, P/E ratios less than 30, and price-to-book ratios less than one.

As you search, be wary of extremely high dividend-yielding stocks because they might be too good to be true. On a similar note, keep in mind that cheap doesn't necessarily mean good. A low stock price could be the result of a company's outdated products, bad management, expired patents, pending lawsuits, etc.

Once you have a more manageable list of five or six, it's time to apply some technical screeners.

Selecting stocks using technical signals

Stock selection using technical analysis generally involves three steps: stock screening, chart scanning, and setting up the trade. With stock screening, your goal might be to arrive at a list of 20 or 25 candidates using a set of technical criteria. You could then try to narrow that list down to three or four candidates by scanning the charts for possible entries or points where it could make sense to buy. Finally, you'll perform a more detailed chart analysis and choose the one you may consider trading.

Screening stocks

To set up a screen, consider the following items: