All we have to go on to determine the success of an item is based
on qualitative statements put out by the retail company.
Not exact matches
Whereas the cash flow
statement and balance sheet are still very important considerations in the High Yield Dividend Newsletter, we put put a greater focus
on credit assessments and
qualitative, subjective considerations given the riskier nature of such higher - yielding ideas, both with respect to income sustainability and subsequent valuation (share price risk).
Sure it's important to be able to navigate around a balance sheet, cash flow
statement and income
statement, but the really great investors spend their time reading, thinking, focusing
on the
qualitative data and testing ideas.
Depending
on the problem
statement, selecting the right buying groups and segments open to
qualitative buyer research becomes important.
If a stock appears to be cheap based
on it's financial
statements, there is probably a
qualitative reason for it's current price level.
But let's make a
qualitative analysis of this
statement: «40,000 times more probable» is not based
on any sort of real statistical analysis (let alone a scientific one, where probability does not enter the equation anyway).
I only do some rough
qualitative analysis and
statements on that.
And, having repeatedly misrepresented research
on infant - mother (I use «mother» here synonymously with mother - substitute or primary caregiver) attachment, as «parents» and «caregivers,» implying that they are all equal (Lamb's own research has found otherwise), and making the completely misleading
statement that «most infants» are attached to «both parents» this ostensibly indicates... that children suffer separation issues from all kinds of human beings, that there is no particular
qualitative differences between one of the «attachment figures» or another, that separation from one is like separation from another, and that all of this separation stress is ameliorated if the child simply is left with another fungible «attachment figure» aka here «the other parent.»