Timothy P. Connolly, CFA, is a founder of Sconset Capital Management, a long/short equity hedge fund. Previously, he was an instructor for Stalla Review for the CFA exams and a portfolio manager at Sofaer Global Research, where he was responsible for a carve-out portion of a global hedge fund. Connolly has also served as a senior financial analyst at Sheer Asset Management and as a director of Omega Portfolio Management of CIBC Oppenheimer. He holds a BS degree in quantitative analysis from St. John's University.
How many days does it take a company to pay for and generate cash from the sales of its inventory?
This is what the Cash Conversion Cycle or Net Operating Cycle tells us. It gives us an indication as to… READ MORE ›
A few months ago, Kraft Foods Group was replaced by UnitedHealth Group in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. It turns out that the Dow Jones is a price-weighted index as opposed to a market-cap-weighted index (like the S&P 500)… READ MORE ›
One of the more interesting and insightful models or systems in financial analysis is the DuPont analysis, named after the U.S. chemical company that began systematically looking at these numbers in the 1920s.
The DuPont analysis is a way of… READ MORE ›
Editor’s Note: We find that many investors are confused when financial professionals talk about what interest rates will be in three years. This article explains something that is intuitive if considered properly: we can apply judgment to the present… READ MORE ›
One of the dirty little secrets of finance is that publicly traded corporations maintain two different sets of “books,” or accounting ledgers. Before you get all riled up and start calling various attorney generals’ offices, understand that it is… READ MORE ›
It can be difficult for investors to understand how their professional managers are really performing. A few statistical tools can help illuminate whether investors are getting value.
The numbers below illustrate performance for two sets of investment managers. How can… READ MORE ›
One of the quickest ways to tell if a company is over or undervalued is to look at its price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) and compare it with the overall P/E of the market—for example, the S&P 500 Index or the… READ MORE ›
No, not the golf kind; those are “divots.” “DIVUTS” is an mnemonic device that CFA Program candidates use to memorize the different things that can affect the price… READ MORE ›
We’ve all heard about the mountains of cash that are just sitting on corporate America’s balance sheet, stashed away in bank accounts overseas earning next to nothing in… READ MORE ›
What does it mean when we say a stock is “expensive”?
While I was working for companies like Smith Barney… READ MORE ›