picking stocks

How to Evaluate Stocks as a Beginner: A 6-Step Checklist I Wish I Had When I Started


Last week, my friend Noah texted me wanting to know what to look for when it came to investing in stocks. I thoughtlessly replied and sent him to a stock screener website where he could look up the vital stats of any company. He replied, “Dude, there are 72 metrics on the screen alone. This is overwhelming.”

And I realized that he was right.

When you’re looking up stocks online, you’re inundated with too much information. So I messaged him, “Don’t worry, I got you, man.” This blog post is the result of that conversation and it’s the post I wish I had before I started investing.


Why You Need a Stock Evaluation Checklist

When it comes to evaluating stocks, there’s a six-step checklist I like to go through with every single stock before I even think about investing money into it.

If you’re a beginner, this checklist is crucial, it gives you the highest likelihood of choosing a stock that returns money in the long run. As long-term investors, we want to be investing in companies with proven track records.


Step 1: Stick to Businesses You Know

The best strategy for beginners is simple:

“Never invest in a business that you don’t understand.” – Warren Buffett

In a world with thousands of stocks, you’re more likely to do well if you pick one that:

  • You intimately understand
  • Offers products or services you already use

Example:
Almost everyone owns at least one Apple device. If you choose to invest in Apple, you’re more likely to research and understand the company better.


Step 2: Understand the Business Economics

Buffett’s favorite analogy is: “How would you go about buying a farm?”

You’d probably:

  • Look at how many acres it has
  • Consider what kind of crops you can grow
  • Review expected revenue per acre
  • Look at operating costs
  • Examine the free cash flow

When you’re buying a farm, you’re buying a piece of a business. The same mindset applies to stocks.

We want to buy solid companies with good business models.

Here’s what Buffett says about monitoring investments:

“If you have to closely follow a company, you shouldn’t have bought it in the first place.”


Step 3: Analyze the Financials – The Holy Trinity

We can evaluate a company’s financial health through three key financial statements:

  1. Balance Sheet
  2. Income Statement
  3. Cash Flow Statement

This is called fundamental analysis. It gives you a full picture of the company’s financial situation.

We won’t be covering technical analysis here—that’s more for short-term traders using charts and patterns.

Where to Find Financial Data

  • SEC.gov: Use the EDGAR search feature for annual/quarterly reports
  • Yahoo Finance: Easier for beginners—search a company (e.g., Apple), then click “Financials”

📊 Balance Sheet: Assets vs. Liabilities

What to look for:

  • Cash Position: Go to current assets → “Cash and cash equivalents”
    • Apple: $62.639 billion
  • Debt: Go to total liabilities → current liabilities → “Current debt”
    • Apple: $15.613 billion in current debt, $109 billion in long-term debt

Takeaway:
Apple has more than enough cash to cover its short-term debt, and its long-term liabilities aren’t a major issue.

💡 Liquidity Check: Current Ratio

Formula:
Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities

  • Apple’s current ratio is 1.07
  • A ratio above 1 is generally a good sign

📈 Income Statement: Revenue and Profits

This shows how the company did in the past quarter and trailing 12 months.

  • Apple’s total revenue (Q ending 6/30): $82.95 billion
  • Net income: $19.442 billion
  • Net profit margin ≈ 23%

A net profit margin above 20% is strong. Over 10% is still respectable.

Compare this to:

  • Lucid Motors: A growth company with no profits (yet), making it harder to evaluate.

Some investors speculate on future profitability.
Amazon, for example, lost money for years (lost $719 million in 1999) before turning a profit.


💵 Cash Flow Statement: The Money Flow

This statement shows:

  • How much money is coming in vs. going out
  • Whether free cash flow is growing year over year

Free cash flow can be used for:

  • Paying down debt
  • Dividends
  • Share buybacks

Companies with strong, growing free cash flow usually have solid long-term prospects.


Step 4: Key Financial Ratios

After reviewing the big three statements, look at these two metrics:

🧮 Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio

Formula:
Current share price ÷ Earnings per share

  • Tells you how much you’re paying per $1 of earnings
  • Example: A P/E of 20 = Paying $20 per $1 of earnings

Important: Compare P/E:

  • To other companies in the same industry
  • To the company’s historical average

Tech stocks typically have higher P/E ratios than consumer staples.

💲 Price-to-Sales (P/S) Ratio

Use this when a company isn’t profitable yet.

Formula:
Current share price ÷ Sales per share

A lower P/S compared to competitors may signal undervaluation.


Step 5: Research the Management Team

You can learn about leadership by:

  • Reading earnings call transcripts and annual reports
  • Reviewing LinkedIn profiles
  • Looking into the Board of Directors

A long-tenured CEO often signals strong leadership and in-depth company knowledge.

Major leadership changes can impact stock prices due to changing expectations.


Step 6: Does the Company Have a Competitive Advantage?

A competitive advantage increases the odds of long-term success.

Examples:

  • AbbVie owns exclusive patents for Humira
  • Coca-Cola has strong brand power
  • Tesla, under Elon Musk, stands out for innovation

These are the kinds of companies that are harder for competitors to dethrone.


Bonus Tip: Diversify Your Portfolio

As a beginner, it’s crucial to diversify your investments:

Don’t go all in on one stock. If it tanks, you lose everything.

Instead:

  • Own 10–50+ different stocks
  • Or invest in a market index fund

Index funds offer:

  • Exposure to a wide range of companies
  • Lower risk than individual stocks
  • Long-term performance that often beats professional fund managers

Index fund investing is one of Warren Buffett’s top recommendations.


In a nutshell

I hope this post helped you gain some valuable insights into how to invest in stocks. Always aim to:

  • Understand the business
  • Review its financials
  • Evaluate its leadership and long-term potential

Thanks for reading!
Have questions? Drop them in the comments, I’ll do my best to respond.
See you in the next one. ✌️

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