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Reddit mentions of Narrative and Numbers: The Value of Stories in Business (Columbia Business School Publishing)

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We found 1 Reddit mentions of Narrative and Numbers: The Value of Stories in Business (Columbia Business School Publishing). Here are the top ones.

Narrative and Numbers: The Value of Stories in Business (Columbia Business School Publishing)
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    Features:
  • Two-sided chest piece with tunable diaphragms on both the adult and pediatric sides^Single-piece tunable diaphragm is easy to attach, and easier to clean because its surface is smooth without crevices^Pediatric side converts to a traditional open bell by replacing the single-piece diaphragm with a non-chill rim^Next-generation tubing provides longer life due to improved resistance to skin oils and alcohol; less likely to pick up stains^Small tunable diaphragm is useful for pediatric, small, or thin patients; around bandages; and for carotid assessment
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Release dateJanuary 2017

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Found 1 comment on Narrative and Numbers: The Value of Stories in Business (Columbia Business School Publishing):

u/damanamathos ยท 3 pointsr/SecurityAnalysis

Qualitative factors are always the most important part of valuing a company as its that understanding that should drive the numbers.

Aswath Damodaran did a great talk at Google a few years back that I think you'd enjoy -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5chrxMuBoo -- and he also wrote a book called Narrative and Numbers: The Value of Stories in Business which is worth a read.

Models are just a way to express your thoughts. My best models have been around 5 lines long outlining how the key drivers translated into future earnings. My worst models have been many many pages.

As for valuations and how stocks trade, yes they're different things. A valuation should reflect what you think a company is worth, and if you buy it at that price you should get your discount rate as a return over the long-term provided all your assumptions prove to be correct.

How a stock acts is completely different. Any investor or trader should have a clear idea about whether their strategy is to predict the long-term value of a company and buy based on that, or whether it's to predict what other market participants will do which will drive prices in the short-term. Often in practice it's a combination of both even if people don't explicitly say that.