KURTOSIS Kurtosis- definition, explanation and relevance to finance Kurtosis in stats is used to describe the distribution of the data set. Kurtosis depicts to what extent the data set points of a particular distribution differs from the data of a normal distribution. Kurtosis is used to determine whether a distribution contains extreme values. In the area of finance the kurtosis is used to measure the volume of financial risk associated with any instrument or a transaction. More the kurtosis more is the financial risk associated with the concerned data set. Skewness is a measure of symmetry in a distribution whereas the kurtosis is the measure of heaviness or the density of distribution tails. These two factor differ from each other in their definition, Kurtosis is an important descriptive statistic of data distribution. An excess kurtosis is a metric which compares distribution kurtosis against normal distribution kurtosis. Excess Kurtosis= Kurtosis-3 Below i...
Free cash flow for a firm is the cash that company generates through its operations less cost of capex. In other words FCF is the cash left over after capex and operational expenses. It is one the crucial parameter for investors before investing in the company. A company with plenty of FCF implies its capability to pay debts, dividends, buyback shares and also to facilitate the growth of firm. Unlike net income which is easy to manipulate FCF is difficult to tweak and acts as crucial parameter in valuating company profitability. A negative FCF need not simply imply downturn of the firm but if the firm has actually undergone huge investments for better returns on the long term. A positive FCF imply that the firm is generating more cash than that used to run the company, in other terms profitability. The capex will usually last for more than a year thus costly when they incur in FCF. This makes FCF itself different from year to year. Firms can also...