FAQs: The Morningstar Rating for Stocks FAQs

What's the philosophy behind the Morningstar Rating for stocks?

How is the rating created?   

What determines whether a stock gets 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 stars?

What do you mean by "consider buying" and "consider selling"?

How often do ratings change? What causes them to change?

 

Do companies pay to have their stocks rated?

How does the methodology for the Morningstar Rating for stocks differ from the methodology for the Morningstar Rating for funds?

Does the Morningstar Rating for stocks include a risk component?

What is the Morningstar business risk rating for stocks?

 

How does the Morningstar Rating for stocks relate to the Morningstar stock grades?

How will you measure the success of the rating? That is, will you review your own picks and their performance?

Can Morningstar analysts invest in the companies they follow?

 


What's the philosophy behind the Morningstar Rating for stocks?

Morningstar has been analyzing investment strategies for nearly 20 years. We've become experts at separating styles that haven't worked from those that have. And we've also developed our own strategy for investing in stocks.

It's pretty simple. Buying a stock means becoming part owner in a business, which means that over the long run, stock prices are ultimately driven by corporate financial performance. Therefore, stocks should be valued as pieces of a business—not as, in the words of Warren Buffett, "little wiggling things with charts attached." That's why we spend a great deal of time thinking about things such as competitive advantages, cash flows, and economic moats—all of which are crucial to valuing companies as businesses.

It's no surprise, then, that the Morningstar Rating for stocks takes a business-centered approach. The rating compares a stock's current price with our estimate of the stock's fair value. We base this estimate on the present value of company's future cash flows. Not on stock-price momentum. Nor on investor sentiment. Nor on other nonfinancial factors.

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How is the rating created?

Morningstar analysts estimate a company's future financial performance using a detailed discounted cash-flow model that factors in projections for the company's income statement, balance sheet, and cash-flow statement. The result is an analyst-driven estimate of the stock's fair value.

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What determines whether a stock gets 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 stars?

The Morningstar Rating for stocks system identifies stocks trading at a discount or premium to our estimate of their fair values. Generally speaking, stocks trading at large discounts to our analysts' fair value estimates will receive higher (4 or 5) star ratings, and stocks trading at large premiums to their fair value estimates will receive lower (1 or 2) star ratings. Stocks that are trading very close to our analysts' fair value estimates will receive 3-star ratings.

A stock's star rating is driven by its level of expected return. For example, 3-star stocks are those that should offer a "fair return," one that compensates for the riskiness of the stock. Five-star stocks, of course, should offer an investor a return that's well above the company's cost of equity, and high-risk 5-star stocks should offer a better expected return than low-risk 5-star stocks.

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What do you mean by "consider buying" and "consider selling"?

"Consider buying" is the price below which we think investors should consider purchasing a stock and is equivalent to the price at which it would earn a 5-star rating. "Consider selling" is the price above which we think investors should consider selling their shares and is equivalent to the price at which it would earn a 1-star rating. Be sure to take your individual circumstances—including diversification, risk tolerance, and tax considerations—into account before making a final decision to buy or sell shares.

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How often do ratings change? What causes them to change?

Ratings are updated daily and can therefore change daily. They can change because of a move in the stock's price, a change in the analyst’s estimate of the stock's fair value, a change in the analyst's assessment of a company's business risk, or a combination of any of these factors. The Morningstar Rating for stocks includes a small buffer around the cutoff between each rating to reduce the number of rating changes produced by random market "noise." If a $50 stock moves up and down by $0.25 each day over a few days, the buffer will prevent the star rating from changing each day based on this insignificant change.

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Do companies pay to have their stocks rated?

No.

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How does the methodology for the Morningstar Rating for stocks differ from the methodology for the Morningstar Rating for funds?

Funds and stocks are different investment vehicles and therefore should be analyzed—and rated—differently. The Morningstar Rating for funds describes how well a fund has balanced return and risk or volatility in the past. The Morningstar Rating for stocks uses projections of a company's future operating performance to estimate whether the stock is overvalued or undervalued.

Evaluating an individual security requires a different approach than sizing up a portfolio of stocks; our ratings for stocks and funds are designed to do two different things.

When evaluating a mutual fund, an investor is essentially judging the past performance of a portfolio manager, the fund company, the cost structure, and the investment strategy to determine if the fund deserves a place in his or her portfolio. Our rating for funds is a backward-looking description of how the fund has balanced return and risk or volatility in the past, and it is a useful tool for paring down an immense universe of mutual funds.

When evaluating an individual stock, you need to estimate future cash flows and earnings. The Morningstar Rating for stocks is designed to tell investors if a stock's current price is greater than or less than our estimate of the stock's fair value, based on the potential future earnings and performance of the company. While historical performance is given consideration when our analysts make their estimates, the Morningstar Rating for stocks is forward-looking.

The Morningstar Rating for funds:

The Morningstar Rating for stocks:

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Does the Morningstar Rating for stocks include a risk component?

Yes. The margin of safety required for a given star rating is higher for companies where we have less confidence in the fair value. As a result, companies with high levels of risk, whose cash flow are hard to forecast, will tend to have lower star ratings.

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What is the Morningstar risk rating for stocks?

 

For the Fair Value Uncertainty Rating, analysts consider factors such as sales predictability, operating leverage, financial leverage, and a firm’s exposure to contingent events. Analysts then classify stocks into one of several uncertainty levels: Low, Medium, High, Very High, or Extreme. The greater the level of uncertainty, the greater the discount to fair value required before a stock can earn 5 stars, and the greater the premium to fair value before a stock earns a 1-star rating.

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How does the Morningstar Rating for stocks relate to the Morningstar stock grades?

The Morningstar Rating for stocks is a forward-looking assessment of a stock's value and is based on analyst inputs. The Morningstar Stock Grades, meanwhile, are purely quantitative descriptions or summaries of a company's historical financial performance.

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How will you measure the success of the rating? That is, will you review your own picks and their performance?

We review the performance of our ratings on a quarterly basis. We publish the results on our Web site, www.morningstar.com.

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Can Morningstar analysts invest in the companies they follow?

No. We prohibit equity analysts from holding positions in the companies they cover, or the close competitors of companies they cover. In addition, Morningstar analysts and their immediate families are prohibited from trading stocks when we are reporting on them. Find out more about Morningstar's stock-ownership policies here.

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See Also

Morningstar Rating for Stocks