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Chris Thompson's avatar

I really like your posts! I subscribe to your service. How do i receive your spreadsheets? Keep up the good work!!

Chris Thompson's avatar

Such as top 5 ranked stocks, exact buy ranges, downside modelling, full 30 stock dataset, allocation framework

Dividend Talks's avatar

Great question - and yep, all of that is included.

Those spreadsheets are released twice a month:

• 1st of each month → Undervalued stocks (top 5 rankings, buy ranges, full dataset, allocation framework, etc.)

• 15th of each month → High-upside opportunities (same detail, just more aggressive setups)

As a paid member, you can access all of them in the archive - just scroll back through past posts and you’ll see the full spreadsheets attached to each report.

If you can’t find them for any reason, just let me know and I’ll send you the direct links.

Appreciate the support Chris!

Chris Thompson's avatar

Thanks! For some reason, If I go to the archive section and click on a post I don't see any attachments? maybe I'm not logged in correctly ?

Dividend Talks's avatar

Hi Chris, this is the most recent 15th of month article (spreadsheet is at the bottom of the article) - https://www.dividendtalks.com/p/119-stocks-screened-only-30-qualified

Here is the most recent 1st of month article (again spreadsheet at the bottom) - https://www.dividendtalks.com/p/20-elite-compounders-quietly-trading

Any questions or issues feel free to message me here or DM.

Chris Thompson's avatar

That's great - I see those now - I just don't want to miss anything! Again, I really appreciate your comments! I'm an ex-equity analyst and relate to your approach. I'm teaching my kids your approach! - Keep up the good work!

The Pursuit of Compounding's avatar

Thanks for the post, I enjoyed it. What about the cash flow statement and FCF margins? Do you think they are more important than op margins?

Dividend Talks's avatar

Great question - and I’d actually say this is where it gets really interesting.

Operating margins tell you how strong the business model is.

But cash flow (and FCF margins) tell you whether that strength is real.

You can have:

- strong operating margins

- but weak cash conversion

And that’s usually where issues start to show up.

So I don’t think it’s either/or - they answer different questions:

• Operating margin → quality of the business

• FCF margin → quality of the earnings

If both are strong, that’s where you get the highest conviction.

If they diverge, that’s where you need to dig deeper.