The value of
assets less liabilities, often expressed as a per unit or per share value.
The total of a company's
assets less any liabilities.
Indicative Value A measure of the intraday net asset value (NAV) of the exchange - traded fund (ETF), which gives an updated measure of the value of the investment based on
its assets less its liabilities.
Yet, had you focused exclusively on net nets (Graham's famous approach whereby one only buys stock in companies where the sum of current
assets less all liabilities exceeds the market value), you would have cashed in 29.4 % annually in the same period.
NAV is computed by dividing the current value of fund
assets less liabilities by the number of shares outstanding.
Second, I stick to stocks with low price - to - book - value ratios (P / B), because they offer investors a discount to the value of
their assets less their liabilities.
Remember, shareholder's equity is
assets less liabilities, which represent what the firm owes, including its long - and short - term debt.
* Cash and equivalents includes short - term securities, accrued income, Treasury futures and other
assets less liabilities.
Resources Holdings Fund Overview (PDF) Summary Prospectus (PDF): Class P2 * Cash and equivalents includes short - term securities, accrued income, Treasury futures and other
assets less liabilities.
The household sector's net worth (
assets less liabilities) remains at a high level.
Not exact matches
Figures here include all
assets (property, cash, equities, business interests)
less any
liabilities.
Working capital is defined as current
assets less current
liabilities.
If the current ratio is
less than one, it can mean that any current
liabilities business owners are paying are costing the company more money than the
assets they are bringing in.
Its wealth (sometimes referred to as «net worth») is the total stock of
assets it has as a result of inheritance and saving,
less any
liabilities.
Long - term debt should be
less than 40 % of total capital, and the current ratio (current
assets divided by current
liabilities) should exceed 2.0.
* «Net Capital» means the amount by which current
assets exceed
liabilities,
less such other items as may be specified in any Guidance Note issued by the Exchange, and in determining Net Capital:
A shareholder's equity is the total of all
assets less the total of all
liabilities of the company, divided by the number of shareholder's shares.
Valuation: Price - to - book ratio compares a stock's market value to the value of total
assets less total
liabilities (book value).
The initial public offering price is substantially higher than the pro forma net tangible book value per share of our common stock immediately following this offering based on the total value of our tangible
assets less our total
liabilities.
The net worth of a business is the total
assets less the total amounts owed to creditors (total
liabilities) at a given moment of time.
As you go about treating all staff as
assets instead of
liabilities, try to maintain the spirit of «we are all in this together» rather than «staff are to be seen and not heard» as this type of thinking would allow you to form a strong Ministry with
less errors and inefficiencies.
So if the Current
Asset: Current
Liability ratio is
less than 1, chances are, the company isn't doing very well — they can't pay back all the money they owe with the cash they'll have on hand and will have to start selling long - term
assets, or look at refinancing the company, in order to pay their short - term bills.
Assuming a company's working capital (current
assets less current
liabilities) is conservatively stated, Graham and Rea felt that a firm could reasonably be expected to be sold off for the value of these
assets.
Price / book (or P / B) ratio is calculated by dividing the market price of a company's outstanding stock by its book value (total
assets of a company
less liabilities) and then adjusting for the number of shares outstanding.
Two things must be true — a firm must not be able to raise cash to make a debt payment, and the
assets of the firm are worth
less than the
liabilities.
He looked for profitable firms trading at much
less than their current
assets (cash and
assets that can be turned into cash over the next year) minus all
liabilities.
Short term is a concept that refers to holding an
asset for a year or
less, and accountants use the term «current» to refer to an
asset expected to be converted into cash in the next year or a
liability coming due in the next year.
Net
Asset Value: In a mutual fund, the
assets of the fund
less its
liabilities divided by the number of shares outstanding, usually referred to as the NAV.
On the other hand under a liquidation scenario wouldn't you take current
assets + rig value
less total
liabilities.
I calculate book value by taking the Total
Assets less the Total
Liabilities, divided by the outstanding shares.
The Net Current
Asset Value (NCAV) calculates the value of a firm's cash, inventory, and receivables
less all
liabilities and preferred stock which is treated as debt.
The first being Benjamin Graham's net current
asset value method that looks for companies trading for
less than two - thirds their current
assets less all their
liabilities, which is a rough measure of their liquidation value.
Net net working capital is: working capital, i.e. current
assets - current
liabilities,
less non-current
liabilities.
The NAV is calculated by dividing the total value of all the
assets in the portfolio,
less any
liabilities, by the number of outstanding shares.
Graham loved «net - nets ``, stocks trading substantially
less than the current
assets of the company minus all its
liabilities.
For those that haven't read me much, the deadly trio of too much leverage, illiquid
assets, and liquid
liabilities is what causes most corporate defaults of financial companies, not
lesser issues like mark - to - market accounting.
Working capital is typically used as a financial metric to determine the financial health of a business by evaluating current
assets less current
liabilities.
The total
assets of a company
less total
liabilities and not including intangible items such as goodwill.
For an investment company or similar entity, the total current value of
assets held
less the amount of outstanding
liabilities, divided by the number of shares outstanding.
For a mutual fund, net
asset value represents the market value of the fund's share and is calculated as total
assets of a corporation
less its
liabilities.
Calculated as current
assets less inventory divided by current
liabilities.
My first, more limited, technique confines itself to the purchase of common stocks at
less than their working - capital value, or net - current
asset value, giving no weight to the plant and other fixed
assets, and deducting all
liabilities in full from the current
assets.
I define young as someone who is
less than 35 years old, and has over a million dollars net worth —
assets minus
liabilities.
A loan that requires
less financial documentation to prove income,
assets and
liabilities than a standard loan.
At June 30, 2009, our current ratio (current
assets divided by current
liabilities) was 14.2; our quick ratio (current
assets less inventories divided by current
liabilities) was 13.7; and our working capital (current
assets less current
liabilities) was $ 22.3 million.
Our net tangible book value at March 31, 2012 was $ 0.24 per share and was determined by dividing our actual net tangible book value (total book value of tangible
assets less total
liabilities) on that date, by the number of outstanding shares (1,249,446) on March 31, 2012.
A P / B Ratio of
less than one can signal that a company is undervalued, or that the value of its
assets minus
liabilities is currently worth more than the share price.
The net current
assets investment selection criterion calls for the purchase of stocks which are priced at 66 % or
less of a company's underlying current
assets (cash, receivables and inventory) net of all
liabilities and claims senior to a company's common stock (current
liabilities, long - term debt, preferred stock, unfunded pension
liabilities).
Net working capital consists of current
assets (cash, marketable securities, receivables, and inventories)
less current
liabilities (accounts, notes, and taxes payable within one year.)
True, some firms voluntarily file for bankruptcy when they see that their
assets are worth
less than their
liabilities, and don't see any way out.