If management wanted to, they could take advantage of OCLR's
cheap stock price by enacting a significant buyback program.
Not exact matches
«We believe the bias for
stock prices in general remains to the upside, underpinned
by a growing economy, low interest rates and increasingly,
cheaper oil... With operating margins at elevated levels, top line growth is poised to more quickly bleed through to the bottom line, thus supporting earnings.»
KLIC looks
cheap both
by traditional metrics and when analyzing the expectations baked into the
stock price.
Aldi's business model is based on low
prices, which it achieves
by practices such as
stocking fewer items, eschewing national brands for
cheaper generic labels and not accepting credit cards.
The earnings yield (earnings per share divided
by the share
price, or the inverse of the
price - to - earnings ratio) still looks attractive versus real (after inflation) bond yields, meaning
stocks may be
cheaper than they look in a low - rate world.
Additionally, many blue chip foreign investments are more attractive investments with
stock prices cheaper by most valuation measures:
price to earnings,
price to sales and
price to book.
By buying in right now, they get the company
stock for a
cheaper price than when the company is large.
If it's really the case that 2 / 3rds of the
cheapest price to book
stocks go under then screening out those bankruptcy candidates
by simply insisting on a tiny debt to equity ratio would have a powerful effect on your portfolio.
Beyond
cheap currencies,
cheap stock prices — as measured
by CAPE ratios (see Figure 4)-- boost our return expectations for EM equity markets relative to the U.S. market.
Rather, the fortunes are made
by those able to obtain
cheap stock prices for a company going public; certain opportunistic creditors; promoters who earn large managerial fees; investment banking fees; trading commissions, and carried interests.
This is logical since
by definition «value
stocks» are
cheap and are generally
priced - off of historical results because they are growing more slowly.
After more than eight years of gains, few truly
cheap stocks remain, at least as measured
by price - earnings ratios...
It's a trading strategy that goes long a diversified portfolio of
cheap U.S.
stocks (as measured
by their high book - to -
price ratios) and goes short a portfolio of expensive U.S.
stocks (measured
by their low book - to -
price ratios).
But this, my friends, amounts to nothing more than a red herring... A true growth
stock always seems to be over-valued, yet its share
price can subsequently look astonishingly & ridiculously
cheap after the business /
stock somehow manages to scale up
by hundreds or even thousands of percent.
You can make a lot of money ringing the register on the way down when you get stopped out and apply that capital a lot lower
by buying the same
stocks you loved at much
cheaper prices.
(A value trap is a
stock that appears to be
cheap by traditional valuation metrics, such as
price - to - book.
But there is no «benchmark» for a value strategy which buys the
cheapest 10 % of
stocks by price - to - sales and weights them equally.
Stocks that appear to be
cheap by financial measures and are falling in
price tend to keep falling, and what seems too expensive and is rising in
price tends to keep on rising.
The earnings yield (earnings per share divided
by the share
price, or the inverse of the
price - to - earnings ratio) still looks attractive versus real (after inflation) bond yields, meaning
stocks may be
cheaper than they look in a low - rate world.
Buy the
stocks that are the
cheapest as measured
by the highest quintiles of book value to
price, and trailing twelve month earnings per share to
price.
(Meaning that they have borrowed
stock and sold it, in hopes that they can take advantage of a decline in the
stock's
price by replacing the borrowed
stock later at a
cheaper price.
- Nintendo is the «
cheapest game
stock in the world» - Nintendo has a ¥ 6.43 trillion ($ 58.7 billion) market cap and is trading at ¥ 46,370 a share ($ 424.15 - Nintendo posted 2018 fiscal year results which included 2018 Q3 operating profit of ¥ 178 billion - this beat the consensus of ¥ 169 billion
by 67 % - Nintendo issued a conservative operating profit guidance and the
stock declined 2 % Thursday - Goyal maintains his 12 - month
price target of ¥ 79,900, which exceeds the average analyst
price target of ¥ 59582 - Goyal believes value could more than triple in 2 years, driven
by Switch, digital titles, and mobile games - if Pokemon Switch hits this fiscal year, final Switch shipments for FY3 / 19e could well exceed co-guidance of 20m