With
the current number of shares outstanding (pre rights offering) that equates to $ 1.38 per share.
Not exact matches
To calculate a company's market capitalization, multiply its
current share price by its
number of outstanding shares.
One important metric used is the price - to - earnings ratio, or, the
current price
of the stock divided by the average earnings per
share (yearly revenue divided by the
number of outstanding shares).
A company with a market capitalization near the low end
of those publicly traded — calculated by taking a firm's
current share price and multiplying that figure by the total
number of shares outstanding - is termed small - cap.
Estimated distributions can change prior to the record date depending on
current market conditions and
number of shares outstanding.
Net asset value (NAV) which is the price per
share equates to the
current market value
of the fund's net assets divided by the
number of shares outstanding.
Almost all the earliest ETFs were tied to traditional indexes that weighted each company according to its size (or more technically, to its market capitalization: the
current share price multiplied by the
number of outstanding shares).
Estimated distributions can change prior to the record date depending on
current market conditions and
number of shares outstanding.
(You can find a company's market cap by multiplying the
number of outstanding shares it has by the
current price
of each
share.)
The S&P / TSX Capped REIT Index is capitalization - weighted, meaning that companies occupy a
share of the index proportional to their size (as measured by the
current price
of a
share multiplied by the
number or
shares outstanding).
The «ideal» form
of this is a «stock split»; the company simply multiplies the
number of shares it has
outstanding by X, and issues X-1 additional
shares to each
current holder
of one
share.
If we divide that by the
number of shares outstanding (1,682,167), that equates to a TBV
of $ 26.73 compared to the company's
current share price
of $ 20.15.
Since every
share repurchased reduces the
number of shares outstanding, buybacks mean that all
current shareholders hold a greater stake in the company after the buyback.
They do this by taking the
current value
of all a fund's assets, subtracting the liabilities, and dividing the result by the total
number of outstanding shares.
Market Cap ($ Mil):
Current share price multiplied by the
number of shares outstanding, expressed in millions
of dollars.
In terms
of market caps, which is the total valuation
of companies based on their
current share price and the total
number of outstanding stocks, your allocation should rarely change at all.
NAV is computed by dividing the
current value
of fund assets less liabilities by the
number of shares outstanding.
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.
It is calculated by multiplying the
number of outstanding shares by the
current market price
of a
share.
NCAV is short for Net
Current Asset Value and is calculated by subtracting Total Debt from
Current Assets and dividing the result by the
number of shares outstanding.
The result is divided by the
number of common
shares outstanding to get the Net
Current Asset Value per
share.
The
current value
of a collective investment fund
share is calculated by dividing the total value
of all securities in its portfolio, less any liabilities by the
number of fund
shares outstanding.
You can calculate market capitalization by multiplying the
current stock price
of a company by the
number of outstanding shares, or the
number of stocks that the company has issued.
It is calculated as the
current share price times the
number of shares outstanding as
of the most recent quarter.
You can calculate market cap for a company by taking the
current market price for a
share of stock and multiplying it by the
number of shares outstanding for that company.
Net
Current Asset Value (NCAV) = cash and short - term investments + (0.75 * accounts receivable) + (0.5 * inventory)-- total liabilities — preferred stock The resulting value can then be divided by the
number of common
shares outstanding to find the NCAV per
share.
Estimated distributions can change depending on
current market conditions and
number of shares outstanding.
Calculated by subtracting
current liabilities from total assets and dividing by the total
number of shares outstanding.
I figure it would probably have to take into account factors such as
current trading volume on Company X and the total
number of shares outstanding, but I don't know enough to know what I don't know...
Market Capitalization is the
number of common
shares outstanding multiplied by the
current market price per common
share.
KO revenues are growing, earnings per
share are growing, the
number of shares outstanding is declining due to
share buybacks, the dividend is growing, the payout ratio has been stable over the last 10 years and the quick ratio,
current ratio and debt / equity ratios look great.
The total assets
of a mutual fund, less
current liabilities
of the fund, divided by the
number of outstanding shares.