Not exact matches
The corporation raises capital and the result is that the proceeds are allocated to two lines in the shareholders» equity statement of the balance sheet; the first $ 25,000 consists of 5,000
shares issued multiplied by $ 5 par value
per share; the remaining line results from multiplying the excess purchase
price ($ 20
per share - $ 5 par value
= $ 15 excess) by the number of
shares issued ($ 15 x 5,000
shares = $ 75,000).
Formula
Price - Earnings Ratio
= Price per share ÷ Earnings
per share P / E Calculation for PAAS
Price per share = $ 16.55 Earnings
per share = $ 0.79 ∴
Price - Earnings Ratio
= $ 16.55 ÷ $ 0.79
= 20.9 x On its own, the P / E ratio doesn't tell you much; however, it becomes extremely useful when you compare it with other similar companies.
Formula
Price - Earnings Ratio
= Price per share ÷ Earnings
per share P / E Calculation for MRVL
Price per share = $ 23.25 Earnings
per share = $ 0.578 ∴
Price - Earnings Ratio
= $ 23.25 ÷ $ 0.578
= 40.2 x The P / E ratio isn't a metric you view in isolation and only becomes useful when you compare it against other similar companies.
Formula: P / B Ratio
= Stock
Price / Book Value
per Share Book Value
per Share = (Total Stockholder's Equity — Preferred Equity) / Total Outstanding
Shares
Exxon
price per share x #
shares = 3.22 % of the US stock market value.
(GBP 25.30 p P / E Val + GBP 22.25 p P / S Val + GBP 30.10 p Asset Val) / 3
= GBP 25.9 p Fair Value
per share, for an Upside Potential of 130 % (from current GBP 11.25 p market
price)
Anyone who has taken a Finance 101 class will know that market capitalization
= shares outstanding x
price per share, assuming that you weren't asleep during that class (which is a very big assumption, I know).
To get the earnings yield, you simply divide the
per share earnings by the
price per share (Earnings Yield
= E / P).
The AAPL investor, if his order is filled at stop
price of $ 160, still makes a profit from his investment: $ 160 - $ 145
= $ 15
per share.
The
shares are also
priced at 1.95 x tangible book value so investors should get 20.11 / 1.95
= 10.31 % return on the equity they hold
per share.