At its $ 12 close yesterday HAWK has a market capitalization of $ 142M, which is 30 % of its $ 443M or $ 36.6 per share in
tangible book value as at March 31.
This being retail, actually the former is probably more appropriate, but you can't teach an old dog new tricks; I have always liked to use
tangible book value as a proxy for intrinsic value, so that's what I did here.
Not exact matches
Therefore, if you purchase shares of our Class A common stock in this offering, you will experience immediate dilution of $ per share, the difference between the price per share you pay for our Class A common stock and its pro forma net
tangible book value per share
as of September 30, 2010, after giving effect to the issuance of shares of our Class A common stock in this offering.
Dilution in pro forma net
tangible book value per share to investors purchasing shares of our Class A common stock in this offering represents the difference between the amount per share paid by investors purchasing shares of our Class A common stock in this offering and the pro forma
as adjusted net
tangible book value per share of our Class A common stock immediately after completion of this offering.
As with our pay - for - performance model, operating cash flow is replaced with: (i)
tangible book value for companies in the Banks, Diversified Financials and Insurance sectors; and (ii) funds from operations for REITs, with the exception of Mortgage and Specialized REITs.
Finally, looking at valuation, European banks traded at a material discount to
tangible book value, one standard deviation3 below their historic forward price - earnings multiple, and near a 20 - year low relative to global banking peers
as the year came to a close.4 We are also finding select financial sector
values in Asia, in both mature, under - earning banking markets like South Korea and Singapore,
as well
as underpenetrated, growth - oriented markets like China (particularly in insurance) and India (particularly in banking).
Luckily for them both, the $ 8 - 10 Paperback is actually competitively priced vis - a-vis e-
books with the
value add of being a
tangible, physical good, and with a little effort I suspect that the $ 12 - 20 TPB could easily supplant the Hardcover
as the «lead» version of paper
books.
The results for the 10 - year price to
tangible book value ratio backtest are
as follows:
Tangible book value Tangible book value is simply what remains after subtracting goodwill and other intangibles from shareholders» equity (also known
as book value).
I view it
as a great sign of strength that, in the worst financial markets since the Great Depression, your company could earn money, grow
tangible book value, buy Bear Stearns and WaMu and expand our franchise.
If you run the same numbers
as above, but at $ 45 per share, buybacks would be accretive to earnings and approximately break even to
tangible book value — still attractive but far less so.
Tangible book value per share Book value (also known as equity, shareholders» funds, or net asset value) is the value of all a company's assets, minus its liabilit
book value per share
Book value (also known as equity, shareholders» funds, or net asset value) is the value of all a company's assets, minus its liabilit
Book value (also known
as equity, shareholders» funds, or net asset
value) is the
value of all a company's assets, minus its liabilities.
Tangible book value is what shareholders of the company can expect to receive if the company were to go bankrupt and takes out items such
as goodwill that no one buys when assets are liquidated.
Book value per share decreased to 3.5 % to $ 13.10 as of December 31, 2007 from $ 13.57 as of December 31 2006 and our tangible book value per share was $ 11.38 as of December, 31 2007 down from $ 11.89 as of December 31 2
Book value per share decreased to 3.5 % to $ 13.10
as of December 31, 2007 from $ 13.57
as of December 31 2006 and our
tangible book value per share was $ 11.38 as of December, 31 2007 down from $ 11.89 as of December 31 2
book value per share was $ 11.38
as of December, 31 2007 down from $ 11.89
as of December 31 2006.
My thesis about the common moving back toward
book value proved out; the common shares have moved up from 40 % to close to 80 % of
tangible book and I decided it was not worth the extra 10 % (I had set 90 %
as my goal) given my view that the market is quite overextended and the potential for a significant pullback quite high.