Once you have determined a company's intrinsic value, you need to compare it to the company's market capitalization (stock price
times number of outstanding shares).
Not exact matches
This
number is calculated using the
share counting rules described in Sections 5 (a) and 5 (b)
of the 2014 Plan and includes the
number of shares available for new award grants under the 2014 Plan out
of the 385 million
shares authorized by shareholders upon adoption
of the 2014 Plan; the
number of shares available for new award grants under the 2003 Employee Stock Plan (the «2003 Plan») on the date that shareholders approved the 2014 Plan; the
number of shares subject to
outstanding stock options under the 2003 Plan and 2014 Plan as
of November 17, 2015; and two
times the
number of shares subject to
outstanding RSUs under the 2003 Plan and 2014 Plan as
of November 17, 2015 (all adjusted for the 7 - for - 1 stock split).
Market Capital - Market Capital is the total
of all
of a firm's
outstanding shares, calculated by multiplying the market price per
share times the total
number of shares outstanding.
Over
time, as public investors adjust their portfolios by selling out
of the company, the
number of outstanding Class B
shares accordingly falls.
The largest segment
of the stock market (measured by market capitalization —
share price
times number of shares outstanding) consists
of large, well - established companies.
Style Categories: Large Cap, Mid Cap, Small Cap, Growth, Value, Grth / Val or Blend («Cap» denotes capitalization, which is market price per
share times number of common stock
shares outstanding).
That means it is based not on the stock price but on the market capitalization (stock price
times number of shares outstanding)
of 500
of the world's largest companies.
• Standard & Poor's «Composite Index,» introduced in 1923, is based on market capitalization (stock price
times the
number of shares outstanding)
of 500
of the world's largest companies.
Market Capitalization: The total value
of the issued
shares of a publicly traded company; it is equal to the
share price
times the
number of shares outstanding.
Most stock indexes weight securities by their market value (
share price
times number of shares outstanding).
an increase in a corporation's
number of outstanding shares of stock without any change in shareholder equity or market value at the
time of the split
It is calculated as the current
share price
times the
number of shares outstanding as
of the most recent quarter.
It is important to be able to have a sufficient
number of outstanding shares to help ensure that investors can purchase and sell
shares at appropriate
times.
By BE / ME, we denote a company's book equity (as found on a balance sheet) divided by its market equity (stock price
times number of common
shares outstanding).
It is the total value
of a corporation, the price per
share of stock
times the
number of shares outstanding.
The market value
of a company is its price per
share times the
number of shares outstanding.
Be wary if a REIT's total debt approaches 40 percent
of its market capitalization (
share prices
times the
number of shares outstanding).