Sunday 10 May 2009

3 measures of a stock's value

Value can be a subjective term depending on who is talking about it and how they measure values for themselves.

3 long-held fundamental measures of value are:

P/E
P/B
DY

Price: Price by itself without any other analytical factor is in fact worthless.

Earning: Earning can be a nebulous figure. Earnings can be modified and adjusted according to what the company's needs are. Sometimes if the company likes to have a different tax basis for one quarter, they may adjust their earnings up or earnings down. There are companies that depress earnings for one quarter and then lifted up earnings the next quarter to facilitate selling of stock options to important executives.

Earnings are what accountants say they are. P/E s are somewhat suspect, because earnings themselves can be suspects.

Book value: Book value also can be quite nebulous.

Often a company carries an asset at cost of 30 years to 40 years ago. Therefore, the book value does not give measure of true value of these assets of this company.

Dividend: Dividend tells us 3 things.

1. Dividend can only come as a result of earnings. In other words, company cannot pay what it doesn't have. In order for a company to pay dividend, it has to have earnings. This let us know that the company we are investing in, is a profitable concern.

2. Dividend represents income. It is a tangible return on your investment you receive every quarter. It is cash in your pocket. You can spend it on your needs, or you can reinvest that dividend into other dividend paying stocks and compound your returns.

3. Dividend helps us provide a basis for value. High quality stocks have some shared characteristics and repetitive patterns. These stocks tend to trade between 2 different bands of dividend yield. One band is when the price is low and the yield is high. The second band is when the price is high and the yield is low. Also, these stocks tend to trade in between these 2 bands over long period of time which gives us a good range to understand when to buy the stock and when to sell the stock.

To summarise: Dividend does 3 things.
1. It shows us our company is a profitable concern.
2. It puts income into our pocket.
3. It tells us when to buy and when to sell a stock.

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/learn-how-to-invest/new-investor-center-video-ap.aspx?cp-documentid=9d33155e-df9b-43b7-8535-9f2a8d87c769

Also read:
Why dividends are important for investors' portfolios.

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