IMPORTANT TERMS TO CHECK WHILE PURCHASING A STOCK

Saturday, 9 February 2013 ·

1. P/E:
 
The P/E ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) of a stock (also called its “earnings multiple”, or simply “multiple”, “P/E”, or “PE”) is a measure of the price paid for a share relative to the annual income or profit earned by the firm per share.A higher P/E ratio means that investors are paying more for each unit of income. It is a valuation ratio included in other financial ratios.The reciprocal of the P/E ratio is known as the earnings yield. Stock having a P/E less than 30 are said to be good investmets

2. EPS:
 
EPS. Total earnings divided by the number of shares outstanding. Companies often use a weighted average of shares outstanding over the reporting term. EPS can be calculated for the previous year (”trailing EPS”), for the current year (”current EPS”), or for the coming year (”forward EPS”). Note that last year’s EPS would be actual, while current year and forward year EPS would be estimates.

3.DVI (Sividend yield):

The yield a company pays out to its shareholders in the form of dividends. It is calculated by taking the amount of dividends paid per share over the course of a year and dividing by the stock’s price. For example, if a stock pays out $2 in dividends over the course of a year and trades at $40, then it has a dividend yield of 5%. Mature, well-established companies tend to have higher dividend yields, while young, growth-oriented companies tend to have lower ones, and most small growing companies don’t have a dividend yield at all because they don’t pay out dividends

Latest Tweet


Saturday, 9 February 2013

IMPORTANT TERMS TO CHECK WHILE PURCHASING A STOCK

1. P/E:
 
The P/E ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) of a stock (also called its “earnings multiple”, or simply “multiple”, “P/E”, or “PE”) is a measure of the price paid for a share relative to the annual income or profit earned by the firm per share.A higher P/E ratio means that investors are paying more for each unit of income. It is a valuation ratio included in other financial ratios.The reciprocal of the P/E ratio is known as the earnings yield. Stock having a P/E less than 30 are said to be good investmets

2. EPS:
 
EPS. Total earnings divided by the number of shares outstanding. Companies often use a weighted average of shares outstanding over the reporting term. EPS can be calculated for the previous year (”trailing EPS”), for the current year (”current EPS”), or for the coming year (”forward EPS”). Note that last year’s EPS would be actual, while current year and forward year EPS would be estimates.

3.DVI (Sividend yield):

The yield a company pays out to its shareholders in the form of dividends. It is calculated by taking the amount of dividends paid per share over the course of a year and dividing by the stock’s price. For example, if a stock pays out $2 in dividends over the course of a year and trades at $40, then it has a dividend yield of 5%. Mature, well-established companies tend to have higher dividend yields, while young, growth-oriented companies tend to have lower ones, and most small growing companies don’t have a dividend yield at all because they don’t pay out dividends

IMPORTANT TERMS TO CHECK WHILE PURCHASING A STOCK

  • Posted: 03:16
  • |
  • Author: TRUST CAPITAL

1. P/E:
 
The P/E ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) of a stock (also called its “earnings multiple”, or simply “multiple”, “P/E”, or “PE”) is a measure of the price paid for a share relative to the annual income or profit earned by the firm per share.A higher P/E ratio means that investors are paying more for each unit of income. It is a valuation ratio included in other financial ratios.The reciprocal of the P/E ratio is known as the earnings yield. Stock having a P/E less than 30 are said to be good investmets

2. EPS:
 
EPS. Total earnings divided by the number of shares outstanding. Companies often use a weighted average of shares outstanding over the reporting term. EPS can be calculated for the previous year (”trailing EPS”), for the current year (”current EPS”), or for the coming year (”forward EPS”). Note that last year’s EPS would be actual, while current year and forward year EPS would be estimates.

3.DVI (Sividend yield):

The yield a company pays out to its shareholders in the form of dividends. It is calculated by taking the amount of dividends paid per share over the course of a year and dividing by the stock’s price. For example, if a stock pays out $2 in dividends over the course of a year and trades at $40, then it has a dividend yield of 5%. Mature, well-established companies tend to have higher dividend yields, while young, growth-oriented companies tend to have lower ones, and most small growing companies don’t have a dividend yield at all because they don’t pay out dividends

About Me-

My Photo

TRUST CAPITAL
Team TRUST CAPITAL is Giving Varieties of Trading Tips depending Upon Technical Set-Up & Chart Patterns, Market Sentiments, Trading Environment with Sole Objective of Maximizing Returns. YOU must Control while Trading – Ignorance, Greed, Hope and Fear.
View my complete profile

About - TRUST CAPITAL

Team TRUST CAPITAL is Giving Varieties of Trading Tips depending Upon Technical Set-Up & Chart Patterns, Market Sentiments, Trading Environment with Sole Objective of Maximizing Returns. YOU must Control while Trading – Ignorance, Greed, Hope and Fear.

Connect Us

WEBSITE - TRUST CAPITAL
FACEBOOK - TRUST CAPITAL
TWITTER -
TRUST CAPITAL
MOBILE -
07778868889

For Live Support During Market Hours
ADD OUR Y! MESSENGER ID
capital.trust@yahoo.com

Today's Data

Breaking News for Stock

Trust Capital Tweets

Followers