market price-to-book value ratio

  • 21Value (economics) — Economics …

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  • 22Market maker — Financial markets Public market Exchange Securities Bond market Fixed income Corporate bond Government bond Municipal bond …

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  • 23price — A fixed value of something. Prices are usually expressed in monetary terms. In a free market, prices are set as a result of the interaction of supply and demand in a market; when demand for a product increases and supply remains constant, the… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 24Market depth — In finance, market depth is the size of an order needed to move the market a given amount. If the market is deep, a large order is needed to change the price. Market depth closely relates to the notion of liquidity, the ease to find a trading… …

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  • 25Market anomaly — A market anomaly (or market inefficiency) is a price and/or return distortion on a financial market that seems to contradict the efficient market hypothesis.[1][2] The market anomaly usually relates to: Structural factors, such as unfair… …

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  • 26Price/book ratio — Compares a stock s market value to the value of total assets less total liabilities ( book value). Determined by dividing current stock price by common stockholder equity per share ( book value), adjusted for stock splits. Also called Market to… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 27price-book ratio — Compares a stock s market value to the value of total assets less total liabilities ( liability) ( book value). Determined by dividing current stock price by common stockholder equity per share> ( book value), adjusted for stock splits. Also… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 28price/book ratio — Compares a stock s market value to the value of total assets less total liabilities ( liability) ( book value). Determined by dividing current stock price by common stockholder equity per share> ( book value), adjusted for stock splits. Also… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 29Value Stock — A stock that tends to trade at a lower price relative to it s fundamentals (i.e. dividends, earnings, sales, etc.) and thus considered undervalued by a value investor. Common characteristics of such stocks include a high dividend yield, low price …

    Investment dictionary

  • 30Value and Capital — is a book by the British economist John Richard Hicks, published in 1939. It is considered a classic exposition of microeconomic theory. A central result in consumer demand theory that the book builds on is that goods have value even with only… …

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