Market debt ratio= TL / (TL - Equity)
Note : equity with market value .
market/book ratio (M/B)
Market Ratios are useful in measuring investor response to owning a company's shares and also the cost of issuing shares to the public. Almost all of these ratios can be used to take decisions as to whether we should invest in a company's stock or not. The ratios that fall under this category are: 1. Earnings Per Share (EPS) 2. Payout Ratio 3. Dividend Cover 4. P/E Ratio 5. Dividend Yield 6. Cash Flow Ratio 7. Price to Book Value Ratio (P/B or PBV) 8. Price to Sales Ratio 9. PEG Ratio
142.5
Market Ratios are useful in measuring investor response to owning a company's shares and also the cost of issuing shares to the public. Almost all of these ratios can be used to take decisions as to whether we should invest in a company's stock or not. The ratios that fall under this category are: 1. Earnings Per Share (EPS) 2. Payout Ratio 3. Dividend Cover 4. P/E Ratio 5. Dividend Yield 6. Cash Flow Ratio 7. Price to Book Value Ratio (P/B or PBV) 8. Price to Sales Ratio 9. PEG Ratio
The Book Value formula for DDB isBV = FCIL - S dkDDBwhereFCIL is the Capital Cost Investment (excluding the cost of land)S is the Salvage valuedkDDB is the depreciation allowance using the Double Declining Balance method.
market/book ratio (M/B)
Book Value of Shares divided by paidup Valur of Shares.
what is market to book ratios used for?
The PBV is a financial ratio that is used to compare a company's book value to its current market price. Book value denotes the portion of the company held by shareholders.Formula:PBV = Market Capitalization / Total Book Value as per the Balance SheetOrPBV = Market Value per Share / Book Value per ShareBook Value per Share = Total Book Value / Total No. of outstanding sharesA point to note here is that, PBV ratios do not directly provide us any information on the company's ability to generate profits for itself or its shareholders. It gives us some idea of whether an investor is paying too much for what would be left if the company were to go bankrupt immediately.
and total debt of $370 billikon. Four years later, in early 2009, GE had a book value of equity of $105 billion, 10.5 billion shares outstanding with a market price of $10.80 per share, cash of $48 billion, and total debt of $524 billion. Over this period, what was the change in GE's a. market capitalization? b. market-to-book ratio? c. book debt-equity ratio? d. market debt-equity ratio? e. Enterprise value?
Salvage Value - [Tax * (Market Value - Book Value)
total equity/# of shares outstanding
Book value is an estimate of what an item could or should sell for, market value is what people will pay.
Book value is an estimate of what an item could or should sell for, market value is what people will pay.
No, but with a private company equity is not priced in the market so one must use either book (accounting) equity value or an appraisal valuation (minus debt) of the company to better approximate market value than using book.
No. To get book value per share, you would divide book value by shares outstanding. Market value is whatever the current rate is on the stock exchange.
It is not same as market value because book value of assets derives from its cost and deduction of depreciation, while market value varies due to market conditions. That's why it may not be same.