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From: | "Martin Ryan" <mryan@cortell.co.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 19 Jun 2003 14:56:12 +1200 |
Anyone feel free to correct me if they think I'm wrong. Book value is the the accounting value of assets. For example you buy a nice Mercedes, you have an asset. But the book value of the asset decreases over time as deprecation sets in. E.g. Historical cost (what you bought it for) $120,000 Depreciation to date (using whatever method) $ 40,000 Leaves a book value of $80,000 - this is what an accountant would say the car is worth. It has a lot of competition as a valuation method though. What it is trying to achieve is work out the value of an asset at this point in time. In this case the book value of the Mercedes right now is $80,000, but you might know someone who thinks it's a gem of a car, and wants to pay $100,000. That is the market value of the car. On the other hand you may not have treated it well, and people might only be interested in paying $50,000 for it. So the market value is actually $50,000. No where near the book value. Share price is a closer reflection of the market value of a company. It may have assets, at book value, of $1,000,000 but everyone knows the market it is involved in is slipping, and its assets will not be much good if they were separated from the company. So maybe investors collectively think the market value of the company is $800,000. If there are a million shares, each one will therefore be worth $80c each, not the $1 each that the book value thinks they should be worth. If you see a share price outdoing the book value, then people see synergy: they think the company is worth more than its assets, i.e. it is leveraging those assets well. When it's lower, the company is not doing its assets justice. I'm just an accountant posing as an investor though. Real investors, please tell me if my take on the share price part of it is incorrect. Marty -----Original Message----- From: sharechat-owner@sharechat.co.nz [mailto:sharechat-owner@sharechat.co.nz]On Behalf Of cab105 Sent: Thursday, 19 June 2003 1:28 p.m. To: sharechat@sharechat.co.nz Subject: [sharechat] book value Hello, could somebody please explain the meaning of 'book value' to me, and in particular why it differs so markedly from shareprice? In most cases I've seen it is lower than the share price, occassionally equal to, and rarely greater than. thanks Carl ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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