Showing posts with label Earning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earning. Show all posts

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Book value

That part of a company's assets which belongs to its shareholders; in the UK these are generally known as shareholders' funds or, simply, net assets. It is an accounting valuation arrived at by taking the gross assets of the business as shown in its balance sheet and subtracting all the prior claims on the business, such as bank debt, payables, allowances for future claims, and so on. Alternatively, it is the sum of the shares outstanding, additional paid-in capital and retained earnings. Book value is usually expressed in per share terms so as to make an easy comparison with the market price of the shares (see Price to book ratio).

Book value

That part of a company's assets which belongs to its shareholders; in the UK these are generally known as shareholders' funds or, simply, net assets. It is an accounting valuation arrived at by taking the gross assets of the business as shown in its balance sheet and subtracting all the prior claims on the business, such as bank debt, payables, allowances for future claims, and so on. Alternatively, it is the sum of the shares outstanding, additional paid-in capital and retained earnings. Book value is usually expressed in per share terms so as to make an easy comparison with the market price of the shares (see Price to book ratio).

Balance sheet

The financial statement of what a company owns and what it owes at a particular date, known as the statement of financial position in the United States. Traditionally, the left-hand side of the balance sheet is a schedule of the company's assets (land, buildings, plant and equipment, cash and inventories); the right-hand side is a statement of the liabilities, either real or potential. Real liabilities comprise the debts the company must pay - that is, creditors - plus its loans. Potential liabilities are the allowances that are likely to be paid: deferred taxes and, increasingly, post-retirement benefits for employees. The remaining item on the right-hand side is the shareholders' interest in the business. This is technically not a liability at all, but a statement of the risk capital subscribed to the business adjusted by the aggregate of retained earnings and (possibly) revaluation of some assets.