P/E Ratio = Price
per share / Earnings per share
If a company’s stock
is selling at $20 per share and the company is earning $2 per share, then the company’s P/E Ratio is 10 to 1. The
company’s stock is selling at 10 times its earnings.
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Working
capital is the money leftover if a
company paid its current liabilities (that is, its debts due within one-year of the date of the balance sheet)
from its current assets.
Working Capital =
Current Assets – Current Liabilities
Bringing It All
Together
Although this brochure discusses each financial statement separately, keep in mind that they are all related.
The changes in assets and liabilities that you see on the balance sheet are also reflected in the revenues and
expenses that you see on the income statement, which result in the company’s gains or losses. Cash flows provide
more information about cash assets listed on a balance sheet and are related, but not equivalent, to net income
shown on the income statement. And so on. No one financial statement tells the complete story. But combined, they
provide very powerful information for investors. And information is the investor’s best tool when it comes to
investing wisely.
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