ShareInvestor provides
Full Year, Half Year and Interim Financials on all companies. Analyse the past few years of the company's financials. ShareInvestor updates the financials by the next day of the result announcement.
In addition, ShareInvestor provides
Financial Ratios based on the Full Year Financials. Financial ratios are used as indicators that allow you to look into areas like solvency, liquidity, operational efficiency and profitability. These financials ratios are usually updated a day following the results announcement.
The ratios that ShareInvestor provides include the following:
- Adjusted EPS
EPS is Earnings Per Share. It shows the profitability of a company and is one of the most popular financial ratios. EPS in ShareInvestor is adjusted for the current number of shares.
- Adjusted NTA / Adjusted Book Value
NTA is Nett Tangible Assets. Comparing the share price of the company to the NTA can indicate whether or not the stock in overvalued or undervalued in terms of its assets. During bull markets, stock prices are more likely to trade significantly higher than NTA, and in a bear market, the reverse happens.
- P/E Ratio
P/E ratio is the Price Earnings ratio. This ratio is obtained by dividing the current share price by the earnings per share. The P/E ratio shows the amount of times over its earnings that an investor is willing to pay for that share. The P/E ratio is a much better indicator of the value of a stock than the market price alone. For example, all things being equal, a stock with a P/E of 75 is much more "expensive" than a stock with a P/E of 20.
- Return on Asset
This ratio is considered a measure of how effectively assets are used to generate a return. Return on Asset shows the amount of income for every dollar tied up in assets.
- Return on Equity
Determines the rate of return for your investment in the business. This is one of the most important ratios as it shows the hard fact about the business -- are you making enough of a profit to compensate you for the risk of being in business? This ratio is often compared against the ratio of other companies in the same or similar industry.
- Current Ratio
The ratio between all current assets and all current liabilities; another way of expressing liquidity. Current ratio of 1 means the company has $1.00 in current assets to cover $1.00 in current liabilities. The higher the current ratio, the better.
- Debt To Equity
Shows the ratio between capital invested by the owners and the funds provided by lenders. This ratio is a comparison of how much of the business was financed through debt and how much was financed through equity. The higher the ratio, the greater the risk to a present or future creditor.
- Price / Revenue
The price/revenue ratio takes the current market capitalisation of a company and divides it by the last 12 months of revenues. This indicator can be a good indicator of value. In general, the lower the price/revenue ratio, the better.