New Stock Valuation Method: Price to Book to Price to Tangible Book [View article]
Somewhat confused...what was your method for assessing and quantifying the variables you mention (intangibles and goodwill)? Additionally, the portal or screener used is irrelevant: the "tangible book value" is there for your use straight from a company's balance sheet. And as far as I know, neither of the "goodwill and intangibles" extras can end up on a company's balance sheet through GAAP procedures unless acquisition is involved. Total book value should involve no intangibles...that's where market value comes into play.
These figures, in my understanding, are reflected in a market capitalization (and derived stock price) higher than book value (shareholders equity).
Simply put, a market cap lower than shareholders equity (a P/B lower than 1) shows a possibly (and probably) undervalued stock, regardless of intangibles or goodwill. Hence why stocks in general will trade at a value greater than 1: intangibles plus book value.
In all seriousness, unless I'm completely off I'd love further insight into your findings.
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These figures, in my understanding, are reflected in a market capitalization (and derived stock price) higher than book value (shareholders equity).
Simply put, a market cap lower than shareholders equity (a P/B lower than 1) shows a possibly (and probably) undervalued stock, regardless of intangibles or goodwill. Hence why stocks in general will trade at a value greater than 1: intangibles plus book value.
In all seriousness, unless I'm completely off I'd love further insight into your findings.