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No par value |
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No par valueThe shares of a company which carry no nominal value or par value.Similar MatchesImputed valueImputed valueRefers to the value of an asset, service, or company that is not physically recorded in any accounts but is implicit in the product, e.g., the opportunity cost of cash remaining in a savings account and not invested. Loan valueLoan valueThe maximum percentage of the value of securities that a broker can lend to a margin account customer, as dictated by the Federal Reserve Board in Regulation T. Ex ante valueEx ante valueThe forecasted rate of return. Enterprise valueEnterprise valueA company's value is sometimes measured in terms of the total funds being used to finance it. This investment ratio is increasingly used in place of the price/earnings ratio in the analysis of certain types of companies. It indicates the economic rather than accounting return that the company is generating on the total value of the capital supporting it.Typical companies for which this ratio is appropriate are those that have borrowed heavily to finance growth, like telecoms companies building a network or those that have paid large premiums for acquisitions or assets. Present valuePresent valueThe value today of a stream of payments and/or receipts over time in the future and/or the past, converted to the present using an interest rate. If Xt is the amount in period t and r the interest rate, then present value at time t=0 is V = St (Xt)/(1+r)t. Further SuggestionsConversion parity or valuePrice value of a basis point (PVBP) Expected value Original face value Hidden values Reinstatement value Present value hidden values Net present value Value added tax Value stock fund Net salvage value Face value Value date Appraised value transfer value intrinsic value Extraordinary positive value Labor theory of value time value value investing Undervalued security market value Stated value Bond value |
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