And I presume it is similar for all Newspapers:
I don't comprehend all the heading:
Can someone please check I have it right and swarm in the blanks:
12 month high-ranking - highest price contained by the last 12 months
12 month low - alike but for the lowest price
Company - name of company
Price (p) - the price of one stock surrounded by pennies
+/- - how much it went up or down by
yld (%) - No theory
P/E - no idea again
Help?
Is it one and the same in adjectives newspapers (if I go to the business bit of the guardian would it look the same and be determined the same)?
Thanks.
Sophie
Answers: The price thing is contained by dollars but not at big deal in that.
yld% is the dividend a stock pays. For example if a yld% is 2% then the stock pays of dividend to its shareholders of 2%. This join will explain it in detail. Great site by the channel (www.investopedia.com).
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/y/yiel...
The P/E is price over earnings and again check this connect out.
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/pric...
Yield is the historic dividend expressed as a percentage of the current share price.
p/e is the price earnings ratio (price divided by earnings)
The FT is the serious newspaper to look at for this sort of thing-and much more.
Resolved Questions:
How do I find out how oodles shares of exxonmobil stock my grandmother owns?
Is countrywide financial going to clear a 3rd quarter dividend?
How can you invest contained by something??
What is the unfaultable instrument for a teen to lift up money besides a profession and chores?
What can I do? Message I have Aetna stock option, expiring that hours of daylight, 4 hours to ring up, I be 2 hours to slow.
I don't comprehend all the heading:
Can someone please check I have it right and swarm in the blanks:
12 month high-ranking - highest price contained by the last 12 months
12 month low - alike but for the lowest price
Company - name of company
Price (p) - the price of one stock surrounded by pennies
+/- - how much it went up or down by
yld (%) - No theory
P/E - no idea again
Help?
Is it one and the same in adjectives newspapers (if I go to the business bit of the guardian would it look the same and be determined the same)?
Thanks.
Sophie
Answers: The price thing is contained by dollars but not at big deal in that.
yld% is the dividend a stock pays. For example if a yld% is 2% then the stock pays of dividend to its shareholders of 2%. This join will explain it in detail. Great site by the channel (www.investopedia.com).
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/y/yiel...
The P/E is price over earnings and again check this connect out.
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/pric...
Yield is the historic dividend expressed as a percentage of the current share price.
p/e is the price earnings ratio (price divided by earnings)
The FT is the serious newspaper to look at for this sort of thing-and much more.
Resolved Questions: