Posts Tagged ‘searchengine’

Book Value Formula Accounting



book value formula accounting
Need help calculating shareholders equity applicable to a) common b) preferred shares?

I’m doing a lab for accounting and I’m able to do all the ratios except three of them which are;
1) Return on commons shareholders equity:
2) Book value per common share:
3) Book value per preferred share:

Can someone help by explaining how to do them by referring to this lab? I already know what the answers should be, it’s just a matter of finding out how to calculate them. I attached the formulas for them too.
You can see it here: http://i43.tinypic.com/no62l4.jpg

For book value add up everything down to property plant and equipment. Then subtract accumulated amortization. You get total assets.

Then add the next three lines, accounts payable, unearned sales and notes payable. Thats total liabilities.

Subtract total assets from total liabilities Thats book value, Divide by 200,000 for book value per preferred share. Divide book value by 50,000 to get book value per common share.

To get retrurn on common shareholder equity add Cost of goods sold and everything below that and subtract it from sales. Divide by 50,000


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 An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


$22.09


New – The introduction of fair value accounting for stock options has required private companies to apply stock option valuation methodologies that were designed to be applied to their public counterparts. The two recommended methodologies, the Black-Scholes formula and the Binomial Lattice model, require the valuator to provide an input for estimated volatility; for private companies that do not have a trading history there is limited guidance regarding the determination of volatility, which re

 An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


$22.09


Used – The introduction of fair value accounting for stock options has required private companies to apply stock option valuation methodologies that were designed to be applied to their public counterparts. The two recommended methodologies, the Black-Scholes formula and the Binomial Lattice model, require the valuator to provide an input for estimated volatility; for private companies that do not have a trading history there is limited guidance regarding the determination of volatility, which r

 An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


$28.32


New – The introduction of fair value accounting for stock options has required private companies to apply stock option valuation methodologies that were designed to be applied to their public counterparts. The two recommended methodologies, the Black-Scholes formula and the Binomial Lattice model, require the valuator to provide an input for estimated volatility; for private companies that do not have a trading history there is limited guidance regarding the determination of volatility, which re

 An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


An Empirical Analysis of Stock Option Valuation Methodologies in Closely Held U.S. Corporations


$28.32


Used – The introduction of fair value accounting for stock options has required private companies to apply stock option valuation methodologies that were designed to be applied to their public counterparts. The two recommended methodologies, the Black-Scholes formula and the Binomial Lattice model, require the valuator to provide an input for estimated volatility; for private companies that do not have a trading history there is limited guidance regarding the determination of volatility, which r