KSK Power Ventur
(KSK)
Sector: n/a
Today's buy and sell prices
The price at which you can buy a share or investment. It is
usually higher than the bid (sell) price. It’s the price you
are being offered.
Offer
|
5.00p
|
The price at which you can sell a share or investment. It is
lower than the offer (buy) price.
Bid
|
1.00p
|
The difference between the bid and offer prices expressed as a
percentage. When you buy shares you pay a higher price than
you get when you sell them. The difference between these
prices is the profit made by the market maker who puts the
deals together.
Spread
|
80.00
|
---|
Today's trading
Range
The lowest and the highest price a share has reached in the
trading day.
|
2.25p-2.25p
|
The lowest and the highest price a share has reached in the
trading day.
Volume
|
0
|
The lowest and the highest price a share has reached in the
trading day.
Today's open
|
2.25p
|
At the end of the trading day there is an official closing
price for every share. The previous session’s close is used as
the base to calculate the following day’s price changes.
Previous close
|
2.25p
|
---|
Yearly summary
The highest and lowest prices the shares have traded at over a
rolling 52-week period. It gives you a good indication of how
the share price is performing now relative to its recent past
performance.
52wk range
|
2.25p-2.25p
|
---|
Fundamentals and health
A measure of the company's worth on the stock market. We
display the previous closing share price multiplied by the
number of shares in issue.
Market capitalisation
|
£3.94
|
The number of shares a company has in circulation, in
millions.
Shares in issue
|
175.31
|
The main valuation used by investors and a way of gauging
whether a company's share price is cheap or expensive compared
to competitors. You get PE by dividing the share price by the
earnings per share (EPS). Our figure is last basic unadjusted
- reported - annual EPS / current share price x 100. Companies
also quote adjusted EPS figures to remove the effect of
one-off exceptional figures from the profit figures. There is
debate among investors as to whether this should be used. We
use basic EPS – the purest figure.
PE ratio
| n/a |
PEG ratio
| n/a |
An important ratio for showing how much profit after tax and
other deductions (net profit) is actually being earned per
share. You divide the net profit by the number of shares in
issue. Expressed in pence per share. Looking at whether the
EPS is rising or falling over time is one of the most
important indicators of whether a company is really making
money for its shareholders. Our figure is undiluted, meaning
it is not adjusted for exceptional costs.
EPS
|
|
Earnings per share growth illustrates the growth of earning
per share over the last two reporting periods. It helps
investors identify stocks that are increasing or decreasing in
profitability. A minus sign indicates negative growth.
EPS growth
|
n/a
|
Return on capital employed measures a company's profitability
in relation to how much capital is invested in the business.
Generally, the higher the figure the better but with all these
ratios it is best to compare companies from the same sector. A
high double digit figure may mean a company has an advantage
over its competitors because of a unique product but an oil
company, for example, will have higher capital outlay than an
online retailer. Our formula: [Pre-tax profit / (total assets
– short-term liabilities)] * 100
ROCE
|
n/a
|
Also known as the acid test ratio, it's a quick guide to how
well a company can pay its short-term debts. Above 1 is
considered healthy. A ratio of 1.5 would mean the company has
£1.50 of liquid (accessible) assets to cover each £1 of debt
(current liabilities). Formula: Current assets minus inventory
/ current liabilities.
Quick ratio
| n/a |
Indicates whether a company can convert assets into cash to
pay its debts within the next 12 months. It is calculated as
current assets / current liabilities for the same period but
will display as '0' for companies such as banks that don't
distinguish between short and long-term liabilities.
Current ratio
| n/a |
The amount of money a company paid to a shareholder for each
share they own over the past 12 months, expressed in pence.
Total dividends per share
| n/a |
The dividends paid per share over the past 12 months (interim
plus final) as a percentage of the share price. Our figure
includes recurring special dividends.
Dividend yield
|
n/a
|
The number of times the dividend could have been paid out from
net profits. It is a good indicator of the company's ability
to pay the dividend and its level of generosity. Formula:
earnings per share / dividends per share. More than 2 is
considered healthy, less than 1.5 may hint that a dividend is
at risk of being cut.
Dividend cover
| n/a |
Dividend per share growth
|
n/a
|
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KSK Power Ventur Fundamentals
n/a
KSK Power Ventur Regulatory news
KSK Power Ventur Latest trades
Analysis
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Volume | - | - |
Value | - | - |
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