Stock Market Listings
Figure 2.8 presents key trading data for a small sample of stocks traded on the New York
Stock Exchange. The NYSE is one of several markets in which investors may buy or sell
shares of stock. We will examine these markets in detail in Chapter 3.
To interpret Figure 2.8 , consider the highlighted listing for General Electric. The table
provides the ticker symbol (GE), the closing price of the stock ($19.72), and its change
( 1 $.13) from the previous trading day. About 45.3 million shares of GE traded on this
day. The listing also provides the highest and lowest price at which GE has traded in the
last 52 weeks. The .68 value in the Dividend column means that the last quarterly divi-
dend payment was $.17 per share, which is consistent with annual dividend payments of
$.17 3 4 5 $.68. This corresponds to an annual dividend yield (i.e., annual dividend per
dollar paid for the stock) of .68/19.72 5 .0345, or 3.45%.
The dividend yield is only part of the return on a stock investment. It ignores prospective
capital gains (i.e., price increases) or losses. Low-dividend firms presumably offer greater
prospects for capital gains, or investors would not be willing to hold these stocks in their port-
folios. If you scan Figure 2.8 , you will see that dividend yields vary widely across companies.
a. If you buy 100 shares of IBM stock, to what
are you entitled?
b. What is the most money you can make on
this investment over the next year?
c. If you pay $180 per share, what is the most
money you could lose over the year?
CONCEPT CHECK
2.3
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C H A P T E R
2
Asset Classes and Financial Instruments
43
The P/E ratio, or price–earnings ratio, is the ratio of the current stock price to last
year’s earnings per share. The P/E ratio tells us how much stock purchasers must pay per
dollar of earnings that the firm generates. For GE, the ratio of price to earnings is 16.01.
The P/E ratio also varies widely across firms. Where the dividend yield and P/E ratio are
not reported in Figure 2.8 , the firms have zero dividends, or zero or negative earnings. We
shall have much to say about P/E ratios in Chapter 18. Finally, we see that GE’s stock price
has increased by 10.11% since the beginning of the year.
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