BrightView Holdings (BV):
BrightView Holdings (BV) stock finished at $ 10.21 and recorded exchange rate of 4.61% in Monday negotiation session. The Company has maintained 42.57 million floating shares and holds 108.98 million outstanding shares. The recent trading activity revealed that the share price fell to 12.82% from its minimum of 52 weeks and traded with a variation of -56.40% from the maximum of prints in the last period of 52 weeks.
The current ratio of 1.6 is mainly used to give an idea of the ability of a company to repay its liabilities (debts and payables) with its assets (cash, negotiable securities, inventories, credits). As such, the current relationship can be used to make a rough estimate of a company's financial health. The rapid ratio of 1.5 is a measure of how much a company can meet its short-term financial liabilities with fast assets (cash and cash equivalents, short-term marketable securities and credits). The greater the relationship, the greater the financial security of a company in the short term. A common rule of thumb is that companies with a rapid ratio above 1.0 are sufficiently able to meet their short-term liabilities.
Long-term debt / equity shows a value of 0.93 with a total net debt / equity of 0.94. It provides investors with the idea of the company's leverage, measured by dividing total liabilities from shareholders' equity. It also illustrates the debt that the company is using to finance its assets in relation to the value represented in equity.
The share price has moved -32.43% from the 50 day maximum and 12.82% from the 50 day minimum. Analyze the consensus score of 1.7. For the next one-year period, the average of individual target price estimates reported by sell-side analysts is $ 21.67.
The company maintained a gross margin of 26.60%. The corporate ownership of the company is 93.00% while the ownership of Insiders is 1.20%. The company has maintained the return on investment (ROI) at 2.60% compared to the previous 12 months.
BrightView Holdings (BV) The recent trading volume of the shares is equal to 80,297 parts compared to the average volume of 477.2 K shares. The relative volume observed at 1.68.
The volume can help determine the state of health of an existing trend. A healthy trend should have a greater volume on the ascending legs of the trend and a lower volume on the descending (corrective) legs. A healthy downtrend usually has a greater volume on the descending legs of the tendency and a lower volume on the ascending (corrective) legs.
The earnings per share of the company shows a growth of -310.90% for the current year and is expected to achieve a profit growth for the next year at 14.49%. The analyst predicted growth of the ESP for the next 5 years to 23.76%. The rate of earnings growth for the next few years is an important measure for investors wishing to hold a stock for several years. The company's earnings usually have a direct relationship with the price of the company's shares. The quarter-on-quarter sales growth is 2.60%.
Moving averages help technical traders track financial assets by mitigating daily price fluctuations or noise. By identifying trends, moving averages allow operators to make sure that trends work in their favor and increase the number of winning operations. The shorter the period of a moving average, the more rapidly it will change with the price action. However, it is more likely to provide less reliable signals than those provided by a longer-term moving average. The longer the period of a moving average, the more slowly it will change with the price action. However, the signals it provides are more reliable.
BrightView Holdings (BV) inventories fell below -6.94% from the 20-day moving average, showing a short-term downward movement. It moved -18.32% below the simple 50-day moving average. This is showing a medium-term pessimistic trend based on SMA 50. The share price went underground -37.68% compared to the 200-day moving average which identified a long-term downtrend.
David Culbreth – Category – Business
David Culbreth he is a self-taught investor who has invested in equities since he was a college senior and continues to invest. He is extremely devoted to demystifying the investment terminology for new investors.
David Culbreth is a senior author and journalist. Has more than 5 years experience in institutional investment markets, including fixed income securities, equities, derivatives and real estate. David holds a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration with a specialization in Finance. He bought his first titles in a private company at the age of 15 and made his first public stock market at 23. He has always been interested in the stock market and how it behaves.
As a father of two, he saved money and invested a high priority for them. Over many years of investment, he made wise choices and made many mistakes. But he learned from both. David David's observations and experience provide him with insight into the stock exchange models and behaviors of the investors who create them.