Toronto-Dominion Bank PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS (TSX: TD) IN FOCUS:
PROFITABILITY REPORT:
Monitoring of the control of profitability, of the profit margin registered at 30.98% and of the operating margin recorded at 40.33%. The company maintained a gross margin of 100.00%. The Company has been able to maintain the return on invested capital (ROA) at 0.87% in the last twelve months. Return on equity (ROE) recorded at 14.60%.
VALIDATION OBSERVATIONS:
Seat of the Toronto-Dominion Bank headquarters (TSX: TD) is Canada. The P / E ratio is noted at 11.577371. The P / E is a popular valuation report of a company's current price relative to its earnings per share (last 12 months). Forward P / E is standing at 9.314592. The Forward P / E is a measure of the price / earnings ratio using the expected earnings for the P / E calculation for the next fiscal year. The title has PEG of 0.82. PEG ratio used to determine the value of a security taking into account the growth in earnings. The P / S ratio of 3.503308 reflects the value placed on sales from the market. The P / B ratio is 1,717,855. P / B is used to compare the market value of a security with its book value. It has a market capitalization of $ 95137350893,568 CAD. Using market capitalization to show the size of a company is important because the size of the company is a key determinant of various characteristics in which investors are interested, including risk.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX: TD) recorded -4.186175% last month and recorded -11.845939% in the last quarter. The stock showed a return of 45.503973% in five years and recorded a weekly return of 0.273815%. The stock was seen at -3.132396% return in the last twelve months.
Monitoring of the last 52 weeks, the high price of 52-week stocks was observed at CAD $ 80.05 and the minimum at 52 weeks seen at $ 69.21 CAD. The 50 SMA is CAD $ 72.003426 and 200 SMA is CAD $ 75.65057. Moving averages can be used as support or resistance when a trader looks for a possible entry or exit on the market. This can also be said in the following way. In the event that the price makes a contact with the moving average on the price table, the trader, examining this chart carefully, will enter a long position or a short position. In reality, this works the same way as horizontal support or resistance lines. Moving averages are known as dynamic support and resistance, simply because they tend to change with prices.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX: TD) the stock changed CAD $ -0.14 and shifted to -0.2% while the share price was hit at $ 69.58 CAD in the last commercial transaction (Friday). 2756778 shares traded by hand while it is an average volume with 3346940 shares. The company recorded a relative volume of 0.82. Volume is more important for traders. The heavily traded stocks allow investors to trade quickly and easily, without drastically changing the price of the stock. Substantial stocks are more difficult to trade because there are not many buyers or sellers at any given time, so buyers and sellers may have to change the desired price considerably to make an exchange.
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The analyst recommended a consent rating of 2 on this stock. Analysts also expected the stock to reach the stock value at $ CAD 85.27 in the next one-year period.
The company has achieved revenue of $ 27156437139,456 CAD. Revenue is also referred to as sales or turnover. Some companies receive interest income, royalties or other fees. Revenue can refer to business income in general, or may refer to the amount, in a monetary unit, earned over a period of time. The company's net income is $ 8252855617.536 CAD. Net income available to common stockholders equals net income minus the privileged dividends paid. The net profits available to the common shareholders are the remaining profits after the company pays all its suppliers, employees, service providers, creditors and preferred shareholders. In other words, it's all revenue minus all your favorite expenses and dividends. The number measures the credit of the common shareholders on the company's cash flows.
The return on invested capital (ROCE) is 0%. Return on investment (ROCE) is a financial report that measures the profitability of a company and the efficiency with which its capital is used. The return on invested capital (ROCE) is the total amount of capital that a company has used to generate profits. It is the sum of the net assets and liabilities of the debt. It can be simplified as a total of assets minus current liabilities.
The volatility or the average percentage of the real interval (ATRP 14) is 1.7%. The ATR expressed as a percentage of the closing price. The average of the real interval percentage (ATRP) measures volatility at a relative level. ATRP allows you to compare titles while ATR no. This means that low-priced shares will not necessarily have lower ATR values than higher-priced ones. The beta value of the shares was seen at 0.862769. Beta measures the amount of market risk associated with market trading. The high beta reveals more riskiness and the low beta shows a low risk.
TECHNICAL INDICATORS:
Now the company has an RSI figure of 32.78. The RSI compares the entity of recent gains with recent losses to see if an asset is oversold or overbought. RSI is plotted on a scale of 0 to 100. Generally, if it is above 70, the stock is considered overbought and then you can try to sell it. Similarly, an RSI below 30 indicates that the stock is oversold and can be purchased.
ADX value listed in 6.68. The ADX indicator measures the strength of a trend and can be useful for determining whether a trend is strong or weak. High readings indicate a strong trend and low readings indicate a weak trend. When this indicator shows a low reading, it is likely that a trading interval will develop. Avoid stocks with low readings! You want to be in stocks that have high readings. This indicator stands for middle management index. On some graphics packages there are two other lines on the map, + DI and -DI (the DI part stands for Directional Indicator). Ignore these lines. Trying to trade on these two lines is a great way to lose money! The only thing we are interested in is the same ADX.
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.