Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Market Share is the breakup of market size in percentage terms, to help identify the top players, the middle and the "minnows" of the marketplace, based on the volume of business conducted; Market Segmentation Some of the factors that determine the market are price, quality, speed of service, ease of maintenance, and points of distribution.
Sales variance is the difference between actual sales and budgeted sales. [1] It is used to measure the performance of a sales function, and/or analyze business results to better understand market conditions.
While "market share" may be defined as "the percentage of a market accounted for by a specific entity", [1] the measure may also be divided into two types: "Unit market share: The units sold by a particular company as a percentage of total market sales, measured in the same units." [1]
The firm's market value added, is the added value an investment creates for its shareholders over the total capital invested by them. MVA is the discounted sum (present value) of all future expected economic value added:
The general formula for variance ... the population variance of a finite population of size ... A function VAR.S in Microsoft Excel gives the unbiased sample variance ...
The 5% Value at Risk of a hypothetical profit-and-loss probability density function. Value at risk (VaR) is a measure of the risk of loss of investment/capital.It estimates how much a set of investments might lose (with a given probability), given normal market conditions, in a set time period such as a day.
This algorithm can easily be adapted to compute the variance of a finite population: simply divide by n instead of n − 1 on the last line.. Because SumSq and (Sum×Sum)/n can be very similar numbers, cancellation can lead to the precision of the result to be much less than the inherent precision of the floating-point arithmetic used to perform the computation.
( ()) is the market premium, the expected excess return of the market portfolio's expected return over the risk-free rate. A derivation [ 14 ] is as follows: (1) The incremental impact on risk and expected return when an additional risky asset, a , is added to the market portfolio, m , follows from the formulae for a two-asset portfolio.