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  2. What are assets, liabilities and equity? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/assets-liabilities-equity...

    That’s their equity. Owner’s equity formula. To calculate an owners’ equity, you total up a company’s assets and subtract its liabilities. In other words: owner’s equity = assets ...

  3. Economic value added - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_Value_Added

    It can be calculated as the sum of interest-bearing debt and equity or as the sum of net assets less non-interest-bearing current liabilities (NIBCLs). The capital charge is the cash flow required to compensate investors for the riskiness of the business given the amount of economic capital invested.

  4. Equity ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_ratio

    The equity ratio is a financial ratio indicating the relative proportion of equity used to finance a company's assets. The two components are often taken from the firm's balance sheet or statement of financial position (so-called book value), but the ratio may also be calculated using market values for both, if the company's equities are publicly traded.

  5. Residual income valuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residual_income_valuation

    The underlying idea is that investors require a rate of return from their resources – i.e. equity – under the control of the firm's management, compensating them for their opportunity cost and accounting for the level of risk resulting. This rate of return is the cost of equity, and a formal equity cost must be subtracted from net income.

  6. How to build equity in your home in 2024 (and why you should)

    www.aol.com/finance/build-equity-home-why...

    But it plays a part in equity-building, too: The faster you can pay down the loan principal, the quicker your equity stake increases. So you want to pay as little in interest as possible.

  7. Capitalization table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalization_table

    A waterfall analysis details the exact payouts to every shareholder on a company's cap table based on a specific amount of proceeds available to equity in a particular liquidity scenario. Since a company often does not know if, when, or how it will achieve a liquidity event, waterfall analysis typically covers a range of liquidity assumptions.

  8. Pre-money valuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-money_valuation

    To calculate the value of the shares, we can divide the Post-Money Valuation by the total number of shares after the financing round. $60 million / 120 shares = $500,000 per share. The initial shareholders dilute their ownership from 100% to 83.33% , where equity stake is calculated by dividing the number of shares owned by the total number of ...

  9. Adjusted present value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjusted_present_value

    APV formula APV = Unlevered NPV of Free Cash Flows and assumed Terminal Value + NPV of Interest Tax Shield and assumed Terminal Value : The discount rate used in the first part is the return on assets or return on equity if unlevered; The discount rate used in the second part is the cost of debt financing by period.