Good discussion. It can be a long time before one is proven right or wrong about a particular company.
A company with stable earnings can have depressed share prices (ie a decade) before share prices starts to move.
Ultimately the dividends(if any) will catch up and tangible value of the company goes up. The shares prices have no choice but to go up.
In a similar way, a company(usually unicorns) with ever mounting losses can have a long run way before shareholders and investors starts throwing in the towel and stops providing funding. And during this time, the valuation can reach dizzy heights.
How much a company is worth depending greatly on who is valuing it. Uber is going public, i have a feeling if the bankers can somehow value it at a trillion, they would. Now it is at around USD100B. Quote from the NY times. "Even at $90 billion to $100 billion, Uber would be valued well above the $76 billion it was appraised at in its most recent fund-raising in August. Investment bankers last year reckoned the company could fetch a valuation of as much as $120 billion in the public markets."
A company with stable earnings can have depressed share prices (ie a decade) before share prices starts to move.
Ultimately the dividends(if any) will catch up and tangible value of the company goes up. The shares prices have no choice but to go up.
In a similar way, a company(usually unicorns) with ever mounting losses can have a long run way before shareholders and investors starts throwing in the towel and stops providing funding. And during this time, the valuation can reach dizzy heights.
How much a company is worth depending greatly on who is valuing it. Uber is going public, i have a feeling if the bankers can somehow value it at a trillion, they would. Now it is at around USD100B. Quote from the NY times. "Even at $90 billion to $100 billion, Uber would be valued well above the $76 billion it was appraised at in its most recent fund-raising in August. Investment bankers last year reckoned the company could fetch a valuation of as much as $120 billion in the public markets."