When we see the term “historic pricing,” maybe we immediately think of those fascinating charts that tell us how much a gallon of milk cost in 1962.
Those are neat and all, but in the world of financial markets, the term “historic” refers to something that occurred a lot more recently than 1962. For the most part, “historic prices” are market prices that were recorded yesterday, or whenever the last time the value of the asset in question was valuated.
Mutual funds, unlike Facebookers, can’t update their “status,” so to speak, in real time. So when investors want to buy or sell those funds, they sometimes do it based on the fund’s historic price: the value it held at the close of the last trading day. There’s a little bit of risk involved there, because if the value went up in the meantime, we could have lost money if we sold. Or the reverse could be true: if the value went down, we might have paid more for the fund than it’s worth today.
Just as an FYI, not all funds use historic pricing. Some use forward pricing, which is the opposite: an asset’s value is calculated based on what its next closing price is expected to be. This is actually a lot more common, but it too comes with risks, since we can’t ever know 100% for sure what an asset’s value is going to be when the market closes.
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Finance: What is the Historical Trading ...18 Views
Finance, a la shmoop. What is a historical trading range? All right you know how [The question written on a blackboard]
some Wall Street words are arcane, uh no arcane.. they say one thing but they mean [Pong being played]
something entirely different? Yeah well this is not one of those times.
Historical trading range, darn well you could say that AT&T has had a historical [AT&T tower]
trading range at a given price largely because well here's its stock chart for
the last umpteen years and you can see that it hasn't really moved sort of [AT&T showing a fairly consistent price over time]
lived between 30 and 40 bucks a share more or less forever it seems all the
investment gains to AT&T shareholders came through the company paying massive [Definition of dividend written on a 100 dollar bill]
dividends but historical ranges aren't just about stock prices alone like
here's the historical trading range of the price to earnings ratio of the S&P
500 so this chart shows the range of p/e multiples from 1880 to today ish and [Arrows showing the date range on the graph]
note that the lion's share of multiples lived in this band from about ten times [Lion's head appears]
to about 20 times and this was the range of multiples in yes there were outliers
like down here in the dumps after the economic hangover post-world War two [Man welding in a workshop]
repair work and then up here as well where earnings were actually very low
like one-time low so the price to earnings ratio was very high right like [Arrow pointing to the highest peak on the graph]
all the companies missed their numbers horribly went negative and stuff
all right like the company used to trade for 20 bucks a share and earned a dollar
well it might have had in that short period only a dime of earnings when
everything went bad and the world was ending but the stock went down 40 percent to [Picture of a city on fire]
12 bucks and on a dime of earnings while that 12 bucks seemed like a huge
multiple at 120 times but Wall Street knew the world wasn't ending and things
did come back and well here we are doing this video, so the short lived things get
tossed out and when you look at ranges you look at their history not just one [Bag labelled 2008 recession is chucked out the door of a house]
moment in time but decades in the past and you think about the ranges and what [Highlighted area on the graph going further back in time]
it implies in the future if anything and when in doubt yes you just sing Oh home
on the range, where the price to earnings ratio [Girl sat next to a fire with a guitar singing]
plays, or something like that historical trading range that's what it
is go check it out...