I know people sometimes use price to book value to try and pick up bargains, but book value is a historic number that can go waaaaay back and not be relevant, correct? I'm more looking for what is the current FMV of a companies' assets, more so real property as personal property of course can be very hard to value. Thanks for any help!
Morningstar has Price/Fair Value, but it isn't free. For example, https://www.morningstar.com/stocks/xnys/f/price-fair-value
Thanks ph1l. But is that "fair value" the fair value of the property, or the fair value of their calculated earnings stream? Looking for the former. Thanks!
Some brokers provide the Morningstar research free with an account. With regards to his question though, most companies aren't valued based upon "assets/properties". The value of their properties is usually small relative to the company valuation. REITs would be an exception. CEFs are easier to find NAV. https://www.cefconnect.com/closed-end-funds-daily-pricing
Thanks so much guys. Yea, I figured what I was talking about did not exist. I was hoping to find companies that might have low values because they are currently not earning (or are losing) money, but when you look at the value of their assets (land) they are undervalued. But no such luck. Thanks.
These questions and the problems will getting accurate info and evaluation on them... plus the subjective value of "stock price vs fundamentals"... all reasons to learn TA and trade from the charts.