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Hi hoffmag2 & kpagarani,
thanks for replying.. i chose C as well.. but the book answer is D.
here’s the full book answer:
D. Firms with high growth rates will tend to have high market values relative to the book value of their equity.
C. High operating profit margins are not necessarily an indicator of earnings growth.
B. Low price to cash flow ratios would tend to identify value stocks rather than growth stocks.
A. Screening for high dividend payout ratios would tend to identify mature firms with relatively few growth opportunities.
Also, a very kind colleague of mine has illustrated why D is and C isn’t the answer.
for D: market value is a forward looking value that means a value that people ascribe to the company. so if market value higher than book value it means people are ascribing a high growth for the company.
for C: high operating income only means gross margin is high. the company may be profitable but not high growth. a new start up company has high growth but margins may be low.
Hope it helps =) |
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