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Re: DrMBA post# 187520

Tuesday, 05/14/2013 4:46:01 PM

Tuesday, May 14, 2013 4:46:01 PM

Post# of 312101
Remember my post 6/18/12... wonder why they call me DrMBA? I just feel sorry for the uneducated investors who saw plastic gold and now their kids are looking to community college instead of Yale.

Re: Stock post# 187508 Post # of 226766

Properly valued, .50 a share. I have used these metrics, VERY CONSERVATIVE ones at that. Remember, JBI lost 2 million dollars last QTR.

OK, Say 2011 Profit vs $18 Mil. Loss, lets crunch the numbers on a P/E basis...(I feel like I am teaching my E201 class)

OK, JBI lost 18 million dollars in 2011 or -.30 per share. Lets say they made loads of money and showed a .01 per share profit. What should the current stock price be? Lets assume they will double their profit for 2012...

$1/.01 = P/E of 100
2012 $2/.02 = P/E of 100 ($2 based on board predictions and the company is going to double profits)

A P/E of 100 is high. Growth companies usually sport a 30 P/E (double the S&P average) Lets look at some slow growing, hundreds of billions in sales/billion dollar profit monsters:

Exxon - 10 P/E
BP - 5 P/E
Chevron - 8 P/E
JBI - 100 P/E (IF THEY DIDN'T LOSE $18 MILLION/MADE .01/Share)

Lets be bold and give JBI the profit and a blistering 50 grow grow P/E. Stock price should be say FIFTY CENTS? What do you think?

AND AGAIN JBI HAS LOST 2 MILLION DOLLARS IN THE FIRST QUARTER

Definition of 'Price-Earnings Ratio - P/E Ratio'
A valuation ratio of a company's current share price compared to its per-share earnings.

Calculated as: Market Value per Share/Earnings per Share (EPS)
Volume:
Day Range:
Bid:
Ask:
Last Trade Time:
Total Trades:
  • 1D
  • 1M
  • 3M
  • 6M
  • 1Y
  • 5Y