¶ … determinants of stock prices, to explain why stock prices fluctuate. There are a number of models that seek to explain stock valuation, including the dividend growth model and the efficient market hypothesis. For many investors, capital gains are the key to a company's value, and EMH would thus apply. Stock prices reflect the aggregate sentiment about the future prospects of a company. These sentiments constantly change, based on new information being released and applied to what is already known about the company, its industry, its competitors and the economy at large. The constant stock price adjustments reflect this collective analysis of all information regarding a stock and the interpretation of its future prospects.
Introduction
A stock is a share in ownership of a company. In theory, a share entitles the holder to a proportional share of future income. There are different schools of thought as to what exactly this entails -- specifically whether it includes capital gains or not. But the basic concept is that the stock price is the present value of future cash flows (Cherewyk, 2015). The simplest version of this is embodied in the dividend discount model, which is predicated on the notion that a stock's price is the present value of the expected future dividends. In this model, a stock that does not currently have dividends is going to have some expected future dividends, even when management claims to have no plans to pay them any time soon.
Stock Valuation Models
The dividend discount model of stock valuation may have some merit where stable companies are concerned, where dividends are largely predictable such that there is a reasonable expectation that the future cash flows are going to manifest, the reality is that this model does not so easily extrapolate to all stocks. For some, their industries...
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