Market Cap : 39.41 M | Enterprise Value : 978.13 M | PE Ratio : | PB Ratio : |
---|
OASPQ has been successfully added to your Stock Email Alerts list.
You can manage your stock email alerts here.
OASPQ has been removed from your Stock Email Alerts list.
Please enter Portfolio Name for new portfolio.
As of today (2021-04-14), Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s share price is $0.121400. Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s Tangible Book per Share of Sep. 2020 for the quarter that ended in Sep. 2020 was $-2.52. Hence, Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s Price to Tangible Book Ratio of today is .
During the past 12 years, Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s highest Price to Tangible Book Ratio was 5.36. The lowest was 0.00. And the median was 1.22.
A closely related ratio is called PB Ratio. As of today, Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s share price is $0.121400. Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s Book Value per Sharefor the quarter that ended in Sep. 2020 was $-2.52. Hence, Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s P/B Ratio of today is .
* All numbers are in millions except for per share data and ratio. All numbers are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.
* The bar in red indicates where Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s Price-to-Tangible-Book falls into.
Oasis Petroleum (OLD)'s price-to-tangible-book ratio for today is calculated as:
Price to Tangible Book | = | Share Price | / | Tangible Book per Share (Q: Sep. 2020 ) |
= | 0.121400 | / | -2.524 | |
= |
* All numbers are in millions except for per share data and ratio. All numbers are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.
It can also be calculated from the numbers for the whole company:
Price to Tangible Book | = | Market Cap | / | Tangible Equity | ||||
= | Market Cap | / | (Total Stockholders Equity | - | Preferred Stock | - | Intangible Assets) |
A closely related ratio is called PB Ratio. The difference between Price-to-Tangible-Book Ratio and PB Ratio is that book value other than intangibles are used in the calculation.
Some businesses have very light assets, such as software companies or insurance agencies. The Price-to-Book Ratio does not work well for these companies. Some companies even have negative equity, so the Price-to-Book Ratio cannot be applied to them.
No Headline