GURUFOCUS.COM » STOCK LIST » Financial Services » Banks » Commercial Bank Of Kuwait (KUW:CBK) » Definitions » Valuation Rank

Commercial Bank Of Kuwait (KUW:CBK) Valuation Rank


View and export this data going back to 1984. Start your Free Trial

What is Commercial Bank Of Kuwait Valuation Rank?

The Valuation Rank measures the current valuation of a business relative to other companies in the same industry and its own historical valuation. The companies are split in equal numbers and then ranked from 1 to 10, with 10 as the most undervalued and 1 as the most overvalued.

  1. Three factors:
    • Absolute valuation (medpsvalue) relative to current stock price, rank among all companies
    • Historical valuation over the past 10 years. Rank pe, ps, pocf, ev2ebit over their own historical values
    • Industry relative valuation
  2. Companies without enough data is not ranked
  3. Companies with negative earnings are ranked lower

These three factors are used to calculate the value score for every eligible company, with values from 1 to 10. The final ranked companies are split in equal numbers and ranked from 1 to 10, with 10 as the most undervalued, and 1 as the most overvalued. The numbers of companies in each rank are the same.


Commercial Bank Of Kuwait Valuation Rank Related Terms

Thank you for viewing the detailed overview of Commercial Bank Of Kuwait's Valuation Rank provided by GuruFocus.com. Please click on the following links to see related term pages.


Commercial Bank Of Kuwait (KUW:CBK) Business Description

Traded in Other Exchanges
N/A
Address
Mubarak Al Kabeer Street, P.O. Box 2861, Safat, Kuwait, KWT, 13029
Commercial Bank Of Kuwait is the financial institution in Kuwait. It operates corporate and retail banking franchise that provides innovative financial and investment solutions to its growing customer base. The company operates in two segments: Corporate and Retail banking, which provides a full range of lending, deposit, and related banking services to domestic and international corporate and individual customers; and Treasury and Investment banking segment comprises of money market, foreign exchange, treasury bonds, and brokerage services. Most of the bank's revenue is derived from traditional banking net interest income, with the remainder coming from fees and commissions.