You do realize that stock prices are decided by the ordinary schmoe on the street, right? Someone sees a commerical and thinks, wow, I can invest in them.
In capitalism, a company's worth is based on how much it makes. That means its earnings, not its stock price. Sometimes stock will follow the earnings, sometimes it won't, which is why analysts look at P/E ratios.
Stocks display demand for how much people believe a company is worth, not its actual worth. Once you seperate these two things, you may be able to learn about capitalism in better detail.
Unless you actually do think that AOL was worth more than Time Warner back in the late 90s?
I'm glad you aren't an accountant, that's for sure.
In capitalism, a company's worth is based on how much it makes. That means its earnings, not its stock price. Sometimes stock will follow the earnings, sometimes it won't, which is why analysts look at P/E ratios.
Stocks display demand for how much people believe a company is worth, not its actual worth. Once you seperate these two things, you may be able to learn about capitalism in better detail.
Unless you actually do think that AOL was worth more than Time Warner back in the late 90s?
I'm glad you aren't an accountant, that's for sure.
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