---
title: "What is the Share Price of a Company?"
description: "What is the share price of a company? Whatever you pay for a single piece of stock or its debt. Sometimes that price is wrong; you can make money from that!"
canonical_url: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-the-share-price-of-a-company
markdown_url: https://trendshare.org/ai/what-is-the-share-price-of-a-company.md
published: 2013-07-19
last_updated: 2017-04-17
content_license: https://trendshare.org/about/disclaimer
---
# What is the Share Price of a Company?

Source: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-the-share-price-of-a-company
Updated: 2017-04-17
A publicly traded company has many owners. With popular businesses, those
owners change every day—sometime even every minute. This is a fundamental
truth of the stock market and is what makes it work. Buyers and sellers meet to
trade small pieces of ownership of thousands of companies all day, all around the clock.

The father of [value investing](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-value-investing), [Benjamin Graham, is quoted](https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Benjamin_Graham) as saying that this is a voting machine in the short term but a
mechanism for valuing companies fairly in the long term.

## What is a Public Company Worth?

For each of those individual transactions, what is the company really worth?
Much of its value depends on its assets: inventory, factories, accounts
receivable. Other value depends on how much [revenue and profit](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/earnings-matter-most) and [free cash](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-free-cash-flow) it can produce over its
lifetime.

If someone offered you $100 to estimate the fair share price for any public
company on the spot, you'd have trouble collecting; figuring out that price is
complicated.

... until you consider that the stock market (where countless people are
buying and selling countless pieces of countless companies every day) are
slowly converging on a single price for a piece of ownership of a company.

Suppose you own a candy company in Canada. You spent $5,000 on a factory and
have $5,000 of inventory sitting in your warehouse. If you could sell the
factory right now for what you paid for it and the candy you have right now for
what it's worth, the company is worth $10,000. Easy math.

If you had 10,000 shares of the company—10,000 pieces of
ownership—you might consider the fair share price to be a dollar. In
other words, you could spend $1 to buy a single piece of ownership of the
company.

## What is the Share Price of a Stock?

Yet $1 isn't the *full* answer, because your candy company is a
working business, with lots of moving pieces.

Your factory's probably worth more than that $10,000, but you have to pay
taxes on it. You owe the suppliers of your ingredients money, but you've
already sold some of your inventory for more than you thought you would. If you
built a second factory, you could triple your sales next year and the year
after that and earn still more money, but you might have to take out a small
loan or raise more capital to do that.

What's the right share price? It depends.

You can do a lot of calculations based on the balance sheet and projections.
You can listen to the advice of financial analysts who do that all day every
day (if they even look at Canadian candy companies). You could also look at the
current price on the public stock exchange where that company is traded to get
a sense of what active buyers are willing to pay and what active sellers want
to get. Sometimes that's way off what the company is *really* worth, but
it's a start.

Yet sometimes that's wrong.

## What's the Right Price for a Stock?

You can't predict the future, but you *can* know the maximum price
*you* want to pay for a stock, based on the value the company holds and
can produce. That's the heart of value investing.

Knowing how to find the share price of a company means understanding what
the business is worth and what *you* want to pay for it. The latter is
up to you; it depends on the return you want to get. If you've been through
basic algebra, all that's left is plugging a couple of values into [discounted cash flow analysis](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-discounted-cash-flow) and...
magic. At least, this is the secret to find great stocks at bargain prices.

If the company can earn more money next year than this year and repeatedly
do that—if it's reliably profitable—you can calculate the [intrinsic value](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-intrinsic-value) of the company itself. This
is the important baseline value. It's your rule of thumb. Do not violate this
value.

This is also where investing introduces risk, but at least it's a calculated
risk, if you're basing these calculations on plausible financial information.
By all means, account for less tangible questions like the global customer base
of people with a sweet tooth or what you could sell a factory for if you had to
liquidate it next week—but let the strength of the business as a business
be your starting point.

You can't get the right price of a stock by looking at a single day in the
market. Only in time will good companies demonstrate that they know how to
succeed in business. Yet if you do your homework and find discounts—they
exist and are available for careful investors—you can be rewarded.
