![]() Stocks with a Value Score from 81 to 100 are considered deep value, those with a score between 61 and 80 are a good value and so on. To be assigned a Value Score, stocks must have a valid (non-null) ratio and corresponding ranking for at least two of the six valuation ratios. The score is variable, meaning it can consider all six ratios or, should any of the six ratios not be valid, the remaining ratios that are valid. ![]() The value score is the percentile rank of the average of the percentile ranks of the price-to-sales ratio, price-earnings ratio, enterprise-value-to-EBITDA (EV/EBITDA) ratio, shareholder yield, price-to-book-value ratio and price-to-free-cash-flow ratio. ![]() Buying stocks that are going to go up typically means buying stocks that are undervalued in the first place, although momentum investors may argue that point.ĪAII’s A+ Investor Value Grade is derived from a stock’s value score.
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