52-Week High/Low

  

The Limbo Stick Metric! How low did you go? This broadly quoted metric covers trading prices of a given stock (and yes, it's usually used for stocks, not so much for bonds) over the trailing 52 weeks, aka a single Earth year. The good indices that track include intraday highs and lows, so that closing prices might have been a bit higher than the absolute low price that the stock hit in the last year. And why does this matter? Because investors love to bemoan the price at which they could have gotten this $72.36 stock when it was trading at $48.96 29 weeks ago. But yeah...that's the way the limbo stick crumbles.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Volatility?77 Views

00:00

In finance allah shmoop what is volatility beta this thing

00:08

that's the symbol for volatility on the street we mean

00:11

the wall one not the mean one and it is

00:14

so commonly used that the in crowd members just say

00:17

beta when they're referring to volatility unless they're from tennessee

00:21

in which case they say you ve all y'all all

00:24

right so here's a siri's of stock prices stamped each

00:27

day that has lo ve all or low beta and

00:30

here's a siri's that has high beta dead man's pulse

00:33

versus rocky mountains Well what makes a stock volatile uncertainty

00:38

Think about it this way If everyone knew for sure

00:41

what a given stocks earnings would be for the next

00:44

ten years quarter by quarter and they also knew what

00:47

the overall markets average earnings would be in a few

00:50

other things like revenue growth and world conditions and we're

00:53

going to be war inflation there wouldn't be a lot

00:56

of guesswork The quote right unquote price today would be

00:59

thirty two dollars eighty three cents and the quote right

01:03

unquote rate of compounding would be eight percent in the

01:06

stock would slowly go up but this rate but in

01:09

non disney land riel life well nobody really knows much

01:12

of anything So stockcharts look like this and nerve endings

01:16

of wall street traders look like this Neither of them 00:01:19.771 --> [endTime] looked much like this chart So that's all you

Up Next

Finance: What is the Historical Trading Range?
18 Views

What is the Historical Trading Range? The historical trading range is just the collection of prices a security has been trading at since its IPO in...

Finance: What's the difference between low and high standard deviation?
9 Views

What's the difference between low and high standard deviation? In financial analysis, deviation refers to the the degree of variance from the avera...

Finance: What are At-the-Close Order and At-the-Opening Order?
24 Views

What are At-the-Close Orders and At-the-Opening Orders? At-the-Close orders are given to brokers and the brokers can only fill them at the close of...

Finance: What is Beta?
22 Views

What is Beta? Beta is a figure associated with public companies that measures how risky the company’s stock is in comparison to the market as a w...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)