Mainly applies to dealer securities. Fixed income value of a convertible, the price at which the convert would have to sell as a straight debt instrument relative to the yield of other bonds of like maturity, size and quality; represents a presumed floor to the bond, allowing, of course, for the continued credit worthiness of the issuer and the general level of interest rates. Bond value. See: conversion value
The estimated price a convertible security would sell for on the open market if it lacked convertibility. also called straight value.
The estimated value of a certain real
The amount that investors believe a security should be trading for, or what they think it is worth; the price at which a convertible would trade if it were nonconvertible and if it were priced at or near the prevailing market yields of comparable nonconvertible issues.
The theoretic intrinsic value of an asset or company.
(2) This is the value that a buyer should pay after deciding on the return required on the property. This can be different to market value, which is based on comparable sales.
Value, closely associated with market value, but also impacted by cash flows, investment objectives, and investor-specific criteria.
The estimated price a convertible security would sell for on the open market based on the values of a particular investor’s individual requirements and expectations. (Also called “Value to the Ownerâ€)
The intrinsic value of a security, as measured generally by the basic yardsticks of earnings, income, and asset value
Estimated value of a convertible if it lacked the option to convert.
the value to a particular investor based on individual investment requirements and expectations. {NOTE: in Canada, the term used is "Value to the Owner"