The Book/Share of Vistra Corp is 43.85
Book value per share is a company’s assets minus liabilities divided by the number of shares outstanding.
mrq (most recent quarter)
The book value of a company is the value of its assets according to its balance sheet account balance. For assets, the value is based on the original cost of the asset less any depreciation, amortization or impairment costs made against the asset. Traditionally, a company's book value is its total assets minus intangible assets and liabilities. However, in practice, depending on the source of the calculation, book value may variably include goodwill, intangible assets, or both. The value inherent in its workforce, part of the intellectual capital of a company, is always ignored. The book value of a company may be also referred as with the term net asset value.
The book value per share is the the balance sheet equity value divided by the number of shares outstanding at the date of the balance sheet. Book value per share can be used to generate a measure of comprehensive earnings, when the opening and closing values are reconciled. The sale of shares/units by a business increases the total book value. Book value per share will increase if the additional shares are issued at a price higher than the pre-existing book value per share. The purchase of its own shares by a business will decrease total book value. Book value per share will decrease if more is paid for them than was received when originally issued. Dividends paid out will decrease book value per share value.
vistra energy is an integrated retail and generation company, with a strong balance sheet, positive cash flows and a strategy for growth. with a tradition of operational excellence from predecessor companies that go back more than a century and a vision for the future, vistra energy has unique expertise in customer relationships, commodity pricing, and risk management. the retail company serves 1.7 million residential and business customers in texas, backed by nearly 18,000 mw of a balanced generation portfolio in texas, including 2,300 mw fueled by nuclear power, 8,000 mw fueled by coal and 7,500 mw fueled by natural gas, and is a large purchaser of renewable power including wind and solar-generated electricity.