01-02-2020, 07:58 PM
I suppose some kind of estimate can be done by referring to previous year's Q1 and discounting its revenue based on different assumptions of severity.
Cash levels will take a hit from the overheads, but is unlikely to be of significant damage to book value. As WB will put it, think of it as a "dividend cheque lost in the mail."
What is more important is how the company will perform in the next 5 to 10 years. And whether present market prices represent an attractive discount to such performance.
Cash levels will take a hit from the overheads, but is unlikely to be of significant damage to book value. As WB will put it, think of it as a "dividend cheque lost in the mail."
What is more important is how the company will perform in the next 5 to 10 years. And whether present market prices represent an attractive discount to such performance.