Seeing is believing!

Before you order, simply sign up for a free user account and in seconds you'll be experiencing the best in CFA exam preparation.

Basic Question 0 of 16

The fair value of a company is

A. always <= its going concern value.
B. always >= its going concern value.
C. normally less than its going concern value.
D. normally more than its going concern value.

User Contributed Comments 6

User Comment
taowu good one!
vi2009 liquidation = how liquid the stock is ... the more popular the stock is in the market the more liquid it is, otherwise there is a liquidity discount
Shalva I got this one wrong .... Interesting concept
qwsx really a awesome q..must admit
rhardin vi2009, this has nothing to do with the "liquidity" of the stock. It has to do with liquidating a company because it is better dissolved then for it to continue in operations.
Roy1 Hmm....Got this wrong.
You need to log in first to add your comment.
I was very pleased with your notes and question bank. I especially like the mock exams because it helped to pull everything together.
Martin Rockenfeldt

Martin Rockenfeldt

Learning Outcome Statements

define valuation and intrinsic value and explain sources of perceived mispricing;

explain the going concern assumption and contrast a going concern value to a liquidation value;

describe definitions of value and justify which definition of value is most relevant to public company valuation;

CFA® 2024 Level II Curriculum, Volume 3, Module 22.