The Southern Company (SO)
(Delayed Data from NYSE)
$73.21 USD
-1.16 (-1.56%)
Updated Apr 26, 2024 04:01 PM ET
After-Market: $73.43 +0.22 (0.30%) 7:58 PM ET
3-Hold of 5 3
D Value C Growth C Momentum D VGM
Fundamental Charts
About Price to Cash Flow
The Price to Cash Flow ratio or P/CF is price divided by its cash flow per share. It's another great way to determine whether a company is undervalued or overvalued with the denominator being cash flow. One of the reasons why some investors prefer the P/CF ratio over the P/E ratio is because the net income of the cash flow portion rightly adds depreciation and amortization back in since these are not cash expenditures. In contrast, the net income that goes into the earnings portion of the P/E ratio does not add these in, thus artificially reducing the income and skewing the P/E ratio. Like the P/E ratio, a lower number is considered better. A value under 20 is generally considered good.
SO 73.21 -1.16(-1.56%)
Will SO be a Portfolio Killer in April?
Zacks Investment Research is releasing its prediction for SO based on the 1-3 month trading system that more than doubles the S&P 500.
Zacks News for SO
Southern Co. (SO) Earnings Expected to Grow: Should You Buy?
CMS Energy (CMS) Q1 Earnings Top Estimates
SO: What are Zacks experts saying now?
Zacks Private Portfolio Services
Should You Invest in the iShares U.S. Utilities ETF (IDU)?
Should You Invest in the Vanguard Utilities ETF (VPU)?
The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights ServiceNow, The Progressive, Analog Devices, The Southern Company and Welltower
Other News for SO
Historically Black Colleges and Universities in Georgia and Florida Join Forces with SouthStar Energy Services in Sustainability Partnership
March's Dividend Portfolio Update Sets New All-Time Record - 100 Holdings, 21 Buys
WeaveGrid launches electric vehicle initiatives with Southern Company subsidiaries, simplifying EV home charging in the Southeast
Celebrating Earth Month: Southern Company NFWF Partnership
Southern Company price target raised by $3 at BofA, here's why