Info - Tenaga Nasional Berhad


 













Analysis - Tenaga Nasional Berhad


Solvency (1) - Quick Ratio
  • Measures the extent to which a business can cover its current liabilities with those current assets readily convertible to cash.
  • Shows number of dollars of liquid assets available to cover each dollar of current debt.
  • Any time the ratio is 1:1 (1.0), the business is said to be in a liquid condition. 
  • The larger the ratio, the greater the liquidity.




Solvency (2) - Current Ratio

  • Measures the degree to which current assets cover current liabilities.
  • The higher the ratio, the more likely the company will be able to meet its liabilities. 
  • A ratio of 2 to 1 (2.0) or higher is desirable.



Solvency (3) - Current Liabilities to Net Worth Ratio

  • Indicates the amount due creditors within a year as a percentage of the owners' or stockholders' investment.
  • Measures the funds creditors are risking with a business temporarily against the funds permanently invested by its owners.
  • Normally a business starts to have trouble when this relationship exceeds 80%.



Solvency (4) - Total Liabilities to Net Worth Ratio

  • Shows how all of the company’s debt relates to the equity of the owner or stockholders.
  • The higher this ratio, the less protection there is for creditors.
  • If total liabilities exceed net worth then creditors have more at stake than stockbrokers.
  • The difference between this ratio and Current Liabilities to Net Worth Ratio is that it pinpoints the relative size of long-term debt, which can burden a firm with substantial interest charges.



Solvency (5) - Fixed Assets to Net Worth Ratio

  • Shows the percentage of assets centered in fixed assets compared to total equity.
  • Generally the higher this percentage is over 75%, the more vulnerable a concern becomes to unexpected hazards and business climate changes. 
  • Capital is frozen in the form of machinery and the margin for operating funds becomes too narrow to support day-to-day operations.



Efficiency (1) - Collection Period Ratio

  • Helpful in analyzing the collectibility of accounts receivable, or how fast a business can increase its cash supply.



Efficiency (2) - Net Sales to Inventory Ratio

  • Measures how fast inventory is moving the cash flow into the business.
  • When this ratio is high, it may indicate a situation where sales are being lost because a concern is understocked and/or customers are buying elsewhere.
  • If the ratio is too low, this may show that inventories are obsolete or stagnant.



Efficiency (3) - Assets to Net Sales Ratio

  • Rates sales to the total investment that is used to generate those sales.
  • If percentage is abnormally high, it indicates that a business is not being aggressive enough in its sales efforts, or that its assets are not being fully utilized. 
  • A low ratio may indicate a business is selling more than can be safely covered by its assets.



Efficiency (4) - Assets to Net Working Capital

  • Measures the number of times working capital turns over annually in relation to net sales. 
  • Should be viewed in conjunction with the assets to sales ratio.
  • A high turnover rate can indicate overtrading (excessive sales volume in relation to the investment in the business).
  • A high turnover may indicate that the business relies extensively upon credit granted by suppliers or the bank as a substitute for an adequate margin of operating funds.



Efficiency (5) - Payable to Net Sales Ratio

  • Measures how the company pays its suppliers in relation to the sales volume being transacted.
  • A low percentage would indicate a healthy ratio. A high percentage indicates the firm may be using suppliers to help finance operations.



Profitability (1) - Return on Sales, or Profit Margin

  • Measures profits after taxes on the year’s sales (profits earned per dollar of sales).
  • The higher this ratio, the better prepared the business to handle downtrends brought on by adverse conditions.



Profitability (2) - Return on Assets

  • The key indicator of profitability.
  • A high percentage tells you the company is well run and has a healthy return on assets.



Profitability (3) - Return on Equity

  • Measures the ability of a company’s management to realize an adequate return on the capital invested by the owners.


Bursa Malaysia - Largest Stock By Market Value

Largest Stocks by Market Value
Source: Information Services, Bursa Malaysia - in billions of RM, Data updated as at 6 January 2011


  1. CIMB Group Holdings Berhad (MYX: 1023) - RM66.59
  2. Malayan Banking Bhd (MYX: 1155) - RM65.97
  3. Sime Darby Berhad (MYX: 4197) - RM56.49
  4. Petronas Chemical Bhd, a subsidiary of Petronas (MYX: 5183) - RM47.36
  5. Genting Group (MYX: 3182) - RM41.96
  6. Axiata Group Berhad (MYX: 6888) - RM40.88
  7. IOI Corporation Bhd (MYX: 1961) - RM40.34
  8. Maxis Berhad (MYX: 6012) - RM40.20
  9. MISC Bhd (MYX: 3816) - RM37.59
  10. Tenaga Nasional Bhd (MYX: 5347) - RM35.98
  11. Public Bank Bhd (MYX: 1295) - RM33.28
  12. Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd (MYX: 2445) - RM24.15
  13. PLUS Expressways Berhad (MYX: 5052) - RM22.95
  14. Petronas Gas Bhd, a subsidiary of Petronas (MYX: 6033) - RM22.32
  15. AMMB Holdings Bhd (MYX: 1015) - RM21.19
  16. PPB Group Bhd (MYX: 4065) - RM20.89
  17. Genting Malaysia berhad (MYX: 4715) - RM20.82
  18. DIGI.COM Bhd(MYX: 6947) - RM19.44
  19. RHB Capital Bhd (MYX: 1066) - RM18.50
  20. YTL Power International Bhd (MYX: 6742) - RM17.52
  21. YTL Corporation Bhd (MYX: 4677) - RM15.97
  22. Hong Leong Bank Bhd (MYX: 5819) - RM14.77
  23. British American Tobacco Malaysia (MYX: 4162) - RM13.27
  24. Telekom Malaysia Bhd (MYX: 4863) - RM12.74
  25. Petronas Dagangan Bhd (MYX: 5681) - RM11.92
  26. UEM Land (MYX: 5148) - RM10.56
  27. Nestle (Malaysia) Berhad (MYX: 4707) - RM10.34
  28. Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd (MYX: 1082) - RM9.56
  29. Malaysian Marine Heavy Engineering Bhd, a subsidiary of Petronas (MYX: 5186) - RM9.52
  30. MMC Corporation Berhad (MYX: 2194) - RM8.89


Source:  Wikipedia