PINX: BRER
Morningstar‘s Stock Analysis BRER
1-Star Price
INVESTOR
5-Star Price
INVESTOR
Economic Moat
INVESTOR
Morningstar Quantitative ratings for equities (denoted on this page by) are generated using an algorithm that compares companies that are not under analyst coverage to peer companies that do receive analyst-driven ratings. Companies withratings are not formally covered by a Morningstar analyst, but are statistically matched to analyst-rated companies, allowing our models to calculate a quantitative moat, fair value, and uncertainty rating. Click here for more on how to use these ratings.
Company Profile BRER
Bresler & Reiner Inc is a real estate company that develops, manages and sells commercial, residential, hospitality properties and land. The company invests its assets through direct ownership or joint ventures with unrelated third parties. It operates in the major metropolitan areas including Washington, DC; Orlando, Florida; Philadelphia and Pennsylvania.
Competitors & Peers BRER
Morningstar does not cover competitors or peers for this firm.
FAQs for Bresler & Reiner Inc Stock
No. BRER does not currently have a forward dividend yield.
Dividend yield allows investors, particularly those interested in dividend-paying stocks,
to compare the relationship between a stock’s price and how it rewards stockholders through dividends.
The formula for calculating dividend yield is to divide the annual dividend paid per share by the stock price.
Learn more about dividend yield.
BRER’s market cap is 136,930.30.
Market capitalization is calculated by taking a company’s share price and multiplying it by the total number of shares.
It’s often used to measure a company’s size. In the Morningstar Style Box, large-cap names account for the
largest 70% of U.S. stocks, mid-cap names account for the largest 70–90%, and small-cap names are the remaining 10% of companies.
Learn more about market capitalization.
BRER’s stock style is Small Value.
Style is an investment factor that has a meaningful impact on investment risk and returns.
Style is calculated by combining value and growth scores, which are first individually calculated.
High-growth stocks tend to represent the technology, healthcare, and communications sectors. They rarely distribute dividends to shareholders, opting for reinvestment in their businesses. More value-oriented stocks tend to represent financial services, utilities, and energy stocks. These are established companies that reliably pay dividends.
Learn more about style.
BRER’s beta can be found in Trading Information at the top of this page.
A stock’s beta measures how closely tied its price movements have been to the performance of the overall market.
Compare BRER’s historical performance against its industry peers and the overall market.