financial ratio which relates a company's stock (share price) to its total assets less any intangible assets (goodwill, patents) minus current and long-term liabilities.
Market price divided by stock equity. The ratio shows how much investors are willing to pay for each dollar of the company.
The price of a security per share divided by its book value per share. In terms of a portfolio, it is the weighted average Price/Book Ratio of the securities held in the portfolio.
The latest price per share divided by the last fiscal year net asset value (book value) per share, for a given corporation. Used by analysts to determine whether a stock is undervalued or overvalued.
A ratio that represents the premium (or discount) a shareholder pays relative to the underlying company's net worth.
A financial ratio in which a company's Market Value is divided by its reported Book Value.
Compares a stock's market value to the value of total assets less total liabilities (book). It is calculated by dividing the current price by the common stockholders' equity per share (book value), adjusted for stock splits.
Compares the price at which a stock is trading and presumably could be sold to the value of total assets less total liabilities (book value). This ratio is determined by dividing current stock price by common stockholder equity per share (book value), adjusted for stock splits.
The share price of a stock divided by its net worth, or book value, per share.
The market price of a stock divided by the book value per share. The ratio gives an immediate valuation of the stock price compared to the underlying company net worth. The lower the ratio, the cheaper the stock compared to the company assets.
The weighted average of the price/book ratios of all the stocks in a fund's portfolio. The P/B ratio of a company is calculated by dividing the market price of its stock by the company's per-share book value.
The price/book (P/B) ratio of a fund is the weighted average of the price/book ratios of all the stocks in a fund's portfolio. Book value is the total assets of a company, less total liabilities (sometimes referred to as carrying value). A company's book value is calculated by dividing the market price of its outstanding stock by the company's book value, and then adjusting for the number of shares outstanding. (Stocks with negative book values are excluded from this calculation.) In computing a fund's average P/B, Lipper weights each portfolio holding by the percentage of equity assets it represents, so that larger positions have proportionately greater influence on the final P/B.
Compares a stock's market value to the value of total assets less total liabilities (book). Determined by dividing current price by common stockholders' equity per share (book value), adjusted for stock splits. Also called Market-to-Book.
The price per share of a stock divided by its book value (i.e., net worth) per share. For a portfolio, the ratio is the weighted average price/book ratio of the stocks it holds.
A ratio which compares the market value of a company’s shares to the company’s net book value, i.e. the book value of total assets less total liabilities. It is calculated by dividing the market value of the share by the ordinary shareholder equity per share (book value). Français: Prix/valeur comptable Español: Relación entre el precio y el valor contable
For an individual company, the P/B ratio is the current share price divided by a company's book value (or net worth) per share. A P/B ratio lower than 1 indicates a company is trading below its book value per share (and, theoretically, below its liquidation value). For a mutual fund, the P/B ratio is the weighted average of the price/book ratios of all the stocks in a fund's portfolio.
Indicates whether a stock is fairly valued by comparing its market value to the value of total assets minus total liabilities (book). Divide the current stock price by the common stockholders' equity per share, adjusted for stock splits mutual fund's P/B ratio is the weighted average of all the stocks in the mutual fund's portfolio.