Price to book ratio
A price to book ratio, or price-to-book ratio, often expressed as a P/B ratio, is used to compare a company's current market price to its book value. It is calculated by dividing the company's current share price by its book value per share.[1]
One way to understand book value is as follows: when a business is liquidated, the book value is what may be left over for the owners after all the debts are paid. Paying only a P/B of 1 means the investor will get all his investment back, assuming assets can be resold at their book value.
Shares of capital intensive industries trade at lower P/B ratios because they generate lower earnings per dollar of assets. Business depending on human capital will generate higher earnings per dollar of assets, so will trade at higher P/B ratios. Value stocks tend to have low P/B ratios, and growth stocks high ones.
See also
- Price to earnings ratio (P/E ratio)
References
- ^ "Price to book ratio". AccountingTools, Inc. March 18, 2020. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
External links
- Investopedia, Price-To-Book Ratio (P/B Ratio) Definition
- Wikipedia: P/B ratio