Valuation & Ratios~10 min+25 XP

P/E, P/B, EV/EBITDA

Three multiples that describe the whole market

A market price without context is meaningless. $180/share says nothing; $180/share at 30× earnings vs $180/share at 8× earnings are entirely different businesses at entirely different valuations. Multiples are how the market compresses a company's financials into a comparable number.

The three you'll see most often:

  • P/E — Price / Earnings per share — "how many years of current earnings does today's price represent?"
  • P/B — Price / Book value per share — "how much more than the company's accounting net worth am I paying?"
  • EV/EBITDA — Enterprise Value / EBITDA — "how many years of operating cash flow does the full business cost?"

Each answers a different question, hides different sins, and suits different industries. Using the wrong one on the wrong company is the single most common valuation mistake.

Play with it

Preset
P/E30.0
P/B45.0
EV/EBITDA21.9
Market cap ($M)$2790.0B
Enterprise value ($M)$2740.0B
EV = Market Cap + Debt − Cash. EV/EBITDA is capital-structure-neutral (it looks at total enterprise value and operating cash generation, regardless of how the company is financed). Notice the growth-tech preset returns N/A on P/E (negative EPS) — a common reason analysts reach for EV/EBITDA or price-to-sales for unprofitable companies.

Toggle through the presets and notice: the growth-tech company returns N/A on P/E because earnings are negative. This is the everyday reason analysts reach for EV/EBITDA or price-to-sales: a growing but unprofitable company has no meaningful P/E.

P/E — the default multiple

P/E=Price per shareEarnings per shareP/E = \frac{\text{Price per share}}{\text{Earnings per share}}

Two common flavors:

  • Trailing P/E (TTM): based on the last 12 months of realized EPS. Most conservative.
  • Forward P/E: based on analyst-estimated next-12-months EPS. Tends to be lower (because estimates assume growth) — and anchors on potentially-optimistic analyst forecasts.

What it does well: single-number comparison of earnings yields. A P/E of 15 means a 1/15 ≈ 6.7% earnings yield.

What it hides:

  • Non-cash earnings distortions: depreciation methods, intangible amortization, stock-based comp treatment. Two companies with identical cash generation can report very different earnings.
  • Capital structure: a company that grows earnings by piling on debt looks identical to one that grows via operations when you only look at P/E.
  • One-off items: write-downs, gains on asset sales, settlement payments — these get included in reported earnings but don't repeat. Many pros adjust to "operating EPS" that strips these out.
  • Negative earnings: a startup with −$2 EPS has no meaningful P/E. Reporting P/E as negative is not useful; most screens just show "N/M" (not meaningful).

Rule of thumb: mature industrials and financials trade 10–18×; growth tech 25–60×; regulated utilities 12–20×; deep cyclicals (steel, airlines) can trade at 4× at the top of the cycle and 60× at the trough — which is exactly backwards from intuition. P/E for cyclicals is dangerous.

P/B — for asset-heavy businesses

P/B=Price per shareBook value per shareP/B = \frac{\text{Price per share}}{\text{Book value per share}}

Book value = Shareholders' Equity = Total Assets − Total Liabilities.

Where it shines: financial companies. A bank's balance sheet is its business — loans, deposits, trading assets. Book value approximates liquidation value more closely than for operating businesses. Historical bank P/B ranges: distressed banks trade below 1.0× (market says book is overstated); healthy banks 1.2–2.0×; premium franchises (JPM peaks, Bank of America in good times) can reach 2.5×.

Where it misleads:

  • Asset-light businesses: Apple's book value per share is a fraction of its market price not because Apple is overvalued, but because most of Apple's value (brand, ecosystem, engineering talent, operating leverage) doesn't sit on the balance sheet. Apple-like P/B of 45× is meaningless.
  • Intangibles-heavy businesses: software, pharma, and media companies have the same issue. The balance sheet understates the productive assets.
  • Goodwill from acquisitions inflates book value without adding productive capacity. Companies that have grown by acquisition often show P/B that looks reasonable but is misleading because the goodwill will be written down at some point.
  • Share buybacks reduce book value numerically (equity falls as cash leaves) while the business is unchanged. P/B can look elevated purely from a buyback program.

Rule of thumb: P/B is useful for banks, insurance, REITs, industrial conglomerates; mostly useless for tech, software, pharma, brand-driven consumer staples.

EV/EBITDA — the capital-structure-neutral multiple

EV=Market Cap+Total DebtCashEV = \text{Market Cap} + \text{Total Debt} - \text{Cash} EV/EBITDA=EVEBITDAEV/EBITDA = \frac{EV}{\text{EBITDA}}

Read this as: "how many years of operating cash generation would it take to buy the entire enterprise — equity and debt alike, net of cash on hand?"

Why this is the analyst's favorite:

  • Capital-structure-neutral. Two otherwise-identical companies, one with $50B of debt and one with zero, have very different P/Es but very similar EV/EBITDA. EV/EBITDA tells you about operating economics, stripping out financing choices.
  • Depreciation-neutral. EBITDA = Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, Amortization. This strips out non-cash accounting choices that plague P/E. Two mining companies with identical cash generation but different depreciation schedules will show identical EBITDA and different EPS.
  • Cross-border comparable. Different countries have different tax regimes, but EBITDA is pre-tax. You can compare a French industrial to a Japanese one without first having to match accounting norms.

Where it falls down:

  • Heavy-capex businesses: EBITDA ignores capex, but capex is real money spent to maintain the business. Utilities, telecom, heavy manufacturing — EBITDA systematically overstates free cash flow. Use EV/EBIT or EV/FCF instead for these.
  • Bank / insurance: EV/EBITDA is meaningless for financials. Their "operating" cash flow looks more like net interest income, and their debt isn't financing debt — it's the product. Use P/B and P/E for these.
  • Unprofitable companies: if EBITDA is negative (some early-stage SaaS, biotech), EV/EBITDA goes negative or infinite. Analysts switch to EV/Revenue or EV/ARR.

Rule of thumb: EV/EBITDA is the default for M&A analysis, cross-company comparisons in the same industry, and any company with meaningful debt. Historical ranges: mature industrials 7–10×; consumer staples 12–16×; growth tech 20–40×.

When each multiple is the right tool

IndustryP/EP/BEV/EBITDA
Mature industrialBest
Software / SaaS✓ (if prof)✗ useless
Banks / insuranceBest
REITsBest✓ (via FFO)
Utilities✗ capex-heavy
Early-stage growth✗ negative✗ useless✗ negative
Commodity cyclicals✗ misleading✓ (norm)

The growth-tech preset — why analysts reach for alternatives

The calculator's growth-tech preset shows EPS = −$1.50. The P/E is literally undefined — the formula breaks. This is common: Uber didn't have positive EPS until 2023; Tesla's first full profitable year was 2020. Yet these companies had tens of billions in enterprise value during the negative-earnings years.

For these, analysts use:

  • EV/Revenue — simple, unburdened by profitability
  • EV/ARR (annual recurring revenue) — for subscription businesses
  • EV/Gross profit — when revenue has wildly different unit economics across peers
  • Rule-of-40 for SaaS — revenue growth % + operating margin % ≥ 40%

Kaufman and Murphy don't cover these (they're technical-analysis-focused). For the grounding: Graham's Intelligent Investor defines P/B and P/E extensively; Schilit's Financial Shenanigans covers how each metric gets gamed (revenue recognition tricks inflate P/E upward; goodwill and intangibles inflate P/B downward).

Quick check

Question 1 / 20 correct

Company A: $50B market cap, $5B debt, $2B cash, $4B EBITDA. Company B: $50B market cap, $0 debt, $0 cash, $4B EBITDA. Which has the lower EV/EBITDA, and what does that tell you?

What you now know

  • P/E — simplest multiple; distorted by non-cash charges, one-offs, and capital structure; useless for negative earnings
  • P/B — best for asset-heavy businesses (banks, insurance, REITs); meaningless for asset-light (tech, brands, software)
  • EV/EBITDA — capital-structure-neutral, depreciation-neutral; best default for most operating businesses; wrong for banks and capex-heavy
  • Different industries demand different multiples; using P/E on a cyclical or P/B on Apple will mislead you
  • Growth companies with negative earnings break P/E entirely — analysts substitute EV/Revenue or Rule-of-40
  • Low multiples aren't automatic buys; they're the starting point for "why is the market pricing this cheap?"

Next: Key Metrics & Shenanigans — Howard Schilit's catalog of how managements distort each of the metrics we just covered.

Press complete when you're done.
Back to tree