Browse Valuation and Analysis

Book and Tangible Book Value

Book value, book value per share, book versus market value, tangible book value, TBVPS, and NCAVPS terms.

Book and Tangible Book Value covers book value, book value per share, book versus market value, tangible book value, TBVPS, and NCAVPS terms.

Use these pages when balance-sheet measures change asset value, downside protection, recoverability, or valuation comparability. It sits inside Asset Value and Balance Sheet Measures, so readers can move up when the broader valuation context matters.

Use the table below to choose the narrower valuation branch before relying on a model input, market multiple, forecast, risk premium, price signal, or recommendation.

What This Branch Covers

AreaUse it for
Book ValueAccounting net worth from the balance sheet, often compared with market value in equity analysis.
Book Value Per SharePer-share version of book equity used to compare accounting value with stock price.
Book Value vs. Market ValueComparison between accounting net worth and market pricing, and why the two can diverge sharply.
Net Current Asset Value per Share (NCAVPS)A conservative deep-value metric that subtracts total liabilities from current assets and divides the result by shares outstanding.
Net Tangible AssetsNet tangible assets measure a company’s assets minus liabilities and intangible assets, helping analysts focus on hard asset backing.
Tangible Book Value (TBV)Tangible book value measures book equity after excluding intangible assets and goodwill.
Tangible Book Value Per Share (TBVPS)Tangible book value per share divides tangible common equity by shares outstanding to estimate hard asset value per share.

What to Check

  • Forecast source, valuation date, market data, accounting adjustments, and model version.
  • Cash-flow input, discount rate, multiple, growth assumption, terminal value, balance-sheet adjustment, and scenario range.
  • Comparable set, transaction set, sector, geography, size, leverage, margin profile, and accounting basis.
  • Effect on intrinsic value, relative value, price target, margin of safety, impairment view, deal price, or recommendation.
  • Sensitivity to growth, margins, reinvestment, discount rate, exit multiple, leverage, and market conditions.

Common Mistakes

  • Treating a valuation output as a precise fact instead of a range of estimates.
  • Comparing multiples without normalizing earnings, leverage, accounting policy, growth, and risk.
  • Ignoring valuation date, source quality, cyclicality, nonrecurring items, and sensitivity analysis.
  • Using valuation terminology as personalized investment, tax, legal, or appraisal advice.

Valuation content is educational and does not provide investment, tax, legal, accounting, appraisal, or valuation advice.

In this section

Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.

Book Value

Accounting net worth from the balance sheet, often compared with market value in equity analysis.

Book Value Per Share

Per-share version of book equity used to compare accounting value with stock price.

Net Tangible Assets

Net tangible assets measure a company's assets minus liabilities and intangible assets, helping analysts focus on hard asset backing.

Tangible Book Value

Tangible book value measures book equity after excluding intangible assets and goodwill.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026