Browse Valuation and Analysis

Book Value Multiples

Valuation-multiple terms for book-to-market, price-to-book, and price-to-tangible-book ratios.

Book Value Multiples covers valuation-multiple terms for book-to-market, price-to-book, and price-to-tangible-book ratios.

Use these pages when reported earnings, normalized metrics, market multiples, asset values, or peer comparisons change relative value or analytical interpretation. It sits inside Price, Earnings, Growth, and Book Multiples, 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-to-Market RatioThe book-to-market ratio compares book equity with market value and is a common value investing and factor-analysis signal.
Price-to-Book RatioEquity valuation multiple comparing market price with book value, often most useful in asset-heavy sectors.
Price to Tangible Book Value (PTBV)Price to tangible book value compares market price with tangible book value, often for banks, insurers, and asset-heavy companies.

What to Check

  • Reported metric, adjusted metric, period, accounting basis, nonrecurring items, and normalization method.
  • Multiple numerator and denominator, enterprise versus equity value, leverage, minority interest, cash, and lease treatment.
  • Peer group, transaction set, sector, growth, margin, size, cyclicality, and accounting comparability.
  • Market price, liquidity, trading volume, valuation date, sentiment signal, and overvaluation or undervaluation claim.
  • Effect on relative valuation, quality of earnings, covenant analysis, price target, and valuation range.

Common Mistakes

  • Comparing P/E, EV/EBITDA, and price-to-sales without matching capital structure and earnings quality.
  • Using stale or mismatched market prices and financial periods.
  • Ignoring one-time items, dilution, leases, cash, debt, and working-capital adjustments.
  • Treating high or low multiples as automatic buy or sell signals.

Earnings and multiples content is educational and does not provide investment, tax, 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-to-Market Ratio

The book-to-market ratio compares book equity with market value and is a common value investing and factor-analysis signal.

P/B Ratio

Equity valuation multiple comparing market price with book value, often most useful in asset-heavy sectors.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026