What is Book Value?
Book value is the net asset value of a company according to its balance sheet—total assets minus total liabilities. It represents the theoretical amount shareholders would receive if the company liquidated all assets and paid off all debts.
Book Value Formula
$$\text{Book Value} = \text{Total Assets} - \text{Total Liabilities}$$
Or equivalently:
$$\text{Book Value} = \text{Shareholders’ Equity}$$
Example Calculation
| Balance Sheet Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total Assets | $500M |
| Total Liabilities | $300M |
| Book Value | $200M |
Book Value Per Share (BVPS)
More useful for comparing companies:
$$\text{BVPS} = \frac{\text{Book Value}}{\text{Shares Outstanding}}$$
Example
- Book Value: $200 million
- Shares Outstanding: 50 million
BVPS = $200M ÷ 50M = $4.00 per share
Price-to-Book (P/B) Ratio
Compares market price to book value:
$$\text{P/B Ratio} = \frac{\text{Stock Price}}{\text{Book Value Per Share}}$$
| P/B Ratio | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Below 1 | Trading below asset value (potentially undervalued) |
| 1-3 | Typical range |
| Above 3 | Premium valuation (growth expectations) |
Why Book Value Matters
1. Floor Value
Theoretical minimum value of the company.
2. Value Investing
Warren Buffett and value investors look for stocks trading near or below book value.
3. Bank Evaluation
Financial institutions are often valued relative to book value.
4. Liquidation Analysis
What shareholders might receive in worst case.
Book Value by Industry
Different industries have different typical P/B ratios:
| Industry | Typical P/B |
|---|---|
| Banks/Financials | 0.8 - 1.5 |
| Insurance | 1.0 - 2.0 |
| Utilities | 1.5 - 2.5 |
| Manufacturing | 2.0 - 4.0 |
| Technology | 5.0 - 20.0+ |
| Software/SaaS | 10.0+ |
Asset-light businesses naturally have higher P/B ratios.
Real Company Examples
| Company | Stock Price | BVPS | P/B Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| JPMorgan | $195 | $104 | 1.9x |
| Bank of America | $42 | $33 | 1.3x |
| Apple | $225 | $4.40 | 51x |
| Microsoft | $415 | $36 | 11.5x |
Tangible vs. Intangible Book Value
Book Value (Total)
Includes all assets, including intangibles.
Tangible Book Value
Excludes intangible assets and goodwill:
$$\text{Tangible BV} = \text{Book Value} - \text{Intangibles} - \text{Goodwill}$$
Tangible book value is more conservative and useful for liquidation analysis.
Limitations of Book Value
1. Historical Cost
Assets are recorded at purchase price, not current market value.
2. Intangible Assets
Many valuable assets (brands, IP, talent) aren’t on the balance sheet.
3. Asset-Light Businesses
Technology and service companies have little tangible book value.
4. Depreciation
Accounting depreciation may not reflect actual asset values.
5. Hidden Liabilities
Some obligations (lawsuits, pension shortfalls) may not appear.
Book Value Growth
Track book value growth over time:
$$\text{BVPS Growth} = \frac{\text{Current BVPS} - \text{Prior BVPS}}{\text{Prior BVPS}} \times 100%$$
Consistent BVPS growth indicates retained earnings and value creation.
Using Book Value in Analysis
Value Screen
Look for stocks with:
- P/B ratio under 1.5
- Consistent BVPS growth
- Profitable operations
Bank Analysis
Banks are often valued on P/B:
- Below 1.0 may signal concerns
- Premium to book indicates quality confidence
Graham’s Formula
Benjamin Graham suggested looking for stocks where:
$$\text{P/E} \times \text{P/B} < 22.5$$
Related Financial Terms
This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.