Book Value: What a Company Is Worth on Paper
How Book Value Works
Book value is an accounting concept, not a market concept. It’s rooted in the balance sheet and reflects historical costs — what the company paid for its assets, adjusted for depreciation and amortization — not what those assets are worth today on the open market.
Think of it this way: if you bought a building for $10 million five years ago and depreciated it to $7 million on your books, the book value is $7 million. The building might sell for $15 million tomorrow, but the balance sheet doesn’t know that.
This gap between book value and market reality is exactly why book value is a starting point for analysis, not the finish line.
The Book Value Formula
This is identical to total shareholders’ equity on the balance sheet. In fact, if you open any company’s 10-K filing and look at the balance sheet, shareholders’ equity is book value.
BVPS strips out preferred stock equity because preferred holders have a senior claim. What’s left is the book value attributable to each common share — and the number you’ll use when calculating the price-to-book (P/B) ratio.
Book Value Example
Let’s walk through a simplified balance sheet:
| Balance Sheet Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total Assets | $500,000,000 |
| Total Liabilities | $320,000,000 |
| Total Shareholders’ Equity (Book Value) | $180,000,000 |
| Preferred Equity | $20,000,000 |
| Common Equity | $160,000,000 |
| Common Shares Outstanding | 40,000,000 |
| Book Value Per Share | $4.00 |
If this stock trades at $12 per share, the P/B ratio is 3.0x — meaning the market values the company at three times what the balance sheet says it’s worth. That premium reflects the market’s view that the company’s earning power, brand, intellectual property, or growth prospects justify paying well above liquidation value.
What Book Value Includes (and Doesn’t Include)
| Included in Book Value | NOT Included in Book Value |
|---|---|
| Cash and cash equivalents | Internally generated brand value |
| Property, plant, and equipment (net of depreciation) | Customer relationships and loyalty |
| Inventory | Human capital and talent |
| Accounts receivable | Future growth potential |
| Acquired goodwill and intangible assets | Internally developed intellectual property (unless acquired) |
| Retained earnings | Market sentiment and momentum |
This table explains why asset-light businesses like tech companies almost always trade at high P/B multiples. Their most valuable assets — software, network effects, data — don’t show up on the balance sheet. For these companies, book value is nearly useless as a standalone valuation tool.
When Book Value Matters Most
Book value isn’t equally useful across all sectors. It’s most informative when a company’s assets are tangible, liquid, and carried close to market value.
Banks and Financial Institutions
Banks are the classic book-value sector. Their assets (loans, securities, cash) and liabilities (deposits, debt) are financial instruments that are regularly marked to market or carried at amortized cost. The P/B ratio is the go-to valuation metric for banks — a bank trading below 1.0x book is either distressed or undervalued.
Insurance Companies
Similar to banks, insurers hold large portfolios of financial assets. Book value approximates realizable value better here than in most industries.
REITs and Real Estate
REITs own physical properties carried on the balance sheet at historical cost less depreciation. Since real estate often appreciates, REIT book values tend to understate true asset value. Analysts use Net Asset Value (NAV) as a supplement, but book value per share is still a key reference point.
Asset-Heavy Industrials
Companies with significant property, plant, equipment, and inventory — manufacturers, utilities, energy producers — have balance sheets where book value carries real economic meaning.
Tangible Book Value
Tangible book value strips out assets you can’t touch or sell independently — goodwill from acquisitions and intangible assets like patents or trademarks. For companies that have done a lot of M&A, tangible book value can be dramatically lower than total book value. If goodwill gets impaired (written down), book value takes a direct hit.
Book Value vs. Market Value
| Dimension | Book Value | Market Value |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Balance sheet | Stock market (price × shares) |
| Basis | Historical cost, accounting rules | Investor expectations, supply and demand |
| Reflects | What the company paid for its assets | What investors believe the company is worth |
| Changes | Quarterly (with earnings and write-downs) | Every second the market is open |
| Includes intangibles | Only if acquired | Yes — brand, IP, growth all priced in |
| Key ratio | P/B ratio connects the two | Market cap |
When market value is below book value (P/B < 1.0), it signals one of two things: the market believes the assets are overvalued on the books (impairment risk), or the stock is genuinely undervalued. Value investors screen for P/B below 1.0 as a starting point, but the number alone doesn’t tell you which scenario you’re in.
Book Value vs. Intrinsic Value
Book value looks backward — it tells you what’s been recorded. Intrinsic value looks forward — it estimates what the business is worth based on future cash flows. A company with modest book value can have enormous intrinsic value if it generates strong free cash flow, and vice versa.
Warren Buffett famously noted that book value was once a reasonable proxy for intrinsic value at Berkshire Hathaway, but over time the two diverged so dramatically that he stopped using book value as a performance benchmark entirely.
How Dilution Affects Book Value Per Share
When a company issues new shares, the impact on BVPS depends on the issuance price relative to existing book value. If shares are issued above BVPS, book value per share increases (accretive). If issued below BVPS, it decreases (dilutive). A stock buyback above BVPS reduces book value per share, while a buyback below BVPS increases it.
Key Takeaways
- Book value = total assets minus total liabilities = shareholders’ equity
- Book value per share (BVPS) strips out preferred equity and divides by common shares outstanding
- It reflects historical cost, not market value — a starting point for analysis, not a conclusion
- Most useful for asset-heavy sectors: banks, insurers, REITs, industrials
- Nearly useless as a standalone metric for asset-light businesses (tech, services)
- Tangible book value (excluding goodwill and intangibles) is often the more conservative and honest measure
- The P/B ratio connects book value to market value and is a key valuation tool for financial stocks
Related Terms
| Term | Relationship to Book Value |
|---|---|
| Balance Sheet | Where book value lives — total equity line |
| Price-to-Book Ratio | Market price divided by BVPS — the key book value metric |
| Intrinsic Value | Forward-looking value estimate — often diverges widely from book value |
| Fair Value | Accounting standard for marking assets to current market price |
| Goodwill | Acquisition premium sitting inside book value — can be impaired |
| Retained Earnings | Accumulated profits that build book value over time |
| Depreciation | Reduces asset carrying value and therefore book value each period |
| Market Capitalization | Market value counterpart — what investors say the company is worth |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does it mean when a stock trades below book value?
A P/B ratio below 1.0 means the market values the company at less than its net asset value. This can indicate a genuine bargain — or it can signal that the market expects asset write-downs, ongoing losses, or that the reported asset values are overstated. You need to investigate the quality of the assets before treating it as a buying opportunity.
Is book value the same as shareholders’ equity?
Yes. On the balance sheet, total shareholders’ equity equals total assets minus total liabilities — which is the definition of book value. The terms are interchangeable.
Why do tech companies have high price-to-book ratios?
Because their most valuable assets — software, algorithms, user data, network effects, brand recognition — are largely intangible and don’t appear on the balance sheet (unless acquired). The balance sheet dramatically understates the economic value of these businesses, so the market assigns a large premium over book value.
What’s the difference between book value and tangible book value?
Tangible book value subtracts goodwill and intangible assets from total equity. It’s a more conservative measure that only counts assets with a physical or clearly realizable form. For companies that have made large acquisitions, tangible book value can be significantly lower than total book value.
Can book value be negative?
Yes. If total liabilities exceed total assets, shareholders’ equity goes negative. This can happen when a company accumulates large losses, takes on excessive debt, or executes aggressive buybacks funded by borrowing. McDonald’s and Starbucks, for example, have had negative book values due to massive buyback programs — yet remain highly profitable businesses.