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Equity Value vs Enterprise Value: Key Differences Explained

Equity value represents the value of a company attributable to its shareholders — think market cap. Enterprise value (EV) represents the total value of the business to all capital providers — equity holders and debt holders combined. The difference between the two is the net debt (and other adjustments) sitting between equity and the total firm.

Why This Distinction Matters

Getting equity value and enterprise value confused is one of the most common — and most costly — mistakes in finance. It affects everything: which multiples you use, how you interpret a DCF output, and how you bridge from one to the other in an equity value bridge. The rule is simple: match the numerator to the denominator.

Enterprise value metrics (EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue) use cash flows available to all investors. Equity value metrics (P/E, P/B) use cash flows available only to shareholders. Mixing them produces nonsensical results.

The Core Formulas

Equity Value (Market Capitalization) Equity Value = Share Price × Diluted Shares Outstanding
Enterprise Value EV = Equity Value + Total Debt + Minority Interest + Preferred Stock − Cash & Equivalents
Rearranged Equity Value = Enterprise Value − Total Debt − Minority Interest − Preferred Stock + Cash

Detailed Comparison

DimensionEquity ValueEnterprise Value
RepresentsValue to shareholdersValue to all capital providers
Includes Debt?NoYes
Affected by Capital Structure?Yes — leverage changes equity valueNo — capital structure neutral
Common MultiplesP/E, P/B, P/FCFEV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue, EV/EBIT
Cash Flow MatchNet income, EPS, FCFEEBITDA, EBIT, unlevered FCF
Used InEquity research, stock screeningM&A, comps, DCF

The Bridge Between Them

Moving from enterprise value to equity value (or vice versa) requires an equity value bridge. The key items in the bridge:

ItemEV → Equity DirectionWhy
Total DebtSubtractDebt holders have a claim before equity holders
Cash & EquivalentsAddCash could be distributed to equity holders
Minority InterestSubtractEV includes 100% of subs, but equity value reflects parent’s share
Preferred StockSubtractPreferred has priority over common equity
Unfunded PensionSubtractDebt-like obligation
Equity InvestmentsAdd (if not in EBITDA)Non-operating asset with value

Which Multiples Match Which Value?

MultipleNumeratorDenominatorValue Type
P/E RatioEquity Value (Market Cap)Net Income or EPSEquity
P/B RatioEquity ValueBook Value of EquityEquity
EV/EBITDAEnterprise ValueEBITDAEnterprise
EV/RevenueEnterprise ValueRevenueEnterprise
EV/EBITEnterprise ValueEBITEnterprise
Common Mistake
Never divide enterprise value by net income or equity value by EBITDA. Net income is after interest (an equity-level metric), so it matches equity value. EBITDA is before interest (a firm-level metric), so it matches enterprise value. Mixing them produces meaningless ratios.
Analyst Tip
When a DCF model outputs enterprise value, you must subtract net debt and other claims to get equity value per share. Forgetting this step — or using the wrong debt figure — is one of the top mistakes in investment banking interviews and on-the-job modeling.

Key Takeaways

  • Equity value = value to shareholders. Enterprise value = value to all capital providers.
  • EV = Equity Value + Debt + Minority Interest + Preferred − Cash.
  • Always match the numerator to the denominator: EV with EBITDA, equity value with net income.
  • Enterprise value is capital structure neutral — use it for comparing companies with different leverage.
  • The equity value bridge connects the two and is critical for M&A and DCF outputs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is enterprise value considered capital structure neutral?

Because EV includes both debt and equity, it captures the total value of the business regardless of how it’s financed. Two identical companies — one with 50% debt, one with 0% debt — will have different equity values but the same enterprise value. This makes EV-based multiples more comparable across companies.

Why do we subtract cash in the enterprise value formula?

Cash is a non-operating asset that could be used to pay down debt or distribute to shareholders. If you’re buying the whole business (enterprise), you effectively “get the cash back.” So the net cost to acquire the business is EV, which nets out cash against debt. Think of it as buying a house with cash in the safe — the net purchase price is lower.

What about stock options and convertible securities?

Use diluted shares outstanding (treasury stock method) when calculating equity value. This includes the dilutive impact of in-the-money options, warrants, and convertible securities. Undiluted equity value understates the true claim on the business and overstates per-share value.

When should I use equity value vs enterprise value multiples?

Use EV multiples (EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue) when comparing companies with different capital structures — which is most of the time in M&A and comps analysis. Use equity multiples (P/E, P/B) when capital structures are similar or when the focus is on returns to shareholders specifically, such as in equity research.

Can enterprise value be less than equity value?

Yes — if the company has more cash than debt (negative net debt). This happens with cash-rich tech companies. An enterprise value below equity value means the market values the operating business at less than the market cap, with excess cash making up the difference.