Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======ntp_inc====== ntp_inc (short for Net Tangible Property, Incorporated; more commonly known as [[Net Tangible Assets]] or [[Tangible Book Value]]) is a measure of a company's physical worth. Think of it as the ultimate "garage sale" value. If a company were to shut down today, sell all of its physical assets (like buildings, machinery, and inventory), and pay off every single one of its debts and obligations, the cash left over would be its ntp_inc. This metric is a favorite of old-school value investors because it provides a rock-solid, conservative valuation. It intentionally ignores "intangible" things like brand reputation or patents, focusing instead on what you can physically touch and count. For followers of [[Benjamin Graham]], the father of [[value investing]], ntp_inc represents a company's bare-bones value, providing a powerful baseline for determining if a stock is truly cheap. It's a no-nonsense number that cuts through accounting fluff and market hype. ===== Why ntp_inc Matters to Value Investors ===== For a value investor, ntp_inc isn't just a number on a spreadsheet; it's a foundational part of a key investment principle: the [[margin of safety]]. ==== A Foundation of Value ==== The holy grail for many value investors is to buy a company for less than its ntp_inc per share. Why? Because if you can buy a stock for, say, $8 when its tangible book value per share is $10, you're essentially getting $10 worth of hard assets for only $8. In this scenario, you are also getting the company's entire future earning potential, its brand, and its competitive advantages for //free//. This provides a huge cushion. If the business stumbles, its tangible assets still provide a floor for the stock's value. If the business thrives, you get all the upside from its future profits on top of the assets you already bought at a discount. It's a classic "heads I win, tails I don't lose much" situation, championed by legendary investors like [[Warren Buffett]] in his early career. ==== The Ghost in the Machine: Intangible Assets ==== The reason ntp_inc is so powerful is because of what it excludes: [[Intangible Assets]]. These are assets you can't see or touch, and they include: * [[Goodwill]]: This is an accounting creation. It typically appears on the books after one company buys another for more than the fair market value of its net assets. It's not a real, sellable asset; it's the premium paid, often for things like reputation or synergies that may never materialize. * Patents and Trademarks: While valuable, their worth can be difficult to pin down and can expire or become obsolete with new technology. Value investors are skeptical of intangibles because their value can be subjective and can vanish in a puff of smoke. A corporate scandal can destroy brand value overnight, but a factory building remains. By stripping these out, ntp_inc gives you a conservative, tangible anchor for your valuation. ===== How to Calculate ntp_inc ===== Calculating ntp_inc is surprisingly straightforward. You just need to look at a company's [[Balance Sheet]], which is a financial statement that shows what a company owns (assets) and what it owes (liabilities). ==== The Simple Formula ==== The most common way to calculate ntp_inc is to start with a company's total equity and subtract its intangible assets. * **Step 1:** Find [[Shareholders' Equity]] (also called Book Value). This is already calculated for you on the balance sheet. (//Reminder: Shareholders' Equity = Total Assets - Total Liabilities//). * **Step 2:** Find all Intangible Assets. Look for line items like "Goodwill" and "Other Intangible Assets." * **Step 3:** Subtract the intangibles from the equity. The formula is: **ntp_inc = Shareholders' Equity - (Goodwill + Other Intangible Assets)** ==== A Practical Walkthrough ==== Let's imagine we're looking at the balance sheet of "Durable Goods Inc.": * Total Assets: $500 million * Total Liabilities: $200 million * Goodwill: $70 million * Other Intangible Assets: $30 million Now, let's do the math: - First, calculate Shareholders' Equity: $500m (Assets) - $200m (Liabilities) = **$300 million** - Next, calculate Total Intangible Assets: $70m (Goodwill) + $30m (Other) = **$100 million** - Finally, calculate ntp_inc: $300m (Equity) - $100m (Intangibles) = **$200 million** Durable Goods Inc. has a net tangible property value of $200 million. To see if it's cheap, you would compare this to its [[Market Value]] (its stock price x number of shares). ===== The Caveats: When ntp_inc Can Mislead ===== While ntp_inc is a fantastic tool, it's not foolproof. You must use it with a healthy dose of critical thinking. ==== The Modern Economy Problem ==== The ntp_inc metric works best for old-economy businesses with lots of physical stuff: manufacturers, banks, retailers, and railroads. It's far less useful for modern, asset-light companies. A software giant like Microsoft or a consulting firm has very few tangible assets, yet they are immensely profitable. Their value lies almost entirely in their [[intellectual property]], code, and human talent—all intangibles. For these companies, ntp_inc will be extremely low, making them look deceptively "worthless" by this metric alone. ==== Liquidation vs. Reality ==== The ntp_inc calculation assumes that the value of assets on the balance sheet ([[Book Value]]) is what you'd get if you sold them. This is often not true. A highly specialized piece of factory equipment might be worth a fraction of its book value in a forced [[liquidation]]. An investor must always ask: //"Are these tangible assets truly worth what the accountants say they are?"// In conclusion, ntp_inc is an excellent starting point for a deep-value investigation. It helps you find potentially undervalued, asset-rich companies and enforces the discipline of buying with a margin of safety. However, it should be used as one tool in a full toolkit that also considers a company's [[earnings power]] and [[free cash flow]].