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. ======Price-to-Tangible-Book-Value (PTBV)====== The Price-to-Tangible-Book-Value (PTBV) ratio is a valuation metric that compares a company’s market price to its hard, physical asset value. Think of it as a stricter, no-nonsense cousin of the more common [[Price-to-Book Ratio (P/B)]]. While the P/B ratio considers all the assets on a company's books, PTBV surgically removes the ‘fluff’—the [[intangible assets]] like [[goodwill]], patents, and brand names. The calculation is straightforward: divide the company's total stock market value ([[market capitalization]]) by its [[tangible book value]]. For [[value investing]] purists, especially those following the deep-value school of [[Benjamin Graham]], PTBV is the ultimate reality check. It asks a simple, powerful question: If the company were to liquidate all its physical, touchable assets tomorrow after paying off all its debts, how much are we paying for those assets on the stock market today? A low PTBV ratio, especially one below 1.0, can be a flashing neon sign for a potential bargain. ===== Why Tangible? The Ghost in the Machine ===== Imagine you're buying a used car. The seller tells you it's worth a premium because it has "sentimental value" and a "great reputation" in the neighborhood. As a savvy buyer, you’d likely ignore that and focus on the engine, the tires, and the chassis—the tangible stuff. The PTBV ratio does the same for companies. It strips out intangible assets, the most famous of which is goodwill. Goodwill typically appears on a [[balance sheet]] after one company acquires another for a price higher than the fair value of its identifiable [[assets]]. It represents things like brand reputation, a loyal customer base, or strong employee relations. While these can be incredibly valuable, they are also notoriously difficult to price accurately and can be written down to zero overnight if a business falters, vaporizing shareholder equity. The PTBV ratio cuts through this accounting fog, focusing only on the cold, hard assets you could theoretically touch and sell. ===== How to Use the PTBV Ratio ===== ==== The Calculation Breakdown ==== The formula is beautifully simple and comes in two main flavors: * **For the whole company:** PTBV Ratio = Market Capitalization / Tangible Book Value * **On a per-share basis:** PTBV Ratio = [[Share Price]] / [[Tangible Book Value Per Share]] To get the key ingredient, Tangible Book Value, you just take a company’s Total Assets and subtract its Total [[Liabilities]] and //all// its Intangible Assets. You can find these numbers in the company’s quarterly or annual financial reports. ==== Interpreting the Numbers ==== A ratio is useless without context. Here’s how to read the PTBV: * **PTBV is less than 1.0:** This is the classic "bargain" signal for deep value investors. It suggests that you could theoretically buy the entire company for less than the value of its tangible assets. This was the foundation of Benjamin Graham's famous "cigar butt" or [[net-net investing]] strategy—finding a discarded cigar with one good puff left in it. A PTBV below 1.0 means you're getting the operating business for free, and then some. //However//, a word of caution: a super-low PTBV can also be a "value trap," signaling a company with serious operational problems or assets that are worth less than their stated book value. * **PTBV is greater than 1.0:** This is the norm for most healthy, profitable businesses. It means the market believes the company is more than just a pile of assets; it's a living, breathing operation that can use those assets to generate future earnings. When you see a PTBV above 1.0, the question becomes: how much of a premium is reasonable? A company with a strong competitive advantage and high returns on its assets can justify a higher PTBV than a struggling, low-margin business. ===== The PTBV Investor's Toolkit ===== ==== Best-Fit Industries ==== PTBV shines brightest in asset-heavy industries where physical assets are the core of the business. It’s an essential tool for analyzing: * Banks (whose assets are primarily loans and securities) * Insurance Companies * Industrial Manufacturers * Real Estate Firms * Utilities In contrast, it’s far less useful for asset-light businesses like software developers, consulting firms, or brand-driven companies whose primary value lies in intellectual property and human capital—the very things PTBV ignores. ==== Pitfalls and Cautions ==== Don't use PTBV in a vacuum. Always be aware of its limitations: - **It ignores earning power:** A company can have a mountain of tangible assets but be terrible at generating profits from them. A cheap company might be cheap for a very good reason. - **Book value isn't market value:** The value of an asset on the balance sheet (its historical cost) can be very different from what it would sell for today. An old factory might be worth much less than its book value. - **It punishes valuable intangibles:** The ratio completely dismisses the immense value of a brand like Coca-Cola or the patent portfolio of a pharmaceutical giant. Using PTBV alone would lead you to believe these world-class businesses are perpetually "expensive." ===== A Capipedia Bottom Line ===== The Price-to-Tangible-Book-Value ratio is a powerful, conservative tool for the value investor’s arsenal. It helps you cut through accounting noise to find potentially undervalued, asset-rich companies that the market may have overlooked. But remember, it's a starting point, not a finish line. A low PTBV gets a company onto your research list; it doesn’t automatically get it into your portfolio. Always follow up by investigating the company’s profitability, debt levels, and the quality of its management.