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Stock Valuation Calculator

Blend P/E, P/B, P/S, dividend discount, DCF, and peer multiples to estimate fair value and upside

Calculator

$1$2000
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$-50$100
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-10%50%
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160
$0$500
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1%60%
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4%20%
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4%20%
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Results

Projected EPS (Next Year)
$0.00
Current P/E Ratio
0.00
Forward P/E
0.00
PEG Ratio
0.00
5-Year Avg P/E
0.0
Fair Value (Sector P/E)
$0.00
Fair Value (5yr Avg P/E)
$0.00
Premium vs Sector P/E
0.0%
P/E Verdict
0
Current P/B Ratio
0.00
Fair Value (Sector P/B)
$0.00
Premium vs Book Value
0.0%
P/B Verdict
0
Current P/S Ratio
0.00
Fair Value (Sector P/S)
$0.00
Margin Needed to Justify P/S
0.0%
P/S Verdict
0
Dividend Discount Model Fair Value
$0.00
Margin of Safety (DDM)
0.0%
Implied Long-Term Return
0.0%
PV of 5-Year Cash Flows
$0.00
Terminal Value (Year 5)
$0.00
PV of Terminal Value
$0.00
DCF Intrinsic Value
$0.00
Upside/Downside (DCF)
0.0%
DCF Verdict
0
P/E Premium vs Peers
0.0%
P/B Premium vs Peers
0.0%
P/S Premium vs Peers
0.0%
Peer P/E Implied Price
$0.00
Peer P/B Implied Price
$0.00
Peer P/S Implied Price
$0.00
Peer Methods Used
0
Peer-Based Fair Value
$0.00
Methods with Positive Fair Values
0
Blended Fair Value (6 Methods)
$0.00
Upside/Downside vs Current Price
0.0%
Overall Verdict
0
Confidence Level
0

Fair Value vs Market Price

Current Price$150.00
Blended Fair Value$0.00
DCF Fair Value$0.00
Peer Fair Value$0.00
DDM Fair Value$0.00

Valuation Multiples vs Benchmarks

P/E Ratio$0.00
Sector P/E$18.00
5-Year Avg P/E$0.00
P/B Ratio$0.00
Sector P/B$2.50
P/S Ratio$0.00
Sector P/S$3.20

How to Use the Stock Valuation Dashboard

Start with the Quick Analysis section: compare the company’s current P/E, P/B, and P/S to sector averages and its own history.

Then review the dividend discount and DCF outputs to see if cash flows justify the current price.

Finally, scan the peer comparison to confirm the company isn’t dramatically richer or cheaper than direct competitors.

Interpreting Multiples

P/E works best for companies with consistent earnings.

If EPS is lumpy or negative, lean on P/S and P/B instead.

PEG ratio (P/E divided by growth) helps determine whether a high P/E is justified – values below 1.0 suggest the price matches growth expectations, while PEGs above 2.0 warn that investors may be overpaying.

Dividend Discount Model Caveats

The DDM assumes dividends grow at a steady rate forever.

Use conservative growth estimates and ensure the growth rate stays below the required return – otherwise the formula breaks down.

DDM is most reliable for mature, dividend-paying companies with long payout records.

Discounted Cash Flow Sensitivity

Small changes in growth or discount rates can move DCF valuations dramatically.

Test bull, base, and bear scenarios by adjusting free cash flow growth, terminal growth, and the discount rate.

If the DCF value collapses when you raise the discount rate by 1-2%, the investment thesis may be fragile.

Peer Comparison Best Practices

Choose peers with similar business models and margins.

Growth stocks typically carry higher multiples than mature peers.

If the company trades at a large premium, confirm that its growth or profitability is materially superior; otherwise it may be priced for perfection.

Quick Decision Rules

Upside above 20% with medium-to-high confidence usually signals a buy candidate.

Upside between -15% and +15% suggests the stock is fairly priced, and you may want to wait for a better entry.

Downside beyond 15% indicates caution: revisit your growth assumptions or consider trimming the position.

Stock Valuation Methods and Intrinsic Value Analysis

Stock valuation attempts to determine a company's intrinsic value—the theoretical fair price based on fundamental business factors rather than current market sentiment. Multiple valuation approaches exist, each with strengths and limitations depending on company characteristics, industry dynamics, and available information. The most common methods include discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis, relative valuation using multiples, and dividend discount models (DDM).

Discounted cash flow analysis values a company based on projected future cash flows discounted to present value using an appropriate cost of capital. This intrinsic valuation method requires forecasting future cash flows (typically free cash flow to equity or to the firm), estimating a discount rate (using CAPM or WACC), and calculating a terminal value for cash flows beyond the explicit forecast period. DCF analysis is theoretically sound but highly sensitive to assumptions about growth rates, margins, and discount rates—small changes in inputs can dramatically affect calculated values.

Relative valuation uses market-based multiples to compare companies against peers or historical norms. Common multiples include price-to-earnings (P/E), price-to-book (P/B), price-to-sales (P/S), and enterprise value-to-EBITDA (EV/EBITDA). Each multiple has appropriate use cases: P/E works well for mature, profitable companies; P/S is useful for unprofitable growth companies; EV/EBITDA allows comparison across different capital structures. The key is selecting comparable companies with similar growth prospects, risk profiles, and business models.

The dividend discount model values stocks based on the present value of expected future dividends, with the Gordon Growth Model (a constant-growth version) being most common. DDM works best for mature companies with stable dividend policies but struggles with non-dividend-paying growth stocks. For those situations, analysts often use two-stage or multi-stage models that assume high growth initially before transitioning to sustainable long-term growth rates.

Practical stock valuation combines multiple approaches to triangulate reasonable value ranges rather than relying on single point estimates. No valuation model perfectly captures all relevant factors—market conditions, competitive dynamics, management quality, and future innovation all affect intrinsic value but resist precise quantification. The margin of safety concept, popularized by Benjamin Graham, suggests buying only when market price sits substantially below calculated intrinsic value, providing a buffer against estimation errors and unforeseen negative developments.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the Stock Valuation Calculator

The most widely used stock valuation methods include: 1) Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio - compares stock price to earnings per share, useful for profitable companies. 2) Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) - projects future cash flows and discounts them to present value, considered the most theoretically sound method. 3) Price-to-Book (P/B) Ratio - compares market value to book value, good for asset-heavy companies. 4) Price-to-Sales (P/S) Ratio - useful for companies not yet profitable. 5) Dividend Discount Model (DDM) - values stock based on present value of future dividends. 6) Comparable Company Analysis - compares valuation multiples to similar companies. Each method has strengths and weaknesses, so analysts typically use multiple approaches to triangulate a fair value estimate.