Most investors look at a stock price or market cap and think they know what a company is worth.
But that number is missing two big things - debt and cash.
Enterprise value fixes that. It gives you the full picture of what it would cost to buy the whole company, debts and all.
This article covers what enterprise value is, how to find it step by step, and how investors use it to compare stocks.
You'll need to know this, as valuing a stock is an important tool investors can use to know if they should invest or now.
We use Nvidia as an example below - but what about when you hear the value of other companies?
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What Is Enterprise Value?
Enterprise value - or EV - is a way to measure what a company is truly worth.
It takes the market cap (what the stock market says a company is worth based on share price) and adjusts it. You add the company's debt. Then you subtract its cash.
Why? If you bought the whole company today, you'd take on its debts too. And you'd get its cash.
Think of it like buying a house. The listing price isn't the full story.
If the house comes with a $200,000 mortgage, that's part of the deal. But if there's $30,000 in escrow that comes with the sale, that offsets some of the cost.
Enterprise value works the same way - but for a business.
The Enterprise Value Formula
Here it is:
Enterprise Value = Market Cap + Total Debt - Cash and Cash Equivalents
Let's break down each piece.
Market cap is the total value of a company's stock. You get it by taking the stock price times the total shares. Most stock sites like Yahoo Finance list this for you.
Total debt is what the company owes - both short-term and long-term. You can find this on the balance sheet under total liabilities. These are the company's debt obligations.
Cash and cash equivalents is the cash on hand. It also shows up on the balance sheet, often as the first line under assets.
| Part | Where to Find It | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Market Cap | Stock sites (Yahoo Finance, Google Finance) | Stock price x total shares |
| Total Debt | Balance sheet (total liabilities) | What the company owes |
| Cash | Balance sheet (assets) | Cash the company has on hand |
How to Calculate Enterprise Value: Step by Step
Let's walk through this with Nvidia.
Step 1: Find the market cap.
Head to any stock data site. At the time of this example, Nvidia's market cap was $4.37 trillion.
Step 2: Find the total debt.
Open the company's 10-K - that's the yearly report every public company files with the SEC. Go to the balance sheet and pull total liabilities.
For Nvidia, that was $32.27 billion.
Step 3: Find the cash.
Same balance sheet. Look under assets for cash and cash equivalents.
Nvidia had $8.58 billion in cash.
Step 4: Do the math.
Market cap: $4.37 trillion
Plus total debt: $32.27 billion
Minus cash: $8.58 billion
Enterprise Value: $4.39 trillion
That's it. Nvidia's EV is about $4.39 trillion.
Market cap said $4.37 trillion. But after adding debt and pulling out cash, the true cost to own the whole business is a bit higher.
Why Enterprise Value Beats Market Cap
Market cap only tells you what the stock market prices the shares at. It skips over debt and cash.
Two companies could have the same market cap. But if one has $50 billion in debt and the other has $50 billion in cash, they're very different.
Enterprise value gives you a more honest number. It shows the full price tag - what a buyer would really pay to take over the company.
That's why Wall Street analysts use EV instead of market cap when they compare stocks.
How Investors Use It: EV/EBITDA
One of the most common ways to use enterprise value is in a ratio called EV/EBITDA.
EBITDA stands for earnings before interest, taxes, and depreciation. In plain English - it's a company's profit before certain accounting costs are removed.
Why strip those out? Because those costs have some wiggle room in how they're counted. Investors want to see what the core business earns.
To find EBITDA, add up net income, interest expense, tax expense, and depreciation. These all come from the 10-K.
Then divide EV by EBITDA. That tells you how many times core earnings investors are paying for.
For Nvidia:
EV: $4.39 trillion
EBITDA: $86 billion
EV/EBITDA: 51x
The market values Nvidia at 51 times its core earnings.
By itself, that number doesn't mean much. You need to compare it to peers.
| Company | EV/EBITDA |
|---|---|
| Nvidia | 51x |
| AMD | 27.5x |
| Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) | 13.3x |
| Intel | 17.82x |
Nvidia's ratio is much higher. That tells you the market expects much bigger growth from Nvidia than from others in thechip space.
And those numbers are all over the place - which is a lesson on its own. No single metric paints the full picture. But by knowing how to read these ratios, you have one more tool in yourinvesting toolkit.
Enterprise Value vs. Market Cap
| Feature | Market Cap | Enterprise Value |
|---|---|---|
| Formula | Stock Price x Shares | Market Cap + Debt - Cash |
| Counts debt? | No | Yes |
| Counts cash? | No | Yes (subtracted) |
| Best for | Quick look at size | Fair side-by-side comparison |
| Used in | Basic stock screens | EV/EBITDA, DCF, M&A deals |
The Bottom Line
Enterprise value shows what it would really cost to buy a company - debt and all.
The formula is simple: Market Cap + Total Debt - Cash.
Every number you need is on the balance sheet and any stock data site. Pair EV with EBITDA, and you can start to see which stocks the market values the most - and why.
No single ratio tells the full story. Smart investors look at EV alongside P/E ratios, P/B ratios, and cash flow to build a full picture.
But EV is one of the most useful numbers to know - and now you can find it yourself.
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