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Stock Investment Indicators Calculator

Enter a share price along with EPS, BPS, dividends and net income to instantly compute the key stock metrics PER, PBR, ROE, dividend yield and payout ratio. Handy for judging whether a stock is cheap or expensive and for reviewing earnings.

Input

Share price & per-share figures

$
$
$
$

Financial figures (for ROE; any unit if kept consistent)

$M
$M

Result

PER (price-to-earnings ratio)

13.89x

Price ÷ EPS. A gauge of whether the stock is cheap or expensive relative to its earnings.

PBR

1.67 x

ROE

15.0 %

Dividend yield

2.4 %


All indicators

IndicatorFormulaResult
PER (price-to-earnings ratio)Price ÷ EPS13.89 x
PBR (price-to-book ratio)Price ÷ BPS1.67 x
ROE (return on equity)Net income ÷ equity15.0 %
Dividend yieldDividend ÷ price2.4 %
Payout ratioDividend ÷ EPS33.3 %

How it works

  • PER (price-to-earnings ratio) is calculated as "share price ÷ EPS (earnings per share)" and serves as a gauge of whether the stock is cheap or expensive relative to its earnings. Generally, a lower figure is considered more undervalued.
  • PBR (price-to-book ratio) is calculated as "share price ÷ BPS (book value per share)". A value below 1 is often taken as a sign that the price is below the company's net asset (break-up) value.
  • ROE (return on equity) is calculated as "net income ÷ shareholders' equity × 100" and shows how efficiently equity is being turned into profit. Net income and equity can be entered in any unit as long as both use the same one (e.g. millions).
  • Dividend yield is calculated as "dividend per share ÷ share price × 100" and shows what proportion of the current price you would receive as dividends over one year.
  • Payout ratio is calculated as "dividend per share ÷ EPS × 100" and shows what share of net income is being paid out as dividends.
  • These results are estimates based on your inputs. Make actual investment decisions at your own risk after checking the latest earnings and price data. Indicators that cannot be computed (e.g. when EPS or equity is zero) are shown as "—".