Copyright © 2008, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Definitions 12.3.10 and 12.3.11
Ratio Formula What It Tells You
Earnings per share (EPS) ________________To tal net income
Number of shares
How much did the business
earn per share of stock?
Book value per share
To tal owners’ equity
_____________Number of shares
How much equity is attributable
to each share of stock?
Example 12.3.5 Thomas Hydrometer Sales Corp is a public company with 3,000,000
total shares outstanding. Calculate the company’s 2007 earnings per share and book
value per share as of December 3, 2007.
Earnings per share $4,780,851___________
3,000,000
$1.59 per share
Book value per share ____________$20,535,025
3,000,000
$6.85 per share
To compare the price of a company’s stock to its financial position, several per-share
ratios are in common use. Two of the most commonly used per share ratios are:
Definitions 12.3.12 and 12.3.13
Ratio Formula What It Tells You
Price-to-earnings (PE) ratio
Price per share
_______________________Annual earnings per share
[If earnings are positive; the
ratio is undefi ned if earnings
are negative (i.e., the
business lost money)]
How much someone buying
the company stock is paying
for each dollar of annual
earnings. A high PE ratio
indicates that the stock
price is expensive relative to
current earnings.
Price-to-book ratio
Price per share
_______________________Annual earnings per share
How much someone buying
the company’s stock is
paying for each dollar’s
worth of equity. A high
price-to-book ratio indicates
that the stock is expensive
relative to the company’s
owners’ equity.
Example 12.3.6 As of the close of trading last Friday, Thomas Hydrometer Sales’
stock was selling for $37.45 per share. Calculate the PE and price-to-book ratios.
Explain what these ratios tell you about the company.
PE $37.45_______
$1.59
23.55
Price to book
$37.45
_______
$6.85
5.47
An investor buying stock in this company would be paying $23.55 for each $1 of earn-
ings; or, in other words, the market value of the company is 23.55 times its 2007 earnings.
Similarly, an investor would pay $5.47 for each dollar of equity in the company, or the total
market value of the company is 5.47 times its owners’ equity.
The price-to-earnings and price-to-book ratios do not have to be calculated on a per share
basis. They can also be calculated by using the total market price for the business divided
by the total earnings.
12.3 Financial Ratios 513