๐Ÿ“Š StockCalc

Decide whether a stock looks expensive or cheap.

Start with price-to-earnings, then add balance sheet, growth, and enterprise value context before you commit capital.

Why this topic path exists

Valuation is rarely a single number. Professional investors combine multiples because each one highlights a different dimension of price: earnings power, book value, growth expectations, revenue scale, and enterprise-level cash flow.

This hub organizes StockCalc's valuation tools into a practical sequence. You can run each calculator in your browser without signing up, then read the matching guide or glossary entry when a formula needs more context.

None of these tools tell you what to buy or sell. They help you compare assumptions, stress-test inputs, and understand why two stocks with similar prices can imply very different expectations.

Suggested workflow

  1. Run the PE ratio calculator for a quick earnings multiple check on profitable companies.
  2. Add PB ratio when balance sheet quality or asset-heavy businesses matter.
  3. Use PEG when growth is a major part of the thesis.
  4. Cross-check with EV/EBITDA when debt, cash, or capital structure affects the picture.
  5. Finish with market cap and P/S when size or revenue-based comparisons help.

Best starting point

Start with the PE Ratio Calculator

PE is the fastest first-pass valuation multiple for profitable companies with positive trailing earnings.

Open calculator โ†’

Calculator path

Run these tools in order or jump to the step that matches your question.

Learn the concepts

Key glossary terms

Example stock metrics

Illustrative metric pages for widely followed names. Data may be delayed; verify independently.

FAQ

Which valuation calculator should I use first?

Start with PE for profitable companies, then add PB, PEG, EV/EBITDA, and market cap for context. Pre-profit or highly cyclical names may need revenue or enterprise-value lenses instead.

Can one low multiple mean a stock is cheap?

Not by itself. A low multiple can reflect slower growth, higher risk, accounting quirks, or temporary earnings spikes. Compare peers and read the guide for each metric before treating a number as cheap or expensive.

Do these calculators use live market data?

The calculators run on inputs you provide in the browser. Some pages link to sample stock metric views for illustration; always verify live prices and fundamentals independently.

Educational Disclaimer

These tools and articles are for educational and informational purposes only. They do not provide investment, financial, tax, or legal advice. Always verify data independently before making financial decisions.