What is P/B Ratio in Layman’s Language?
P/B Ratio stands for Price-to-Book Ratio.
It tells you:
“How much are you paying for ₹1 of the company’s net worth?”
🧠 Imagine This:
Let’s say a company owns buildings, land, cash, and machines worth ₹100 crore.
It also has loans worth ₹20 crore.
So, the net worth (also called book value) is:
Assets – Liabilities=₹100crore–₹20crore=₹80crore
Now, if the company has 10 crore shares, then:
Book Value per Share=₹80crore÷10crore=₹8pershare
If the current market price is ₹12 per share, then:
P/B Ratio=₹12/₹8=1.5
This means you’re paying ₹1.50 for every ₹1 of the company’s real net worth.
🛍️ Think of It Like Buying a Shop
Suppose someone offers to sell you a shop:
- The shop building, inventory, and furniture are worth ₹10 lakh.
- But he’s asking you to pay ₹15 lakh.
So you’re paying ₹1.5 for every ₹1 of assets. That’s a P/B of 1.5.
Would you pay more than it’s worth? Only if:
- The shop has great location (future potential),
- It earns more profit than others,
- Or has something special (brand, loyal customers, etc.)
Same logic with companies.
✅ What is an Ideal P/B Ratio for Investment?
| P/B Ratio | What It Means | Good or Bad? |
| < 1.0 | Stock is cheaper than its net assets | Can be a good deal, but check if company is in trouble |
| 1.0 – 2.0 | Fairly valued | Ideal range for most stable businesses |
| > 2.0 | Market expects high growth or profits | Okay only if company has strong performance |
🔍 When is P/B Ratio Useful?
- Very useful for banks, insurance companies, NBFCs — where “book value” is meaningful.
- Less useful for tech companies or startups with intangible assets like software, patents, or brand name.
🧾 Ideal P/B Ratio Based on Sector:
| Sector | Ideal P/B Range |
| Banks / Insurance | 1.0 – 2.0 |
| Manufacturing / FMCG | 1.5 – 3.0 |
| Tech / Internet Companies | P/B may not matter much here |
| Turnaround or Deep Value Stocks | <1.0 (only if financially strong) |
⚠️ Don’t Look at P/B Alone!
P/B ratio should be used with:
- ROE (high ROE justifies higher P/B)
- Debt (too much debt = risky)
- Growth potential
- Management quality
🎯 Final Thought (Layman Summary):
P/B tells you if you’re paying a fair price for what the company owns.
A good P/B ratio is around 1 to 1.5 for most stable companies.
But don’t just go for low P/B — check if the company is actually strong and profitable.
