Most people pick stocks based on hype, headlines, or gut feeling. That is a gamble, not investing. The investors who consistently make money do something different. They read numbers. Specifically, they read three numbers before they buy anything.
These are not obscure formulas used only by Wall Street analysts. They are ratios anyone can calculate. Better yet, most financial platforms publish them automatically. The skill is knowing what they mean and how to use them together.
Why Ratios Matter More Than Stock Prices
A stock price alone tells you nothing useful. A $10 stock can be wildly overpriced. A $500 stock can be a steal. Price is just the number someone last paid. Ratios reveal whether that price makes sense.
Financial ratios help investors quickly assess a company’s market value. They can be compared over time and across industry peers. Some figures come from financial statements, others from market prices and analyst forecasts. Used together, they tell you where a company stands relative to its valuation.
Think of ratios as a health check before you commit. You would not buy a car without checking under the hood. Do not buy a stock without checking these three.
Ratio #1: The Price-to-Earnings Ratio (P/E)
This is the starting point for almost every stock analysis conversation. The price-to-earnings ratio also called the “multiple” is quite possibly the most frequently cited stock ratio.
The formula is straightforward. Divide the stock’s current share price by its earnings per share (EPS). EPS is the company’s net income divided by its total number of outstanding shares.
So if a stock trades at $100 and earns $5 per share, the P/E is 20. That means you are paying $20 for every $1 of annual earnings the company produces.
A forward P/E is based on the current stock price relative to estimated EPS for the next year. This indicates how expensive future earnings are at current prices. It is a useful lens for growth-oriented companies still scaling their profits.
What’s a good P/E? Context is everything here. The simplest way to determine whether a P/E is high or low is to compare it against other companies in the same sector and against the P/E of an appropriate benchmark index.
The S&P 500’s long-term average P/E sits around 18. The forward P/E for the S&P 500 is closer to 21, based on Wall Street’s earnings projections for the next 12 months. (Henssler Financial)
A P/E of 10 in a sector where peers average 25 could signal undervaluation. Or it could signal trouble. That is why the P/E is never the only ratio you look at.
The key limitation: P/E ratios are backward-looking when trailing, and speculative when forward. A high P/E is not automatically a red flag if the company is growing fast. A low P/E is not automatically a buy signal if earnings are falling.
Ratio #2: The Price-to-Book Ratio (P/B)
Where P/E measures earnings, P/B measures assets. It compares what the market is willing to pay against what the company actually owns on paper.
The P/B ratio compares a company’s market valuation to its accounting value. Book value represents what would theoretically remain if a company liquidated all assets and paid all liabilities.
The formula: divide the stock’s share price by its book value per share. A P/B ratio of 1.0 means the stock trades at exactly its book value. Anything above 1.0 means the market is pricing in brand strength, earnings potential, or competitive advantage beyond what the balance sheet shows.
A P/B ratio below 2.0 could signal value. Below 1.0 is considered deep value territory. But the threshold matters by sector. (Britannica Money)
The P/B ratio is particularly useful for industries like banking and manufacturing, where cash and physical assets like property and equipment play a major role. For tech or consumer brands, where value sits in intellectual property and brand loyalty, P/B becomes less reliable.
When JPMorgan Chase trades at a P/B of 1.5, investors are paying 1.5 times the bank’s accounting value. When Nestlé trades at a P/B of 6.0, investors are paying six times its book value. The gap reflects how much intangible value the market assigns to each business.
The key limitation: Book value can be misleading if assets are not regularly revalued. It also excludes intangibles like brand equity and patents, which are often a company’s most valuable assets.
Ratio #3: The Debt-to-Equity Ratio (D/E)
The first two ratios help you judge price. This one helps you judge risk.
The debt-to-equity ratio is derived from two components: total debt and shareholders’ equity. It is crucial for evaluating a company’s financial risk. A higher ratio indicates the company relies more heavily on borrowed money.
The formula: divide total debt by total shareholders’ equity. If a company reports total liabilities of $150 billion and shareholders’ equity of $50 billion, the D/E ratio is 3.0 meaning $3 of debt for every $1 of equity.
Most experts recommend investing in companies with a D/E ratio of up to 2. Anything beyond 2:1 is considered too high, as it puts the company at risk of bankruptcy. (Fi Money)
Why does this matter when evaluating a stock? Because debt amplifies both gains and losses. During a downturn, highly leveraged companies struggle to service interest payments. This erodes earnings, hurts cash flow, and in extreme cases, triggers insolvency.
A high D/E ratio may deter conservative investors, while those with a higher risk tolerance might see it as an opportunity for greater returns. Neither stance is wrong. The point is knowing what you are stepping into.
The key limitation: D/E ratios vary significantly by industry. Utility companies and banks routinely carry higher debt levels by the nature of their business models. Always compare a company’s D/E against its industry average, not a universal benchmark.
Using All Three Together
Each ratio is a lens. None of them alone gives you the full picture. The real skill is using them in combination.
Here is a quick reference for what each ratio signals at a glance:
| Ratio | Low Reads As | High Reads As | Most Useful For |
| P/E | Potentially undervalued | Growth expectations priced in | Earnings valuation |
| P/B | Deep value opportunity | Strong market confidence in growth | Asset-heavy companies |
| D/E | Low financial risk | High leverage, higher risk | Assessing debt exposure |
And here is how the signals combine when you read all three together:
| Signal | P/E | P/B | D/E | What It Suggests |
| Worth investigating | Low | Below 2 | Under 2 | Undervalued with manageable risk |
| Proceed with caution | High | Above 5 | Above 3 | Growth assumptions must hold |
Neither row is a guaranteed outcome. A high-growth company can justify every number in the second row. A struggling business can sit comfortably in the first place. The table gives you a starting filter, not a final verdict.
Although financial ratio analysis cannot reveal everything important about a company, it helps to see just enough of the road ahead to decide where to go and whether to speed up or slow down. (Charles Schwab)
The Habit That Separates Disciplined Investors
Most retail investors skip this step entirely. They chase momentum, earnings headlines, and social media sentiment. Some of them get lucky for a while.
Consistent investors build a process. They check these three ratios before every buy. They compare numbers to the sector average, to historical figures, and to competitors. They look for convergence, where all three ratios point in the same direction.
This is not about finding perfect stocks. Perfect stocks do not exist. It is about stacking the odds in your favor before you commit capital.
The numbers are public. The formulas are simple. The discipline is the hard part.
Sources: Charles Schwab | Britannica Money | Henssler Financial | Fi Money
Post Disclaimer
The information provided on Financepdia.com is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency and financial markets are highly volatile and involve significant risk. Readers should conduct their own research (DYOR) and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Financepdia.com and its authors are not responsible for any financial losses resulting from actions taken based on the information provided on this website.





