Overview Fair Value Calculators:

Fair Value Calculators

Unleash the Power of Financial Ratios! Plug in your own data and watch as our calculators reveal the True Worth of any stock.

Simple Fair Value Calculator

Insert earnings per share and revenue growth to estimate the stock's Fair Value.

Use 7 different metrics to define a more accurate Fair Value.

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Overview Financial Ratios Calculators:

Price Ratios

Further calculators for the most common financial ratios that determine wether a stock is cheap or expensive.

P/B (Price to Book) Ratio

Compare a firm's market capitalization to its book value (= total assets - liabilities.)

P/E (Price to Earnings) Ratio

Measures the current share price relative to the company's earnings per share.

P/CF (Price to Cashflow) Ratio

Measures the current share price relative to the company's cashflow per share.

P/S (Price to Sales) Ratio

This sales multiple compares the company's stock price to its revenue per share.

PEG (Price -Earnings -Growth) Ratio

The PEG Ratio combines the P/E Ratio with the estimated company's growth.

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Profitability Ratios

Measure how efficient a management is at generating income and how effective a company can turn its equity into profits using these calculators.

ROE (Return on Equity) Ratio

ROE measures the profitability calculated by dividing income by shareholders' equity.

EBIT Margin Profitability

EBIT margin measures how efficiently a company converts its revenue into profit.

Debt Ratios

These key ratios indicated by our calculators show whether a company has too much debt.

Debt to Equity Ratio

Measures a firm's leverage and divides a company's liabilities by its shareholder equity

Dynamic Gearing (Debt Repayment Period)

This ratio shows how long the company theoretically would need to pay off its debt.

Dividend Yield

The dividend a company pays out to investors as a percentage of the share price.

Dividend Yield

Tells the percentage of a company's share price that it pays out in dividends.

Essentials

Utilize These Calculators for Effective Financial Planning and Future Return Simulations

Stock Return Calculator

Calculate the total over time stock return of your stock investment.

Interest Compound Calculator

The Power of Compound Growth: Stock Interest Compound Calculator!

These are the most import financial Key Ratios to value a stock:

These are the most important fundamental key figures for the valuation of a company in fundamental stock analysis. Our tools will help you to find these fundamental key data for every stock in the world.

Revenue: Shows the company’s total revenue.

Profit margins: show the percentage of sales that remain as profit.

EBITDA: shows earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.

EBIT: shows earnings before interest and taxes.

Net Debt: shows the ratio of debt to equity.

Price to Earnings Ratio (P/E): shows the ratio of stock price to earnings per share. A lower P/E ratio can indicate that a stock is undervalued and higher future growth is expected.

Price to Book Ratio (P/B): shows the ratio of stock price to book value per share. A lower P/B ratio can indicate that a stock is undervalued compared to the book value of its assets. 

It’s important to note that no single metric is a reliable indicator of the future course of a stock price. It’s best to use a combination of various metrics to get a comprehensive picture of a company’s financial position. Additionally, you should also take into consideration other factors such as industry, economic conditions, and political developments in your considerations. It is important to note that none of these metrics are meaningful when viewed on their own, but must always be seen in the context of other metrics and factors.

Relevant fundamental metrics for stock predictions:

There are many fundamental metrics that are considered relevant for predicting the future course of a stock price in studies. Here are some of the most commonly used metrics:

Revenue Growth: Higher revenue growth suggests positive business development and can affect the stock price.

Earnings Growth: Higher earnings growth can indicate a strong financial position and positive future development, affecting the stock price. 

Dividend Yield: A higher dividend yield can indicate a stable financial position and positive future prospects, affecting the stock price.

Investopedia is a great source for further information about financial Key Ratios. 

FAQ: Free Fair Value Calculators

Quickly estimate intrinsic value, compare to price, and define a margin of safety with clean, transparent inputs.

Which free calculators are included?
What results can I expect from the free tools?
A fair value estimate or range, implied upside versus price, and a basis to set your margin of safety. Cross-check with EV-based and price-based multiples for robustness.
Which inputs matter most for a clean valuation?
  • Revenue growth and margin trajectory.
  • Reinvestment needs (CapEx and working capital).
  • Discount rate or required return.
  • Capital structure details to compute EV consistently.
How should I combine DCF with multiples?
Use the DCF for fundamentals and sanity-check with EV/EBIT, EV/EBITDA, P/E, P/CF and P/S. Calculate EV cleanly via the EV Calculator.
How do I choose a discount rate or required return?
Tie it to risk-free rates, risk premium and leverage, or set a simple required return reflecting business risk. Keep the basis consistent across scenarios.
How should I set base, bear and bull scenarios?
  • Base: realistic mid-cycle margins and reinvestment.
  • Bear: slower growth, lower margins, higher discount rate.
  • Bull: stronger growth, efficiency gains, steady reinvestment.
TTM or forward—what should I use for inputs and multiples?
Stay consistent. Compare TTM with TTM or forward with forward, and account for cyclicality using multi-year context.
How do I adjust for one-offs and avoid value traps?
Normalize margins, remove non-recurring items, and cross-check balance sheet and cash conversion before trusting a low multiple.
When is the Dividend Discount Model appropriate?
For businesses with stable payout policies and predictable growth. Try the DDM and sanity-check the yield with the Dividend Yield tool.
What’s a practical workflow with the free tools?
  1. Context: Review Market Valuation and Sector Valuation.
  2. Screen: Use the Stock Screener to find candidates.
  3. Value: Run the DCF, compute EV, and cross-check multiples in Stock Valuation.
  4. Decide: Act only if your margin of safety is sufficient for the risk.
Any limitations I should keep in mind?
Aggregates can mask dispersion; inputs can be uncertain; results are model-based. Always cross-check with sector context and financial quality.
Is this investment advice?
No. Not financial advice. These are analysis tools to support your own decisions.
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