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Guide · Valuation Methods

Stock Valuation Calculator

Valuing a stock means estimating what a business is worth independent of its current market price. The right valuation method depends on the sector, capital structure, and growth stage of the company — here's how to choose.

The 5 main stock valuation methods

MethodBest forMain inputLimitation
DCFProfitable companies with stable FCFFree cash flow, WACCSensitive to growth assumptions
P/EQuick screening, mature earningsEPSIgnores growth and risk
P/FCFTech, SaaS, asset-light businessesFree cash flowRequires positive FCF
EV/EBITDACapital-intensive industries, M&AEBITDAIgnores capex differences
P/BookBanks, financials, asset-heavyBook value per shareMisleading for intangible-heavy firms

DCF Calculator — the most complete method

Discounted Cash Flow analysis values a company by projecting its future free cash flow, discounting each year back to present value, and adding a terminal value to capture all cash flows beyond the projection period.

DCF Formula
Equity Value = Σ (FCFt / (1+WACC)t) + TV − Net Debt
TV = Terminal Value · WACC = discount rate · t = year

DCF's key strengths as a stock valuation calculator: it captures growth rate, investment risk, and the quality of earnings. Unlike P/E or EV/EBITDA, it explicitly models what the business will be worth based on the cash it generates — not just what it earns today.

Relative valuation — sector-by-sector

Technology stocks → P/FCF

For technology and SaaS companies, P/FCF (Price-to-Free Cash Flow) is the most relevant multiple. Asset-light tech businesses with strong FCF margins typically trade at 15x–40x FCF, depending on growth rate. A high-growth company at 30% FCF CAGR justifies a higher multiple than a mature software business growing at 8%.

Financial stocks (banks) → P/Book Value

Banks are not suited for enterprise value multiples because debt is core to their business model — not just financing. The standard valuation metric is Price-to-Book (P/B). A bank with a Return on Equity (ROE) above its cost of equity deserves to trade above 1x book. Using the Damodaran formula: P/B = (ROE − g) / (ke − g), where ke = cost of equity.

Energy & Industrials → EV/EBITDA

Capital-intensive businesses — energy, industrials, telecoms — are commonly valued on EV/EBITDA because it is capital-structure neutral and accounts for depreciation of physical assets. Typical trading ranges: energy 4x–8x, industrials 8x–14x, telecoms 5x–9x.

REITs → P/FFO

Real Estate Investment Trusts are valued on Funds From Operations (FFO) rather than earnings, because depreciation charges on real estate assets systematically understate true profitability. P/FFO of 12x–20x is typical for diversified REITs.

How to interpret valuation results

Bull / Base / Bear scenarios

Any stock valuation calculator should produce a range of outcomes, not a single point estimate. Bear scenario uses pessimistic growth and higher discount rates; bull scenario uses optimistic growth and lower rates. The spread between them shows model sensitivity and helps you understand the risk you're taking at the current price.

Margin of safety

Benjamin Graham's principle: only buy when the current market price is significantly below your estimate of intrinsic value — ideally 20–30% or more. Buying at 70–80 cents on the dollar gives you a buffer against valuation errors, unforeseen risks, and the natural uncertainty in any forward projection.

BUY / HOLD / SELL signals

A structured signal makes the valuation actionable: BUY when the market price is meaningfully below the base case intrinsic value (20%+ upside); HOLD when the stock is fairly valued within ±10%; SELL when the market price exceeds even the bull case intrinsic value.

What pocketDCF's stock valuation calculator does

pocketDCF automates the full institutional-grade valuation workflow for any US-listed stock:

Related guides
What is DCF? Discounted Cash Flow Explained →How to Value a Stock: Step-by-Step Guide →Intrinsic Value Calculator — How to Calculate What a Stock is Worth →
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