How to Use Price-to-Book Ratio the Right Way
You come across a stock trading at ₦5,000. Then you check its book value, ₦500. That means investors are paying 10 times the company’s paper value. At first glance, it feels obvious: This stock is too expensive. But that conclusion misses something important.
Why “Expensive” Isn’t Always What It Seems
It’s natural to compare what a stock costs and, what the company is worth today
If a company is “worth” ₦500 per share, why pay ₦5,000? Because markets don’t price companies based on what they are. They price them based on what they can become.
What Is Book Value (And Why It Matters)?
Book value represents a company’s net worth. If a company sold all its assets and paid off its debts, the remainder belongs to shareholders. When divided by the total number of shares, you get:
Book Value Per Share (BVPS)
BVPS = (Total Assets − Total Liabilities) ÷ Total Shares Outstanding
In simple terms: if a company has ₦10 billion in assets, ₦4 billion in liabilities, and 12 million shares outstanding, its BVPS is ₦500. That’s what each share would theoretically be worth if the company closed today.
It’s a useful baseline, but it’s only a snapshot of today.
What Is Price-to-Book Ratio (P/B)?
The Price-to-Book ratio compares:
- Market price per share
- Book value per share
In the earlier example:
- Share price = ₦5,000
- Book value = ₦500
- P/B = 10x
This means investors are willing to pay 10 times the company’s current net assets.
How to Interpret P/B
- P/B < 1 means the market has low expectations or concerns
- P/B ≈ 1 means the company is priced close to its net assets
- P/B > 1 means investors expect future growth
This is where many people get it wrong.
The Big Misconception: “High P/B Means Overpriced”
A high P/B ratio doesn’t automatically mean a stock is expensive. It often means investors believe:
- Earnings will grow
- Assets will become more productive
- The business will generate more value over time
You’re not just buying what the company owns today. You’re buying what you can potentially earn tomorrow.
Why Book Value Misses a Big Part of the Story
To understand this, it helps to know what a balance sheet actually contains.
A balance sheet is a financial snapshot of a company, it lists everything the company owns (assets) and everything it owes (liabilities). The difference between the two is what belongs to shareholders, which is where book value comes from.
Assets on a balance sheet generally fall into two categories:
Tangible assets: physical, measurable things like:
- Buildings and land
- Equipment and machinery
- Cash and inventory
Intangible assets: non-physical value that’s harder to measure, like:
- Brand recognition
- Patents and trademarks
- Customer relationships
- Goodwill
Here’s the problem: while accounting standards allow some intangible assets on the balance sheet, many of the most valuable ones, brand strength, customer loyalty, distribution networks, operational efficiency, don’t show up clearly, if at all.
A company with strong intangible advantages can generate significantly more profit from the same asset base, and investors price that in. This is one of the main reasons P/B can feel misleading, especially for modern businesses.
A Practical Example
Let’s compare two companies:
| Company A | Company B |
| Book Value per Share: ₦500 Share Price: ₦500 P/B = 1x Return on Equity (ROE): 5% Earnings Growth: 3% annually | Book Value per Share: ₦500 Share Price: ₦4,000 P/B = 8x Return on Equity (ROE): 35% Earnings Growth: 40% annually |
At first glance, Company B looks expensive. But look deeper:
- It generates 7x more profit per naira of equity
- It is growing significantly faster
In this context, investors aren’t overpaying. They’re pricing in a more productive and faster-growing business. The stock trading at ₦4,000 isn’t necessarily the most expensive one; it might actually be the better buy.
What Is Return on Equity (ROE)?
ROE measures how efficiently a company uses shareholders’ money to generate profit. It answers: For every ₦1 invested, how much profit is the company producing?
- Low ROE mean inefficient use of capital
- High ROE mean strong profitability and efficiency
This is why ROE works well alongside P/B:
- P/B tells you what you’re paying.
- ROE tells you what you’re getting.
How This Plays Out on the Nigerian Exchange
The NGX offers a useful real-world lens for understanding P/B across different sectors.
Banking sector: Where P/B is most meaningful
Nigerian banks are among the best examples of how P/B works in practice. Banks hold large, measurable asset bases, loans, bonds, and cash reserves. Their book value is relatively reliable, making P/B a genuinely useful metric.
Institutions like Guaranty Trust Holding Company (GTCO) and Zenith Bank have historically traded at varying P/B multiples.
When a tier-1 bank trades at a premium to book value, it’s often because the market is pricing in consistent dividend payments, strong ROE, and a well-managed loan book. When one trades at or below book value, it can signal investor concern about asset quality, regulatory exposure, or earnings pressure.
In this sector, P/B is not just a surface-level number; it reflects real expectations about how well the bank manages its balance sheet.
Consumer goods and industrials: A different picture
Companies like Dangote Cement or BUA Foods sit in sectors where assets, factories, equipment, and raw materials are central to the business. Their book values carry more weight, and P/B can offer meaningful insight into how the market values their physical capacity relative to competitors.
But even here, the premium over book value is often justified by brand dominance, distribution reach, and pricing power, intangible advantages that don’t appear directly on the balance sheet.
Telecoms: Where P/B starts to break down
MTN Nigeria is one of the largest companies listed on the NGX by market capitalisation. But if you tried to value it primarily through P/B, you’d miss most of what makes it valuable.
Its economic strength lies in network coverage, customer base, brand recognition, and mobile money infrastructure, none of which are fully captured in tangible assets. A high P/B ratio here isn’t a warning sign. It’s the market acknowledging that the real value sits in things that accounting can’t easily measure.
This is precisely why context matters. The same ratio means different things depending on the industry.
When Price-to-Book Can Mislead You
P/B is useful, but only in the right context.
1. Asset-Light Businesses: Tech, media, and service companies often have low physical assets but high earnings power. Their book value looks small. Their P/B looks high. But their profitability may justify it.
2. Weak or Declining Businesses: A company can have strong assets but poor performance. Low P/B may look attractive, but earnings may be stagnant or declining. This is often called a value trap, a stock that appears cheap based on its assets, but fails to deliver meaningful returns because the business itself isn’t improving. You’re buying something that looks like a bargain, but doesn’t actually create value over time.
3. Inflated or Outdated Asset Values: If assets are overstated or outdated, book value can give a false sense of security. For example, a company may still carry land or equipment on its books at values from years ago, even though market conditions have changed significantly. If those assets were sold today, they might fetch much less than their stated value. In that case, the “book value” you’re relying on isn’t truly reflective of reality.
4. No Growth to Support the Premium A high P/B ratio without strong earnings or growth can indicate true overvaluation.
When P/B Is Most Useful (And When It Isn’t)
Works best for:
- Banks and financial institutions
- Insurance companies
- Manufacturing and cement firms
- Asset-heavy businesses
In these sectors, assets play a direct role in generating income, and the NGX has deep representation across all of them.
Less useful for:
- Telecoms companies
- Consumer brands
- Service-based businesses
In these cases, value comes more from intangible factors than physical assets. A high P/B ratio is more likely to reflect competitive strength than overpricing.
The Cowrywise Valuation Lens
Before deciding whether a stock is expensive, ask:
- Am I paying for assets or future growth?
- Is the company generating strong returns on equity?
- Is that growth consistent and sustainable?
- Does the sector make book value a reliable benchmark?
These questions matter more than the ratio alone.

Final Thought
A stock isn’t expensive simply because its price is high relative to its book value. It becomes expensive when the business behind that price cannot justify the expectations built into it.
If a company is generating strong returns on equity and growing its earnings consistently, a higher price may be justified. If it isn’t, even a “cheap” stock can turn out to be costly.
Understanding that distinction, and how it plays out differently across the NGX, is what separates surface-level investing from thoughtful decision-making.
