Enterprise Value

What is Enterprise Value

Enterprise Value (EV) is a valuation metric that measures a company's total value, including its market capitalization, total debt, preferred equity, and minority interest, minus its cash and cash equivalents. It provides a more comprehensive picture of a company's value than market capitalization alone. By considering EV, investors can better assess a company's financial health and compare it to peers.

Enterprise Value (EV) measures a company's total value, including both its equity and debt components. It is conceptually constructed by adding a company's Market Capitalization, Total Debt, Preferred Equity, and Minority Interest, then subtracting its Cash and Cash Equivalents. This metric provides a more comprehensive picture of a company's value than equity market capitalization alone, as it accounts for the company's capital structure. Higher Enterprise Value readings generally signal a larger company size or a higher valuation, while lower readings indicate a smaller company size or lower valuation. The quality of the Enterprise Value signal can be affected by variations in its definition, such as the treatment of leases, minority interest, preferred equity, and cash adjustments.

How to calculate it

Formula

Enterprise Value = Market Capitalization + Total Debt + Preferred Equity + Minority Interest - Cash and Cash Equivalents

Example

Example frame: Enterprise Value changes when the underlying company data changes, so the live page context should drive any comparison. Open the live stock page.

Definition Variations

Enterprise value definitions can vary based on leases, minority interest, preferred equity, and cash adjustments, making some versions more relevant in certain situations, such as when considering the impact of leases or the role of preferred equity on a company's valuation.

Benchmarks

Enterprise Value can vary significantly by sector or business model due to differences in capital structure, operating leases, and other factors, which is why comparing a company's Enterprise Value to the live S&P 500 benchmark and sector medians can provide a more nuanced understanding of its valuation. By considering these benchmarks, investors can better assess a company's relative valuation and make more informed decisions.

Sector comparison

As of Jul 9, 2026 | n=12Median Enterprise Value by sector
SectorMedian Enterprise ValueAs of
S&P 500$53.1BJul 9, 2026
Communication Services$100.8BJul 9, 2026
Energy$77.8BJul 9, 2026
Technology$70.5BJul 9, 2026
Industrials$60.3BJul 9, 2026
Utilities$60.1BJul 9, 2026
Consumer Defensive$45.3BJul 9, 2026
Real Estate$44.8BJul 9, 2026
Consumer Cyclical$42.8BJul 9, 2026
Healthcare$39.6BJul 9, 2026
Financial Services$37.6BJul 9, 2026
Basic Materials$36.6BJul 9, 2026

Universe distribution

As of Jun 23, 2026 | n=3,451Universe distribution versus S&P 500Typical range is the 25th to 75th percentile: $225.3M to $8.7B. Values outside that band need a business-specific explanation.

Chart view is trimmed to the 5th-95th percentile for readability.

Interpretation

How to read it

  1. Subtract cash and equivalents from the debt-inclusive valuation first, because a company holding substantial cash can appear expensive on an EV basis when it actually has lower net leverage.
  2. Watch whether preferred equity and minority interest are included in the calculation, since their omission understates the true cost of capital and can make a leveraged or complex capital structure appear cheaper than it is.
  3. A rising enterprise value paired with flat or declining operating earnings signals that the market is pricing in future growth or that debt has accumulated without corresponding cash generation.
  4. Compare enterprise value across peers only after confirming that lease obligations and off-balance-sheet financing are treated consistently, because accounting treatment differences can distort relative valuations.

High vs low

Enterprise Value reflects what an acquirer would pay for a company's core operations. A high Enterprise Value relative to earnings or cash flow signals the market is pricing in substantial future growth or competitive advantage, but also means less margin for error if those expectations disappoint. A low Enterprise Value can indicate genuine undervaluation, but equally often reflects deteriorating cash generation, high leverage, or structural business decline. The signal resolves through comparison: examine whether low EV accompanies strong free cash flow and reasonable debt levels (suggesting undervaluation) or weak profitability and rising liabilities (suggesting justified discount). Similarly, high EV paired with expanding margins and durable competitive position differs sharply from high EV supported only by speculative growth assumptions. Comparing Enterprise Value across peers in the same industry and stage of maturity provides the clearest context for interpretation.

Reference

Extremes

As of Jul 9, 2026 | sp500Current highest and lowest Enterprise ValueThese are the top and bottom 3 companies in the S&P 500 for this metric.
Highest
  • NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA)
    Technology
    $4.8T
    Enterprise Value
  • Apple Inc. (AAPL)
    Technology
    $4.7T
    Enterprise Value
  • Alphabet Inc. (GOOG)
    Communication Services
    $4.3T
    Enterprise Value
Lowest
  • MetLife, Inc. (MET)
    Financial Services
    -$259.4B
    Enterprise Value
  • Apollo Global Management, Inc. (APO)
    Financial Services
    -$148.9B
    Enterprise Value
  • State Street Corporation (STT)
    Financial Services
    -$58.5B
    Enterprise Value
GroupCompanyTickerSectorEnterprise ValueAs of
HighestNVIDIA CorporationNVDATechnology$4.8TJul 9, 2026
HighestApple Inc.AAPLTechnology$4.7TJul 9, 2026
HighestAlphabet Inc.GOOGCommunication Services$4.3TJul 9, 2026
LowestMetLife, Inc.METFinancial Services-$259.4BJul 9, 2026
LowestApollo Global Management, Inc.APOFinancial Services-$148.9BJul 9, 2026
LowestState Street CorporationSTTFinancial Services-$58.5BJul 9, 2026

Limitations

When calculating Enterprise Value (EV), several factors can affect the accuracy of the result, including variations in the treatment of certain financial components.

  • Enterprise Value requires accurate measurement of total debt across multiple sources (bank loans, bonds, leases), and omissions or misclassifications can distort the metric significantly.
  • The treatment of cash equivalents varies by analyst and accounting standard, creating inconsistency when comparing enterprise values across companies or time periods.
  • Enterprise Value does not account for the quality or sustainability of earnings, so two companies with identical EV may have vastly different cash generation profiles.
  • Preferred equity and minority interest adjustments are often material but inconsistently reported, making standardized cross-company comparisons difficult without detailed reconciliation.

FAQ

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