Two Numbers, One Company

When a financial headline says a company is "worth $8 billion," you should immediately ask: which $8 billion? The number you use changes the valuation multiples, the comparison to peers, and the deal price if anyone ever buys the company.

Market capitalization and enterprise value both purport to measure how much a company is worth. They often differ by billions. Using one when you should use the other is one of the most consistent mistakes analysts make — and it produces systematically wrong conclusions.

The short answer: market cap measures what the equity is worth. Enterprise value measures what the entire business is worth — equity and debt included, minus any cash the acquirer would immediately recover. Once you understand why those two things differ, you understand why EV/EBITDA multiples exist alongside P/E ratios, and why you can never swap one for the other.

What Market Cap Actually Measures

Market capitalization is the simplest company valuation metric: multiply the current share price by the total number of shares outstanding. If 80 million shares trade at $42.50 each, the company's market cap is $3.4 billion.

Formula — Market Capitalization
Market Cap = Share Price × Shares Outstanding

Uses fully diluted share count when available (includes options and convertible instruments). For a listed company, this number refreshes every second the market is open.

Think of market cap using a property analogy. You own a house worth $600,000 in total, but you put down $150,000 and the bank holds a $450,000 mortgage. Your equity in the house — the amount you'd receive if you sold it at market price and paid off the mortgage — is $150,000. That's your market cap equivalent: it's the current market price of the equity stake, not the total value of the asset.

Market cap reflects what investors are collectively willing to pay for the equity — for the residual claim on earnings and assets after all creditors are satisfied. It captures stock market sentiment, growth expectations, and profitability estimates. What it deliberately excludes is how the underlying business is financed. A company with $4 billion in market cap and $6 billion in debt is a fundamentally different acquisition than a company with $4 billion in market cap and no debt — yet market cap treats them identically.

Diluted vs Basic Shares

Financial analysts use fully diluted share count (basic shares + all dilutive instruments: options, warrants, convertible notes). Basic share count understates market cap for companies with large equity compensation programs. The difference can exceed 5–8% at high-growth tech companies.

What Enterprise Value Actually Measures

Enterprise value answers a different question: if you wanted to buy this entire business outright — take ownership of everything, assume all obligations — what would you pay? Unlike market cap, EV is capital-structure neutral. It accounts for the fact that a leveraged company carries obligations that a buyer inherits.

Enterprise Value (EV) The theoretical total cost of acquiring a company — calculated as market capitalization plus all interest-bearing debt plus preferred stock plus minority interest, minus cash and cash equivalents.

Going back to the house analogy: if you want to buy that $600,000 house from someone, you don't just pay their $150,000 equity stake — you assume the $450,000 mortgage too, or arrange for it to be paid off at closing. Your total acquisition cost is $600,000. That's the enterprise value: the full ticket price.

Formula — Enterprise Value
EV = Market Cap + Total Debt + Preferred Stock + Minority Interest − Cash & Equivalents

Total debt = short-term borrowings + current portion of long-term debt + long-term debt. Cash is subtracted because an acquirer would immediately access it post-acquisition, reducing the net cost.

The logic behind each component is precise. You add debt because a buyer taking over the company must settle its creditors — either by assuming the debt or refinancing it. You add preferred stock because preferred shareholders have priority claims and must be paid out or bought out in a full acquisition. You add minority interest (non-controlling interest) because it represents ownership of subsidiaries not fully owned by the parent — an acquirer needs to buy those stakes too. You subtract cash because the acquirer gets it on day one, reducing the effective cost of the deal.

The Bridge: From Market Cap to Enterprise Value

The "EV bridge" is the reconciliation between what equity markets value the company at and what an acquirer would actually pay. The relationship is straightforward — you start with market cap and adjust for the capital structure.

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EV Is Always Relative to Market Cap

Enterprise value isn't a market-traded number — it's calculated from observable inputs. Market cap changes every trading day, so EV changes every day too. When analysts quote EV for a public company, they're typically using the most recent closing price and the latest balance sheet figures for debt and cash.

For most companies, EV exceeds market cap — sometimes dramatically. A capital-intensive manufacturer with $2 billion in long-term debt will have an EV significantly above its market cap. The only scenario where EV falls below market cap is a cash-heavy company with minimal debt, where the net cash position (cash minus debt) exceeds zero. Some Japanese corporations have historically traded below their net cash value — a structural inefficiency that value investors actively hunt for.

One nuance worth flagging: operating leases, pension obligations, and other off-balance-sheet liabilities are sometimes included in EV calculations for a more complete picture of total obligations. For most standard valuation work, the five-component formula above is sufficient. For deep M&A analysis, you'd add capitalised lease obligations as well. See the enterprise value vs equity value article for a detailed treatment of the bridge mechanics used in deal analysis.

EV vs Market Cap: Side-by-Side

Dimension Market Capitalization Enterprise Value
What it measures Market price of equity Total acquisition cost of the business
Formula Share price × shares outstanding Market cap + debt + preferred + minority interest − cash
Includes debt? No Yes — added to reflect acquirer's obligation
Includes cash? Implicitly (as an asset) Subtracted — acquirer recovers it post-deal
Capital-structure neutral? No — varies with leverage Yes — two companies with same operations but different debt have same EV, different market caps
Best used with Equity multiples: P/E, P/B, P/S, dividend yield Operating multiples: EV/EBITDA, EV/EBIT, EV/Revenue
Changes in real time? Yes — every tick of the share price Yes — but debt/cash update only with financial statements
Useful for M&A? Partial — equity deal price only Yes — represents actual total deal value
Useful for peer comparison? Only for companies with similar capital structures Yes — works across any capital structure

Worked Example: NexaTech Industries

NexaTech Industries is a mid-size industrial technology manufacturer listed on a US exchange. Using its most recent share price and balance sheet, here is how market cap and enterprise value are calculated — and why the two numbers diverge by 23.7%.

NexaTech Industries — Market Cap to EV Bridge (FY 2026)
Step 1 — Calculate Market Capitalization
Share Price (latest close)$74.50
Shares Outstanding (fully diluted)62.0 million
Market Capitalization$4,619M
Step 2 — Add Obligations (Debt & Claims)
Short-term borrowings & current portion of LTD+$215M
Long-term debt+$1,046M
Preferred stock+$148M
Minority interest (non-controlling interest)+$72M
Total Additions+$1,481M
Step 3 — Subtract Cash
Cash & cash equivalents−$387M
Enterprise Value$5,713M ✓

NexaTech's EV is $5,713M — 23.7% above its market cap of $4,619M. The primary driver is $1,261M in total debt (the sum of short-term and long-term borrowings). Any acquirer paying market cap would immediately be on the hook for that debt. A buyer who valued NexaTech at its market cap alone would severely underprice the acquisition.

Now consider how this changes the multiple you'd use for valuation. Suppose NexaTech's EBITDA is $842M and net income is $418M.

Multiple Numerator Denominator Value
EV/EBITDA $5,713M (EV) $842M (EBITDA) 6.8×
P/E Ratio $4,619M (Market Cap) $418M (Net Income) 11.1×
❌ Market Cap / EBITDA (wrong) $4,619M (Market Cap) $842M (EBITDA) 5.5× — understated

The bottom row illustrates the cardinal error: using market cap as the numerator against an operating metric like EBITDA that belongs to all capital providers. The result (5.5×) looks cheaper than it is. The correct EV/EBITDA is 6.8× — a full turn higher — because EBITDA flows to both debtholders and equity holders, and you need EV in the numerator to represent both claimants.

Which Metric Do Analysts Use When?

The governing rule is simple: match the numerator to the denominator. If your denominator is a pre-debt metric (before interest expense), use EV. If it's a post-debt metric (after interest expense), use market cap (equity value). Using the wrong numerator inflates or deflates the multiple — making companies look cheaper or more expensive than they are.

Multiple Numerator Denominator Why This Pairing?
EV/EBITDA Enterprise Value EBITDA (pre-interest, pre-tax) EBITDA accrues to all capital providers; EV represents all capital
EV/EBIT Enterprise Value EBIT (pre-interest) Same logic as EV/EBITDA; preserves D&A differences across industries
EV/Revenue Enterprise Value Revenue Revenue belongs to the entire enterprise, not just equity holders
EV/FCF Enterprise Value Unlevered Free Cash Flow Unlevered FCF is pre-financing cash flow — paired with EV for consistency
P/E Ratio Market Cap (equity value) Net Income (after interest, after tax) Net income is the equity holders' residual; market cap is the equity price
Price/Book Market Cap Book Value of Equity Both figures represent the equity claim only
Dividend Yield Share Price Dividend Per Share Dividends are paid to equity holders; price is the equity cost

EV/EBITDA is the dominant M&A multiple because it lets you compare companies regardless of their capital structure. Two companies with identical operations but one levered (debt-financed) and one unlevered (equity-financed) will have the same EV/EBITDA but wildly different P/E ratios — simply because interest expense distorts net income. For acquisition pricing, debt is irrelevant to operational value, so analysts strip it out.

"When you're deciding whether a business is cheap or expensive, use EV/EBITDA. When you're deciding whether a stock is cheap or expensive, use P/E."

Why Market Cap Alone Misleads

Consider two industrial companies with identical market caps of $3.2 billion:

Metric Grantham Engineering Solaris Components
Share price $32.00 $32.00
Shares outstanding 100M 100M
Market capitalization $3,200M $3,200M
Total debt $2,400M $0
Cash $180M $450M
Enterprise Value $5,420M $2,750M
EBITDA $580M $580M
EV/EBITDA 9.3× 4.7×

Same market cap. Same EBITDA. Completely different valuation stories. Grantham Engineering's $2.4 billion debt load means an acquirer would actually pay $5.4 billion for the business — a 9.3× EBITDA multiple. Solaris Components, with no debt and $450M in cash, is actually far cheaper in enterprise value terms at 4.7×. Market cap alone made them look identical.

This is the leverage illusion. Highly leveraged companies routinely appear "cheap" on market cap-based metrics because debt suppresses equity value while EBITDA remains unaffected. The correction is straightforward: always include the full capital structure in your comparison.

Watch Out for "Market Cap Rankings"

Lists ranking companies by market cap are popularity contests, not valuations. Apple's $3 trillion market cap tells you what equity investors value the equity at — it tells you nothing about Apple's debt, cash position, or what it would cost to actually acquire the company. For acquisition analysis or peer comparison, market cap rankings are close to useless without the corresponding EV figures.

Common Misconceptions

Myth

A company with a higher market cap is always more expensive than a smaller one.

Reality

A $5B market cap company with $8B in debt has an EV of $13B+. A $7B market cap company with zero debt and $1B cash has an EV of $6B. The smaller market cap company is actually cheaper on every EV-based multiple.

Myth

EV/EBITDA and P/E measure the same thing — you can use either for valuation comparisons.

Reality

P/E reflects capital structure — two identical businesses financed differently will have different P/E ratios. EV/EBITDA is capital-structure neutral. They are not interchangeable: use EV/EBITDA for cross-company operating comparisons and P/E for equity investor return analysis.

Myth

A negative enterprise value means the company is virtually free — an obvious bargain.

Reality

Negative EV (where cash exceeds market cap plus debt) can signal a distressed business with a collapsing market cap, heavy cash burn, or structural value destruction. It occasionally signals a genuine deep-value opportunity — but investors should verify the cash is real, liquid, and accessible before concluding the company is "free."

Key Takeaways

  • Market cap is the equity price. It equals share price × shares outstanding — what investors pay for the equity claim alone, ignoring how the business is financed.
  • Enterprise value is the total acquisition cost. It equals market cap + debt + preferred + minority interest − cash — what you actually pay to own the whole business.
  • Match numerator to denominator. EV goes with pre-interest metrics (EBITDA, EBIT, revenue); market cap goes with post-interest metrics (net income, book equity). Mixing them produces incorrect multiples.
  • Leverage creates a gap between EV and market cap. A heavily indebted company looks cheap on market cap; its EV multiple reveals the true cost. Peer comparisons using only market cap are unreliable whenever capital structures differ.
  • EV/EBITDA is the standard M&A multiple because it eliminates capital structure differences and lets acquirers compare operating value across differently financed businesses.
  • Cash-rich companies can have EV below market cap. This is rare for profitable businesses but common in deep-value territory — and worth investigating when it occurs.

Quick Quiz

Four questions to check your understanding. Click an answer to reveal the explanation.

1. A company has a market cap of $4.8B, total debt of $2.1B, preferred stock of $300M, minority interest of $100M, and cash of $650M. What is its enterprise value?

Answer: C. EV = $4,800M + $2,100M + $300M + $100M − $650M = $6,650M ($6.65B). You add all obligations (debt + preferred + minority interest) to market cap, then subtract cash. Option B ($6.3B) is wrong because it forgets to add the preferred stock and minority interest. Option D ($7.3B) is wrong because it forgets to subtract cash. Takeaway: use the full five-component formula — omitting preferred stock or minority interest is a common shortcut that understates EV.

2. An analyst wants to compare the valuation of two companies in the same industry: one financed entirely with equity, the other carrying significant debt. Which multiple is most appropriate for a fair comparison?

Answer: C. EV/EBITDA is capital-structure neutral — it compares the operating value of both businesses before financing costs distort the picture. P/E (Option A) is the classic wrong answer here: the leveraged company's net income is reduced by interest expense, so its P/E appears lower than the unleveraged peer's even if both have identical operating performance. P/E makes the indebted company look cheaper when it isn't. Takeaway: whenever capital structures differ, use EV-based multiples, not equity multiples.

3. Company A has a market cap of $2.5B and $3.8B in net debt. Company B has a market cap of $4.2B and zero debt with $600M in cash. Which company has the higher enterprise value?

Answer: A. Company A: EV ≈ $2,500M + $3,800M = $6,300M. Company B: EV ≈ $4,200M − $600M = $3,600M. Despite Company A having a much lower market cap ($2.5B vs $4.2B), its massive debt load pushes its EV to nearly double that of Company B. This directly illustrates the leverage illusion — market cap rankings reverse the true acquisition cost ranking here. Takeaway: market cap understates the real cost of a leveraged company. Always check EV before concluding which business is "bigger."

4. Why is cash subtracted when calculating enterprise value?

Answer: C. Cash is subtracted because from an acquirer's perspective, it's a "free" asset — you buy the company, and one of the things you receive is its cash balance. If a company has $500M in cash and you pay $3B for it, your effective net cost is $2.5B because you now control $500M in cash. Option D sounds plausible (share price does reflect cash) but is conceptually backwards — EV strips out cash to neutralise it, not to avoid double-counting. Takeaway: EV represents the net cost of the operating business. Cash is excluded because it directly offsets the purchase price dollar for dollar.