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Tools · Fundamentals

Fundamental calculator

Turn a company's latest results into every valuation and quality ratio on one screen: P/E, P/B, P/S, PEG, EV/EBITDA, ROE, margins, growth, debt-to-equity and more, each read back in plain English, with the live BazaarBaazi technical read for covered stocks. No login.

The answer

The P/E ratio is the share price divided by earnings per share: a stock at 500 rupees with an EPS of 25 rupees trades at a P/E of 20, meaning you pay 20 rupees for every 1 rupee of annual profit. This tool computes that and every other valuation, quality, growth and leverage ratio from the figures you enter.
Price₹500
EPS₹25
P/E20x

BazaarBaaziSource & method

The calculatorInstant · in your browser

Pick a covered stock for the live technical read, or go straight to manual entry. Type the figures from the latest results and every ratio updates as you go. Nothing is sent anywhere.

1 · Pick a covered stock, or enter any company by hand

The technical read is BazaarBaazi live data. Pick a name to auto-fill the latest filed figures, or enter any company's numbers from its results below. Nothing is sent anywhere.

3 · The read, one screen

Pick a covered stock above to auto-fill, or enter a price and at least one figure (start with price and EPS for the P/E). Every ratio it can compute appears here, each read back in plain English.

A calculator, not advice. Stored figures are pulled from each company's filed results, date-stamped and currency-checked; price-derived ratios are computed live from those times the price you set. Always read a ratio against the company's own history and sector, and verify against the official results. Banks and financials need different lenses (price-to-book and ROE over P/E and EV/EBITDA).

How to read the outputThe method

A ratio is a question, not an answer. Here is what each block is telling you.

Valuation ratios ask what you are paying. P/E and EV/EBITDA say how many years of current profit the price represents, P/B anchors to net assets, and PEG checks the multiple against the growth rate. None of them is cheap or expensive on its own, they are only cheap or expensive against the sector and the company's own past.

Quality ratios ask whether the business is worth owning at any price. A high, durable return on equity with healthy margins and low leverage is the signature of a compounder, the kind of name where time is on your side. Growth and balance-sheet health then tell you whether that quality is improving or decaying, and whether the company can survive a bad year. Read all four blocks together, never a single number in isolation.

FAQ5 reader questions · AEO-eligible

Reading a company's ratios, distilled and schema-marked for AI Overview, Perplexity, and reader search.

How do I calculate the P/E ratio of a stock?

Divide the share price by the earnings per share (EPS) over the trailing twelve months. A stock at 500 rupees with an EPS of 25 has a P/E of 20. A lower P/E can mean cheaper or it can mean the market expects trouble, so always compare it to the sector and the stock's own history.

What ratios can I compute from a company's last earnings?

From the results and the price you can compute the full valuation set (P/E, P/B, P/S, PEG, EV/EBITDA, earnings yield, dividend yield, market cap, enterprise value), the quality set (ROE, net margin, EBITDA margin), growth (EPS and revenue year on year) and balance-sheet health (debt-to-equity, current ratio, interest cover). This tool does all of them on one screen.

What is a good ROE for a stock?

As a rough guide, return on equity below 10 percent is weak, 10 to 15 percent is acceptable, 15 to 20 percent is good, and above 20 percent is excellent if it is sustainable and not driven by heavy debt. Compare ROE within the same sector for a fair read.

Why does this calculator not auto-fill the fundamentals?

Free third-party fundamental data for Indian stocks is often stale or wrong, and publishing a wrong P/E would be worse than none. So you enter the figures from the company's own latest filed results and the tool computes from that real source. The live technical read (Crack Score and stance) for covered stocks is BazaarBaazi data and does pre-fill.

Are bank and NBFC ratios read the same way?

No. For banks and financials, debt is the raw material of the business, so debt-to-equity and EV/EBITDA are not meaningful. Read them on price-to-book and return on equity instead, alongside net interest margin and asset quality from the results.

Use it with

Compute the ratios here, then compare two names and read the full verdict.

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