Browse Valuation and Analysis

Market Value

Understand market value as the price an asset, company, or security commands in the market at a given time.

The market value is the value assigned to an asset, company, or security by the market at a given time.

In simple terms, it is what the market is currently willing to pay.

Why It Matters

Market value matters because it is the valuation investors and counterparties actually face in the market, regardless of what an asset originally cost or what its book value may be.

It is central to:

  • trading decisions
  • portfolio measurement
  • acquisition analysis
  • performance reporting

Worked Example

A company can report one book value on its balance sheet while the stock market assigns a very different market value to its equity.

That difference reflects investor expectations, risk, growth assumptions, and current market conditions.

Scenario Question

An investor says, “If an asset cost me a certain amount, that must still be its value.”

Answer: No. Historical cost and current market value are different concepts. Market value reflects the price the market supports now.

  • Book Value: A balance-sheet value measure that often differs from market value.
  • Fair Market Value: A related valuation term used in appraisal and tax contexts.
  • Current Market Value: A narrower phrase emphasizing present-time market price.
  • Open Market Value: Another way of thinking about market-based sale value.
  • Portfolio Value: Portfolio value is often built from the market values of its holdings.

FAQs

Is market value the same as book value?

No. Book value comes from accounting records, while market value comes from what buyers and sellers will currently pay.

Can market value change quickly?

Yes. Market value can change immediately as new information or sentiment changes prices.

Why do investors focus on market value?

Because it reflects the current economic price of owning or selling the asset.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026