Intrinsic Value is a finance-focused reference term for equity ownership, valuation, or balance-sheet analysis.
Intrinsic value is an estimate of what an asset, security, or business is truly worth based on its underlying economics rather than on its current market price.
In investing, intrinsic value matters because price and value are not always the same thing. The market may price an asset too high, too low, or roughly fairly depending on expectations, fear, optimism, and changing information.
Investors use intrinsic value to answer a simple question:
Is the current price justified by the future cash flows and economic quality of the asset?
That makes intrinsic value central to:
There is no single universal method. Intrinsic value is estimated, not observed directly.
Common approaches include:
Discounted cash flow (DCF) estimates value by projecting future cash flows and discounting them back to the present using a required return.
Investors may also compare valuation multiples such as P/E, EV/EBITDA, or price-to-book, though those are usually supporting tools rather than pure intrinsic-value methods.
Some businesses are analyzed partly through net asset value, liquidation value, or balance-sheet value.
Intrinsic value depends on assumptions, including:
That means different investors can reach different intrinsic-value estimates for the same company and still be acting rationally.
Market price is what the asset trades for now.
Intrinsic value is what the investor believes the asset is economically worth.
When the investor’s estimate of intrinsic value is above market price, the asset may look undervalued. When it is below market price, the asset may look overvalued.
This gap between price and value is one of the foundations of value investing.
Book value is based on accounting net assets.
Intrinsic value is broader. It tries to capture the economic value of future returns, not just recorded balance-sheet numbers.
That is why a company can have modest book value but high intrinsic value if it has strong future cash-generation potential.