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EV / EBITDA at other companies

JPMorgan Chase logo
JPMorgan ChaseJPM
6.1×+2.0×
Bank of America logo
Bank of AmericaBAC
4.2×+1.3×
Wells Fargo & Company logo
Wells Fargo & CompanyWFC
4.1×-1.0×
Citigroup logo
CitigroupC
2.3×+0.7×
Morgan Stanley logo
Morgan StanleyMS
7.5×+1.6×

Other financials

Income statement

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Revenue$17.2B+14.4%
Net income$5.6B+18.8%
EPS (diluted)$17.55+24.3%

Balance sheet

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Cash & equivalents$179.53B+7.2%
Total debt$2.1B-99.4%
Total equity$122.78B-1.2%
Total assets$2.06T+16.7%

Cash flow

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Operating cash flow-$31.9B+14.4%
CapEx$565.0M+13.2%
Free cash flow-$32.4B+14.0%

Valuation

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Market cap$323.49B+47.0%
Enterprise value$146.06B-78.7%
P/E17.9×+3.1×
P/S5.4×+1.3×

Profitability

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Net margin29.9%+2.5pp

Returns & leverage

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Return on equity14.6%+2.4pp
Debt / equity-2.7×

Questions, answered.

What does EV / EBITDA mean?
What the whole business (debt included) costs relative to its operating cash earnings.
How do you interpret EV / EBITDA?
Lets you compare companies with different leverage and tax positions on a like-for-like basis — the standard multiple in M&A. Lower can mean cheaper, subject to growth and capital intensity.
How does EV / EBITDA compare across companies?
Broadly comparable across non-financial sectors; not used for banks and insurers, where EBITDA is not meaningful.