📘 Stock Market 101 – Lesson 8
Essential Financial Ratios: How Real Investors Actually Use Them
Hook
Let me start with a simple truth.
Most beginners don’t lose money because they picked the wrong stock.
They lose money because they didn’t understand what they were buying.
They saw a low price.
They heard someone say, “This stock is cheap.”
They checked one ratio… and jumped in.
This lesson exists to stop that mistake.
Today, we’re not going to learn all ratios. We’re going to learn the few that actually matter, and more importantly, how to think about them.
Why Financial Ratios Are Important (And Why They’re Often Misused)
Financial ratios are not magic numbers.
They don’t predict stock prices.
They don’t guarantee profits.
What they do is reduce ignorance.
When you understand ratios, you stop asking:
“Is this stock good?”
And you start asking:
“Why is the market valuing this company like this?”
That shift alone makes you a better investor.
Let’s Slow Down Before Jumping into Ratios
Before we discuss P/E, ROE, or ROCE, I want you to remember this:
Ratios are comparison tools, not judgement tools.
A ratio only makes sense when you compare:
The same company over time
Similar companies in the same industry
Comparing an IT stock with a bank using the same ratio is like comparing a bike and a truck based on mileage alone.
Now let’s get into the essentials.
1️⃣ Price to Earnings Ratio (P/E)
What P/E Really Means (In Plain Language)
P/E answers one simple question:
“How much am I paying today for the company’s earnings?”
If a stock has a P/E of 20, it means:
You’re paying ₹20 for every ₹1 of annual profit.
That’s it. Nothing fancy.
Why People Love P/E (And Why It Confuses Beginners)
P/E is popular because it looks simple.
But simplicity can be dangerous.
A high P/E usually means:
The market expects growth
Investors believe earnings will increase
A low P/E usually means:
The business may be struggling
Growth expectations are weak
Here’s where many beginners go wrong.
They see a low P/E and think:
“This stock is cheap. It will surely go up.”
Sometimes it does.
Many times, it doesn’t.
When P/E Completely Fails
Let me be very clear here.
P/E is useless when:
Earnings are temporary
Profits are cyclical
One-time income inflated EPS
This happens often in commodity, metal, and cyclical stocks.
That’s why P/E should never be used alone.
2️⃣ Price to Book Ratio (P/B)
What P/B Tells You
P/B compares the stock price with the company’s net worth.
In simple words:
“What am I paying compared to what the company owns minus what it owes?”
Where P/B Works Best
P/B works beautifully for:
Banks
NBFCs
Financial institutions
Why?
Because their assets and liabilities are clearly defined and updated frequently.
A Common Beginner Confusion
Many people believe:
“If P/B is below 1, the stock is undervalued.”
That’s not always true.
A low P/B can also mean:
Poor asset quality
Bad loan book
Weak management
Again, context matters.
3️⃣ Return on Equity (ROE)
Why Investors Care About ROE
ROE shows how efficiently a company uses shareholders’ money.
Think of it like this:
You give money to a business.
ROE tells you how well that money is being used.
What Is a “Good” ROE?
There is no perfect number, but as a general guide:
Above 15% → healthy business
Consistent ROE → strong management
Consistency is more important than one great year.
The Hidden Risk with ROE
Here’s something many articles don’t explain properly.
ROE can look high simply because:
The company has taken a lot of debt
Debt reduces equity, which inflates ROE.
That’s why ROE without ROCE is incomplete.
4️⃣ Return on Capital Employed (ROCE)
Now we’re getting into a ratio I personally trust a lot.
Why ROCE Is Powerful
ROCE tells you:
“How well is this company using all the money invested in the business?”
That includes:
Equity
Debt
This makes ROCE extremely useful for:
Manufacturing companies
Infrastructure businesses
Capital-heavy industries
How to Think About ROCE (Not Memorise It)
A simple way to use ROCE:
If ROCE is consistently higher than borrowing costs → good business
If ROCE improves year after year → improving efficiency
ROCE exposes weak businesses faster than most ratios.
5️⃣ Profit Margins (Operating & Net)
What Margins Reveal About a Business
Margins show how much profit remains after costs.
Operating margin shows business strength
Net margin shows overall efficiency
Why Margins Matter More Than You Think
High margins usually indicate:
Pricing power
Strong brand
Cost discipline
Falling margins often signal:
Rising competition
Input cost pressure
Weak demand
Margins tell a story long before stock prices react.
Sector Context: The Rule Most Beginners Ignore
Let me say this clearly.
Ratios without sector context are meaningless.
For example:
Banks → P/B and ROE matter most
FMCG → ROE and margins dominate
Manufacturing → ROCE is critical
IT → Margins and earnings growth matter more
If you remember only one thing from this lesson, remember this.
Common Ratio Mistakes I See Again and Again
Beginners often:
Focus on one ratio only
Ignore long-term trends
Compare unrelated companies
Chase “cheap” stocks blindly
Ratios are tools.
They are not shortcuts.
A Simple Ratio Framework (No Overthinking)
Here’s how I suggest beginners approach analysis:
Start with valuation (P/E or P/B)
Check profitability (ROE and margins)
Check efficiency (ROCE)
Compare with peers
Look at consistency over years
You don’t need anything more than this to begin.
Final Thoughts (Read This Slowly)
Financial ratios will not make you rich overnight.
But they will save you from bad decisions, and that alone compounds wealth over time.
Most successful investors are not smarter than others.
They are simply less careless.
And understanding these ratios helps you become exactly that.
Further reading 👇
Stock Market 101: Learn Stocks from Zero
SIPs in 2025: Why They’re Booming in India
Disclaimer :
This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

