- Highlights companies trading below their accounting value, indicating market discount relative to assets.
- This screener highlights companies where the market price is below the company’s reported book value, while maintaining sufficient trading activity and no external debt.
- Trading below book value can signal pessimism, neglect, or unresolved business issues — not automatic opportunity.
- WynWealth presents this as a valuation signal, not a recommendation.
Why Book Value Matters
- Book value represents net assets on paper
- Market price reflects current perception
- When price < book, the market is discounting something
- This screener helps you notice where perception and accounting value diverge.
Important Context
- Below-book stocks often appear during:
- Sector downturns
- Temporary business stress
- Persistent discounts may indicate:
- Weak returns on assets
- Poor capital allocation
- Structural business issues
- Numbers don’t tell the full story. Context completes it….
Results (28 stocks)
Showing 1 to 5 of 28 results
How to Read Stocks Below Book Value Result
| Signal Element | What It Means | What You Should Notice |
|---|---|---|
| Price < Book Value | Market values company below assets | Ask why the discount exists |
| Zero Debt | No leverage risk | Asset value is not debt-inflated |
| Trading Volume > 50K | Active participation | Avoid illiquid value traps |
| Asset Quality | What assets make up book value | Cash ≠ factories ≠ goodwill |
| Earnings Trend | Business performance | Cheap stocks can stay cheap |
- WynWealth highlights stocks below book value to help you observe valuation gaps — not to label companies as cheap or attractive.
