Passenger Airlines Companies By Pb Ratio

Price To Book
Price To BookEfficiencyMarket RiskExp Return
1UP Wheels Up Experience
2.86 K
 0.15 
 8.65 
 1.27 
2JOBY Joby Aviation
15.22
 0.15 
 5.33 
 0.79 
3LTM LATAM Airlines Group
15.19
 0.06 
 1.90 
 0.12 
4FLYX flyExclusive,
6.86
 0.27 
 6.50 
 1.75 
5RYDE Ryde Group
4.72
 0.05 
 7.47 
 0.40 
6RYAAY Ryanair Holdings PLC
3.44
 0.01 
 1.81 
 0.02 
7VLRS Volaris
3.1
 0.19 
 3.26 
 0.61 
8SRFM Surf Air Mobility
2.86
 0.06 
 8.91 
 0.54 
9UAL United Airlines Holdings
2.45
 0.14 
 2.88 
 0.39 
10ULCC Frontier Group Holdings
2.34
 0.12 
 6.19 
 0.74 
11LUV Southwest Airlines
2.19
 0.01 
 2.57 
 0.02 
12DAL Delta Air Lines
2.16
 0.10 
 2.59 
 0.27 
13CPA Copa Holdings SA
1.92
 0.09 
 1.51 
 0.14 
14SKYW SkyWest
1.61
 0.01 
 2.28 
 0.02 
15ALK Alaska Air Group
1.58
 0.03 
 2.87 
 0.10 
16UHAL-B U Haul Holding
1.25
(0.05)
 1.60 
(0.09)
17SNCY Sun Country Airlines
1.09
 0.04 
 3.55 
 0.14 
18ALGT Allegiant Travel
1.08
 0.05 
 4.01 
 0.20 
19JTAI JetAI Inc
1.05
(0.01)
 3.28 
(0.02)
20JBLU JetBlue Airways Corp
0.77
 0.11 
 3.18 
 0.34 
The analysis above is based on a 90-day investment horizon and a default level of risk. Use the Portfolio Analyzer to fine-tune all your assumptions. Check your current assumptions here.
Price to Book (P/B) ratio is used to relate a company book value to its current market price. A high P/B ratio indicates that investors expect executives to generate more returns on their investments from a given set of assets. Book value is the accounting value of assets minus liabilities. Price to Book ratio is mostly used in financial services industries where assets and liabilities are typically represented by dollars. Although low Price to Book ratio generally implies that the firm is undervalued, it is often a good indicator that the company may be in financial or managerial distress and should be investigated more carefully.