What is Tobin's Q?
The ratio of a company's market value to the replacement cost of its assets. Developed by Nobel laureate James Tobin in 1969. Q above 1 signals that the market values the firm above what it would cost to recreate; below 1 signals the opposite.
Tobin's Q = (Market value of equity + Market value of debt) / Replacement cost of assets. Q > 1 means it's more expensive to buy the equity than to build the business from scratch; Q < 1 means the opposite. The theoretical implication: a Q < 1 environment encourages acquisitions over capex (it's cheaper to buy than build); a Q > 1 environment encourages capex over acquisitions. At the aggregate market level, Tobin's Q has historically reverted toward 1 over multi-decade windows, making it a long-horizon valuation indicator alongside Shiller CAPE.
Limitations
Calculating Tobin's Q precisely requires estimating the replacement cost of intangibles (brand, software, IP) which is genuinely hard. Simplified proxies (market value / book value of assets) sacrifice precision for accessibility. For modern intangibles-heavy economies, the original Q calibration is less informative than it was for 1960s manufacturing-heavy markets.
invest-like does not use Tobin's Q as a framework input. The valuation pillars use FCF yield, P/E, EV/EBITDA, and DCF-derived intrinsic value, which are more practical at the individual-stock level than the asset-replacement-cost approach.
Frequently asked questions
What is Tobin's Q?
The ratio of market value to asset replacement cost. Q > 1 means market values exceed what it would cost to build the business; Q < 1 means the opposite.
Is it useful for individual stocks?
Less so than for aggregate markets. Replacement-cost estimation for intangibles is hard and the calibration varies by industry. invest-like doesn't use it directly.
Where is Tobin's Q useful?
Long-horizon broad-market valuation, alongside Shiller CAPE. A multi-decade signal, not a tactical timing tool.
Educational only. invest-like is not a registered investment adviser; nothing on this page constitutes personalised investment advice.