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Every Formula You Need for Investment Banking Interviews (Cheat Sheet)

Complete IB interview formula sheet: WACC, DCF, CAPM, enterprise value, LBO returns, valuation multiples, and key ratios. All in one place.

Every Formula You Need for Investment Banking Interviews (Cheat Sheet)
4 min read

This is the complete formula reference for investment banking interviews. Every formula below has either been asked directly in interviews or underpins a concept that gets tested. No explanations you don't need – just the formulas, what they mean, and when you'd use them.

Bookmark this page. Come back to it the night before your interview.

Enterprise Value & Equity Value

Formula What It Means
Enterprise Value = Equity Value + Net Debt + Minority Interest + Preferred Stock – Associates Value of core business operations to all capital providers (debt + equity). Used for EV-based multiples.
Equity Value = Share Price × Diluted Shares Outstanding Value of the company to common shareholders only. Also called market capitalisation (basic) or fully diluted equity value.
Net Debt = Total Debt – Cash & Cash Equivalents The net obligation to debt holders after accounting for available cash.
Diluted Shares = Basic Shares + In-the-Money Options (Treasury Stock Method) + Convertibles Accounts for all potential shares that could be outstanding. Treasury stock method: (Options × (Price – Strike)) / Price.

DCF Valuation

Formula What It Means
UFCF = EBIT(1–t) + D&A – CapEx – ΔNWC Unlevered Free Cash Flow: cash generated by operations available to all investors, before debt payments.
WACC = (E/V)(Re) + (D/V)(Rd)(1–t) Weighted Average Cost of Capital: blended return required by all capital providers. The DCF discount rate.
Cost of Equity (Re) = Rf + β(Rm – Rf) CAPM: Risk-free rate + (Beta × Equity Risk Premium). The return equity investors require.
Terminal Value (Gordon Growth) = FCF × (1+g) / (WACC – g) Value of all cash flows beyond the projection period assuming perpetual growth at rate g.
Terminal Value (Exit Multiple) = Terminal Year EBITDA × Exit Multiple Value beyond projection period using a market-based multiple. Cross-reference with Gordon Growth.
PV = CF / (1 + r)^n Present Value: discount any future cash flow at rate r for n periods.

Valuation Multiples

Multiple Formula When to Use
EV/EBITDA Enterprise Value / EBITDA Most common. Capital-structure neutral, ignores non-cash charges. Use for most sectors.
EV/Revenue Enterprise Value / Revenue Pre-profit companies (SaaS, biotech). When EBITDA is negative or meaningless.
P/E Share Price / Earnings Per Share Equity-level multiple. Affected by capital structure. Common for mature, stable businesses.
P/B Share Price / Book Value Per Share Banks and financial institutions where book value is meaningful.
EV/EBIT Enterprise Value / EBIT When D&A differences between comps are significant. More conservative than EV/EBITDA.
Interviewer Tip

Remember: EV-based multiples (EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue) match with metrics before debt – to the whole enterprise. Equity-based multiples (P/E, P/B) match with metrics after debt – to equity holders only. Never mix them.

M&A Formulas

Formula What It Means
Accretion/Dilution = Combined EPS – Standalone Acquirer EPS If positive, the deal is accretive (EPS goes up). If negative, dilutive. Tests whether the deal creates value for acquirer shareholders.
Quick Test: Target P/E < Acquirer P/E → Accretive (all-stock deal) If the target is 'cheaper' on a P/E basis, issuing stock to buy it increases combined EPS.
Offer Premium = (Offer Price – Current Price) / Current Price How much above the current share price the acquirer is willing to pay. Typically 20–40%.
Goodwill = Purchase Price – Fair Value of Net Assets The premium paid above the fair value of the target's identifiable assets minus liabilities.

LBO Formulas

Formula What It Means
MOIC = Exit Equity Value / Initial Equity Invested Multiple of Invested Capital: a 2.5x MOIC means you got back £2.50 for every £1 invested.
IRR ≈ MOIC^(1/n) – 1 Internal Rate of Return approximation. 2x in 5 years ≈ 15% IRR. 3x in 5 years ≈ 25% IRR.
Purchase Price = Entry EBITDA × Entry Multiple How much the PE firm pays for the company.
Exit Value = Exit EBITDA × Exit Multiple What the company is worth when the PE firm sells.
Exit Equity = Exit Value – Remaining Net Debt The equity proceeds to the PE firm after paying off remaining debt.

Profitability & Leverage Ratios

Ratio Formula What It Tells You
Gross Margin (Revenue – COGS) / Revenue Profitability after direct costs. How efficiently the company produces.
Operating Margin EBIT / Revenue Profitability after operating expenses. Core business efficiency.
Net Margin Net Income / Revenue Bottom-line profitability after everything including tax and interest.
ROE Net Income / Shareholders' Equity Return on equity. How effectively the company uses shareholders' capital.
ROA Net Income / Total Assets Return on assets. How effectively the company uses all its assets.
ROIC NOPAT / Invested Capital Return on invested capital. Best measure of true operating returns.
Debt/EBITDA Total Debt / EBITDA Leverage ratio. How many years of earnings it would take to repay debt.
Interest Coverage EBIT / Interest Expense Can the company cover its interest payments? Below 1.5x is risky.
Debt/Equity Total Debt / Total Equity Capital structure ratio. Higher = more leveraged.

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