Stock Valuation Heatmap — The Beer Board
Every stock scored. The fuller the glass, the more real value backs the price.
How to Read the Stock Valuation Heatmap
Each cell in the heatmap represents one stock. The mini glass shows the beer-to-foam ratio visually — beer (the golden portion) represents fundamental value backed by real earnings, cash flow, and assets. Foam (the lighter top portion) represents speculation, hype, or premium pricing beyond what fundamentals justify.
The Beer Score is a number from 0 to 100. A score of 100 means the stock price is fully supported by intrinsic value. A score of 0 means the price is entirely speculative. Most stocks fall somewhere in between. Learn how Beer Score is calculated →
Score Brackets Explained
Price is well-supported by fundamentals. DCF models show intrinsic value at or above market price. Low speculation premium.
Solid fundamental backing with some premium. The market may be pricing in reasonable growth expectations beyond current earnings.
Significant speculation in the price. Less than 60% of the stock price is supported by current fundamentals and conservative growth estimates.
Price is driven primarily by narrative, momentum, or future expectations. Current fundamentals support less than 40% of the stock price.
A low Beer Score does not mean "sell" and a high score does not mean "buy." Beer Score measures the gap between price and fundamentals — it's one signal among many. See our full methodology →
Where Does the Data Come From?
Every Beer Score is derived from publicly available financial data. We pull directly from SEC EDGAR filings (10-K annual reports and 10-Q quarterly reports), run Discounted Cash Flow analysis using conservative growth estimates, and compare intrinsic value against current market price.
Updated Daily
The heatmap refreshes every trading day. When a company files new earnings, the Beer Score updates within 24 hours. Price changes are reflected in real-time market data. This means the heatmap is always showing the most current beer-to-foam ratio for every stock.
45 S&P 500 Stocks and Growing
We currently track 45 of the most widely held S&P 500 stocks across technology, healthcare, consumer goods, financials, industrials, and energy sectors. The list is expanding — join our free list to be notified when new stocks are added.
Check Any Stock's Real Value — Free Beer Score
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