Deep Dive: How to Value Companies with Negative Earnings
The 10-year Treasury closed at 4.45% on May 4, 2026 — the highest risk-free rate the equity market has had to discount since the 2007 cycle peak. That number matters because every dollar of distant-future profit is now worth meaningfully less than it was when the same article was written in February. And every loss-making company on the public market is, by definition, asking you to pay today for profits that arrive somewhere out in the discount window. This is exactly when the price-to-earnings ratio fails worst. A negative P/E is mathematically meaningless — a P/E of -5 isn't 'better' than -40. Worse, P/E tells you nothing about the two questions that actually decide whether a loss-making stock is investable: how big can the eventual profit pool become, and how soon does it arrive? Those are the questions Snowflake, Rivian, Roblox, and a long list of SaaS, EV, and platform names force on you the moment their earnings line dips into red ink. Yet some of the best-performing stocks of the last decade — Amazon, Tesla, Shopify — operated at a loss during their highest-growth phases. Snowflake itself, with a market capitalization above $55 billion, generated $913 million of free cash flow in fiscal 2025 while reporting a $1.3 billion net loss. Rivian, capitalized near $19 billion, burned $2.49 billion of cash the same year. Both report negative earnings. Only one is structurally building toward profitability. This guide gives you the toolkit professional analysts actually use when earnings-based ratios break: enterprise value to revenue as a first-line replacement, free cash flow as the truth-teller, gross margin as the leading indicator, cash runway as the survival check, reverse-DCF as the implied-expectations test, and a path-to-profitability decision framework that separates structural loss-makers from companies whose losses are simply the cost of building scale.