Aehr Test Systems EV/EBITDA

What is the EV/EBITDA of Aehr Test Systems?

The EV/EBITDA of Aehr Test Systems is N/A

What is the definition of EV/EBITDA?



EV/EBITDA is enterprise value divided by earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization. It is a measure of how expensive a stock is and is more frequently valid for comparisons across companies than the price to earnings ratio. It measures the price (in the form of enterprise value) an investor pays for the benefit of the company’s cash flow (in the form of EBITDA).

= enterprise value / EBITDA

Price to earnings ratios are impacted by a company's choice of capital structure - companies which raise money via debt will have lower P/Es (and therefore look cheaper) than companies that raise an equivalent amount of money by issuing shares, even though the two companies might have equivalent enterprise values. A sample case is when a company with debt were to raise money by issuing shares of stock, and then used the money to pay off the debt, this company's P/E ratio would shoot up because of the increased number of shares - although nothing about the fundamental value of the business has changed. EV / EBITDA is unaffected by capital structure as enterprise value includes the value of debt, and EBITDA is available to all investors (debt and equity) as it excludes interest payments on that debt. It is ideal for analysts and potential investors looking to compare companies within the same industry.

What does Aehr Test Systems do?

headquartered in fremont, california, aehr test systems is a worldwide supplier of systems for burning-in and testing memory and logic integrated circuits and has an installed base of more than 2,500 systems worldwide. aehr test has developed and introduced several innovative products, including the abts, foxtm and max systems and the diepak® carrier. the abts system is aehr test’s newest system for packaged part test during burn-in for both low-power and high-power logic as well as all common types of memory devices. the fox system is a full wafer contact test and burn-in system. the max system can effectively burn-in and functionally test complex devices, such as digital signal processors, microprocessors, microcontrollers and systems-on-a-chip. the diepak carrier is a reusable, temporary package that enables ic manufacturers to perform cost-effective final test and burn-in of bare die.