News Corporation (NWSA) Enterprise Value (EV): $13.42B
The enterprise value (EV) for News Corporation (NWSA) is $13.42B as of Wednesday, June 24, 2026.
NWSA Enterprise Value (EV) Metrics
ENTERPRISE VALUE (EV)
$13.42B
NWSA Competitors' Enterprise Value (EV)
| NAME | MARKET CAP | ENTERPRISE VALUE (EV) |
|---|---|---|
| News Corporation (NWSA) | $14.02B | $13.42B |
| Pinterest, Inc. (PINS)vs › | $12.99B | $16.76B |
| TKO Group Holdings, Inc. (TKO)vs › | $15.20B | $20.12B |
| Paramount Skydance Corporation Class B Common Stock (PSKY)vs › | $10.57B | $20.43B |
| Charter Communications, Inc. (CHTR)vs › | $18.60B | $124.86B |
| The Trade Desk, Inc. (TTD)vs › | $8.43B | $18.00B |
| Match Group, Inc. (MTCH)vs › | $8.33B | $10.78B |
| Roku, Inc. (ROKU)vs › | $20.03B | $15.25B |
| Snap Inc. (SNAP)vs › | $7.52B | $17.47B |
| Zillow Group, Inc. Class C (Z)vs › | $7.33B | $16.27B |
Enterprise Value Calculation
Market Cap
$14.02B
Total Debt
$1.80B
Cash
$2.40B
Enterprise Value
$13.42B
EV-Based Valuation Multiples
Why use EV instead of Market Cap?
- EV accounts for debt - an acquirer must pay or assume it
- EV deducts cash - the acquirer effectively receives it
- EV enables fair comparison of companies with different capital structures
- EV-based ratios (EV/EBITDA, EV/Sales) are capital structure neutral
News Corporation Enterprise Value (EV) Formula & Definition
Enterprise Value represents the total value of a company as if you were to acquire it completely - paying for equity while assuming debt and receiving cash.
Expanded definitions: Investopedia, Wikipedia, Corporate Finance Institute
News Corporation Enterprise Value (EV) FAQ
- What is the enterprise value (EV) for News Corporation (NWSA)?
- The enterprise value (EV) for NWSA stock is $13.42B.
Related Metrics
About News Corporation
News Corporation, an influential media and information services entity, is dedicated to producing and disseminating premium, engaging content along with a diverse array of products and services for both individual consumers and corporate clients worldwide. Its operations are strategically segmented into six distinct divisions: Digital Real Estate Services, Subscription Video Services, Dow Jones, Book Publishing, News Media, and an "Other" category. The company supplies a wide spectrum of content and data solutions, featuring esteemed publications and services such as The Wall Street Journal, Barron's, MarketWatch, Investor's Business Daily, Factiva, Dow Jones Risk & Compliance, Dow Jones Newswires, and OPIS. These are distributed across numerous platforms, including traditional newspapers, newswires, dedicated websites, mobile applications, newsletters, magazines, proprietary databases, live journalism events, video content, and podcasts. News Corporation also manages a substantial portfolio of daily, Sunday, weekly, and bi-weekly newspapers. Noteworthy titles include The Australian, The Weekend Australian, The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Telegraph, Herald Sun, Sunday Herald Sun, The Courier Mail, The Sunday Mail, The Advertiser, Sunday Mail, The Sun, The Sun on Sunday, The Times, The Sunday Times, and the New York Post, complemented by various digital mastheads and associated online properties. Beyond news, the company publishes a broad range of books, encompassing general fiction, nonfiction, children's literature, and religious titles. It further delivers sports, entertainment, and news programming to pay-TV and streaming subscribers, as well as other commercial licensees, via cable, satellite, and internet distribution. Additionally, it secures broadcasting rights for live sporting events. Moreover, News Corporation extends its services to include property and real estate-related advertising and offerings via its websites and mobile applications, provides online real estate services, and offers financial services. The company was established in 2012 and maintains its primary corporate office in New York, New York.
- Sector
- Communication Services
- Industry
- Entertainment
- CEO
- Robert J. Thomson