Price to Earnings

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The Economic Times  Aug 17  Comment 
While investors watch the bulls and bears fight it out, they must keep an eye on the rising price-to-earnings ratio that is yet again nearing a danger zone .
Stock Trading To Go  Jul 30  Comment 
The most commonly quoted valuation model is Price to Earnings (P/E). Relying on earnings per share (EPS) as its basis, P/E has become the most used benchmark.
Stock Trading To Go  May 7  Comment 
The P/E ratio is a very helpful tool to help value the price of a stock, but there are certainly some major flaws in using a price to earnings ratio as a major investment decision maker.
Buying Value  Nov 27  Comment 
If you made it through price to earnings ratio, price to book ratio will be a piece of cake. What is it? Market Price per Share BPS otherwise known as (Book Value / Total number of Shares outstanding) What does it tell us? We looked at Price...
Buying Value  Nov 23  Comment 
To follow up our Graham intro we will investigate Graham’s first insurance technique of buying on the cheap. Graham used a number of ratios to determine if a company is cheap. The first ratio we need to look at is the Price/Earnings ratio. What...
Investing School  Nov 17  Comment 
The price to earnings ratio (denoted P/E) measures the relationship between the share price to its earnings per share. It is considered one of the most important metric of a company because comparing two similar companies' P/E shows us which is a...
The Essentials of Trading  Jun 13  Comment 
The other day I talked about the impact of interest rates on stock prices, and how higher interest rates imply lower stock prices by virtue of the discounting of future earnings. Along the same lines, PE ratios are also impacted by interest...
The Curious Investor  Mar 13  Comment 
I've probably given you all more than enough time to read the Tweedy Browne article I mentioned in my last post. That being said, maybe some people are too lazy or just want to hear my wonderful re-cap of Price to Earnings - why and how we use...
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P/E equals current share price divided by earnings per share

The P/E (or "Price to Earnings ratio") is the most common measure of the cost of a stock. The P/E ratio can be calculated one of two ways, either as a stock's market capitalization (total shares times cost per share) divided by its after-tax earnings, or as the current share price divided by earnings per share.

For example, the P/E ratio of company A with a share price of $50 and earnings per share of $5 is 10.

The higher the P/E ratio, the more the market is willing to pay for each dollar of annual earnings. In general, a low P/E is considered a sign that a stock may be undervalued, or that investors expect poor future earnings. By contrast, a high P/E is thought to indicate an over-valued stock, or one that is expected to post significant earnings increases.

It should be noted that there is no mathematical basis for what a company's P/E should be. Rather, a high or low P/E is defined only in relative terms. Historically, P/E ratios for US listed companies have averaged between 14 and 16, though functionally, stocks with P/E below about 12 are considered "low" while P/Es above 40 or 50 are considered "high", in absolute terms. A P/E's significance (i.e. "high" or "low") on more general terms is dictated by a company's P/E in relation to its industry and competitors. In other words, the industry a company is in often has as much to do with its P/E ratio as the company's performance, and therefore the metric may be useless unless taken in context. Thus, because of the major discrepancies in earnings results across sectors, P/E ratios are most useful when comparing companies in the same industry.

Forward P/Es

Typically, a P/E ratio is backward-looking - meaning that it uses earnings from the company's most recent trailing 12-month period, though there are variations of P/E that use a different earnings value. A Forward P/E for example, uses as its denominator analyst estimates for the company's earnings in the upcoming 12 months.

Forward P/Es can be helpful in that expected changes to the company's earnings are already "baked in". However, they rely on estimates of earnings that are frequently inaccurate. While the earnings figures of backward-looking P/Es are sometimes out of date, they are at least accurate.

Capital Structure Bias

One weakness of P/E ratios is that they are impacted by a company's choice of capital structure. Companies that have chosen to raise money via debt will often have lower P/Es (and therefore look cheaper) than companies that raise money by issuing shares, even though the two companies might have equivalent enterprise values. For example, if 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.

This makes it difficult to use P/E ratios to compare different companies with different amounts of leverage. As a result, ratios of EV / EBITDA, which are unaffected by capital structure, are a more effective way of comparing the "price" of two different companies.


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