Price to Earnings Growth

RECENT NEWS
Motley Fool  Dec 1  Comment 
Dirt cheap, growing fast. What more could you ask for?
Resource Investor  Nov 20  Comment 
While many correctly perceive that China's currency 'peg' has contributed to current global imbalances, few fully comprehend the ramifications should that peg be discarded.
The Economist  Nov 20  Comment 
Reuters  Nov 19  Comment 
Expressing frustration over the Obama administration's light touch on China's yuan exchange rate, two U.S. senators asked the Commerce Department on Thursday to investigate alleged Chinese currency "manipulation."
StreetInsider.com  Nov 17  Comment 
Visit StreetInsider.com at http://www.streetinsider.com/Dividends/Public+Service+Enterprise+%28PEG%29+Declares+%240.3325+Quarterly+Dividend%3B+4.2%25+Yield/5118914.html for the full story.
The Straits Times  Nov 16  Comment 
HONG KONG Chief Executive Donald Tsang disclosed yesterday that there were no plans for the Special Administrative Region to ditch its policy of pegging its currency to the United States dollar, given the economic stability the link provides.
The Globe and Mail  Nov 16  Comment 
CEO says peg is important for economic stability
Clusterstock  Nov 15  Comment 
Contrary to last week's speculation, China insists that it has no plan to let the Yuan slowly appreciate against the US Dollar. Prior to the collapse, the country had allowed incremental strengthening, but in light of the economic weakness, that...
Stock Blog Hub  Nov 15  Comment 
Public Service Enterprise (PEG) is expanding its utility solar base. Its subsidiary Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSE&G) received approval from the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities for an additional $143 million for its ongoing...
Clusterstock  Nov 11  Comment 
China's stunning rebound from the financial crisis has sent the country's industrial production back to pre-crisis levels. October industrial production rose 16.1%, the fastest since March 2008. Power generation also grew at the fastest rate since...
The Globe and Mail  Nov 9  Comment 
Price-to-earnings ratios tell only part of the story, according to Peter Lynch. Factoring in growth provides a much more valuable tool
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This article is about the financial metric Price/Earnings To Growth. For the article on the company with ticker PEG, see Public Service Enterprise Group (PEG).

The PEG ratio equals the P/E Ratio divided by projected annual earnings-per-share growth

The PEG ratio (alternately PE/G, P/E to G, Price/Earnings to Growth, or Price to Earnings to Growth) is a valuation metric comparing the Price to Earnings ratio of a company to its projected annual Earnings Per Share growth.

A PEG ratio below 1 would indicate a company is undervalued relative to its share price, while a PEG greater than 1 would indicate an overpriced stock, as a high P/E should generally correlate with a market expectation of greater forthcoming earnings.

However, as PEG relies on projected EPS growth, its usefulness is tied directly to the accuracy of such projections.

It must be noted that PEG is only a rule of thumb and has no underlying mathematical basis for gauging what a company's share price truly "should" be. The ratio has been criticized for penalizing value stocks, which have lower earnings growth.

Examples

  • Company XYZ is trading at $20/share with an EPS of $1.00 for a P/E of 20. Analysts predict a 50% annual earnings increase over the next five years. The PEG ratio of XYZ is therefore .40, indicating the stock is undervalued by the market assuming the earnings projection is accurate.
  • Company ABC is trading at $50/share with an EPS of $1.00 for a P/E of 50. Analysts predict a 50% annual earnings increase over the next five years. The PEG ratio of ABC is therefore 1.00, indicating the stock is valued properly by the market assuming the earnings projection is accurate.
  • Company LMN is trading at $10/share with an EPS of $1.00 for a P/E of 10. Analysts predict a 5% annual earnings increase over the next five years. The PEG ratio of LMN is therefore 2.00, indicating the stock is overvalued by the market assuming the earnings projection is accurate.
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