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simply "multiple", "P/E", or "PE") is a measure of the price paid for a share relative to the
income or profit earned by the firm per share.[1] A higher P/E ratio means that investors
are paying more for each unit of income. It is a valuation ratio included in other financial
ratios. The reciprocal of the P/E ratio is known as the earnings yield.[2]
The price per share (numerator) is the market price of a single share of the stock. The
earnings per share (denominator) is the net income of the company for the most recent 12
month period, divided by number of shares outstanding. The earnings per share (EPS)
used can also be the "diluted EPS" or the "comprehensive EPS".
For example, if stock A is trading at $24 and the earnings per share for the most recent 12
month period is $3, then stock A has a P/E ratio of 24/3 or 8. Put another way, the
purchaser of stock A is paying $8 for every dollar of earnings. Companies with losses
(negative earnings) or no profit have an undefined P/E ratio (usually shown as Not
applicable or "N/A"); sometimes, however, a negative P/E ratio may be shown.
By comparing price and earnings per share for a company, one can analyze the market's
stock valuation of a company and its shares relative to the income the company is
actually generating.[citation needed] Investors can use the P/E ratio to compare the value of
stocks: if one stock has a P/E twice that of another stock, all things being equal, it is a
less attractive investment. Companies are rarely equal, however, and comparisons
between industries, companies, and time periods may be misleading.
By dividing the price of one share in a company by the profits earned by the company per
share, you arrive at the P/E ratio. If earnings move up in line with share prices (or vice
versa) the ratio stays the same. But if stock prices gain in value and earnings remain the
same or go down, the P/E rises.
The price used to calculate a P/E ratio is usually the most recent price.
The earnings figure used is the most recently available, although this figure may be out of
date and may not necessarily reflect the current position of the company. This is often
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referred to as a 'trailing P/E', because it involves taking earnings from the last four
quarters
Variations
The 'forward P/E' uses the estimated earnings going forward twelve months.
'P/E10' uses average earnings for the past 10 years. There is a view that the average
earnings for a 20 year period remains largely constant[3], thus using P/E10 will reduce the
noise in the data.
Interpretation
The average U.S. equity P/E ratio from 1900 to 2005 is 14 (or 16, depending on whether
the geometric mean or the arithmetic mean, respectively, is used to average). An
oversimplified interpretation would conclude that it takes about 14 years to recoup the
price paid for a stock [not including any income from the reinvestment of dividends].
Normally, stocks with high earning growth are traded at higher P/E values. From the
previous example, stock A, trading at $24 per share, may be expected to earn $6 per share
the next year. Then the forward P/E ratio is $24/6 = 4. So, you are paying $4 for every
one dollar of earnings, which makes the stock more attractive than it was the previous
year.
The P/E ratio implicitly incorporates the perceived riskiness of a given company's future
earnings. For a stock purchaser, this risk includes the possibility of bankruptcy. For
companies with high leverage (that is, high levels of debt), the risk of bankruptcy will be
higher than for other companies. Assuming the effect of leverage is positive, the earnings
for a highly-leveraged company will also be higher. In principle, the P/E ratio
incorporates this information, and different P/E ratios may reflect the structure of the
balance sheet.
Variations on the standard trailing and forward P/E ratios are common. Generally,
alternative P/E measures substitute different measures of earnings, such as rolling
averages over longer periods of time (to "smooth" volatile earnings, for example), or
"corrected" earnings figures that exclude certain extraordinary events or one-off gains or
losses. The definitions may not be standardized.
Various interpretations of a particular P/E ratio are possible, and the historical table below
is just indicative and cannot be a guide, as current P/E ratios should be compared to
current real interest rates (see Fed model):
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Either the stock is undervalued or the company's earnings are thought to be in
0–10
decline. Alternatively, current earnings may be substantially above historic trends.
10–17 For many companies a P/E ratio in this range may be considered fair value.
Either the stock is overvalued or the company's earnings have increased since the
17–25 last earnings figure was published. The stock may also be a growth stock with
earnings expected to increase substantially in future.
A company whose shares have a very high P/E may have high expected future
25+
growth in earnings or the stock may be the subject of a speculative bubble.
It is usually not enough to look at the P/E ratio of one company and determine its status.
Usually, an analyst will look at a company's P/E ratio compared to the industry the
company is in, the sector the company is in, as well as the overall market (for example
the S&P 500 if it is listed in a US exchange). Sites such as Reuters offer these
comparisons in one table. Example of RHAT Often, comparisons will also be made
between quarterly and annual data. Only after a comparison with the industry, sector, and
market can an analyst determine whether a P/E ratio is high or low with the above
mentioned distinctions (i.e., undervaluation, over valuation, fair valuation, etc).
A variation that is often used is to exclude companies with negative earnings from the
sample - especially when looking at sub-indices with a lower number of stocks where
companies with negative earnings will distort the figures.
Seigel in Stocks for the Long Run argues that the earnings yield is a good indicator of the
market performance on the long run. The average P/E for the past 130 years has been
14.45 (i.e. earnings yield 6.8%). Shiller has argued that the mean P/E has risen from 12 to
about 21 during 1920 to 2003[4]. Matt Blackman has examined a trading strategy using
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P/E ratio involving staying out of the market when P/E's 2 year SMA falls below 5 year
SMA. It resulted in capturing 91% of the gain by staying in the market for only 42% of
the time.
An example
An easy and perhaps intuitive way to understand the concept is with an analogy:
Let's say I offer you a privilege to collect a dollar every year from me forever.
How much are you willing to pay for that privilege now? Let's say you are only
willing to pay me 50 cents, because you may think that paying for that privilege
coming from me could be risky. On the other hand, suppose that the offer came
from Bill Gates, how much would you be willing to pay him? Perhaps, your
answer would be at least more than 50 cents, let's say, $20. Well, the price
earnings ratio or sometimes known as earnings multiple is nothing more than the
number of dollars the market is willing to pay for a privilege to be able to earn a
dollar forever in perpetuity. Bill Gates' P/E ratio is 20 and my P/E ratio is 0.5.
Now view it this way: The P/E ratio also tells you how long it will take before
you can recover your investment (ignoring of course the time value of money).
Had you invested in Bill Gates, it would have taken you at least 20 years, while
investing in me could have taken you less than a year, that is, only 6 months.
If a stock has a relatively high P/E ratio, let's say, 100 (which Google exceeded during the
summer of 2005), what does this tell you? The answer is that it depends. A few reasons a
stock might have a high P/E ratio are:
• The market expects the earnings to rise rapidly in the future. For example a gold
mining company which has just begun to mine may not have made any money yet
but next quarter it will most likely find the gold and make a lot of money. The
same applies to pharmaceutical companies — often a large amount of their
revenue comes from their best few patented products, so when a promising new
product is approved, investors may buy up the stock.
• The company was previously making a lot of money, but in the last year or
quarter it had a special one time expense (called a "charge"), which lowered the
earnings significantly. Stockholders, understanding (possibly incorrectly) that this
was a one time issue, will still buy stock at the same price as before, and only sell
it at least at that same price.
• Hype for the stock has caused people to buy the stock for a higher price than they
normally would. This is called a bubble. One of the most important uses for the
P/E metric is to decide whether a stock is undergoing a bubble or an anti-bubble
by comparing its P/E to other similar companies. Historically, bubbles have been
followed by crashes. As such, prudent investors try to stay out of them.
• The company has some sort of business advantage which seems to ensure that it
will continue making money for a long time with very little risk. Thus investors
are willing to buy the stock even at a high price for the peace of mind that they
will not lose their money.
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• A large amount of money has been inserted into the stock market, out of
proportion with the growth of companies across the same time period. Since there
are only a limited amount of stocks to buy, supply and demand dictate that the
prices of stocks must go up. This factor can make comparing P/E ratios over time
difficult.
• Likewise, a specific stock may have a temporarily high price when, for whatever
reason, there has been high demand for it. This demand may have nothing to do
with the company itself, but may rather relate to, for example, an institutional
investor trying to diversify out risk.
Inputs
Accuracy and context
In practice, decisions must be made as to how to exactly specify the inputs used in the
calculations.
A distinction has to be made between the fundamental (or intrinsic) P/E and the way we
actually compute P/Es. The fundamental or intrinsic P/E examines earnings forecasts.
That is what was done in the analogy above. In reality, we actually compute P/Es using
the latest 12 month corporate earnings. Using past earnings introduces a temporal
mismatch, but it is felt that having this mismatch is better than using future earnings,
since future earnings estimates are notoriously inaccurate and susceptible to deliberate
manipulation.
On the other hand, just because a stock is trading at a low fundamental P/E is not an
indicator that the stock is undervalued. A stock may be trading at a low P/E because the
investors are less optimistic about the future earnings from the stock. Thus, one way to
get a fair comparison between stocks is to use their primary P/E. This primary P/E is
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based on the earnings projections made for the next years to which a discount calculation
is applied.
These and many other actions used by companies to structure themselves to be perceived
as commanding a higher P/E ratio can seem counterintuitive to some, because while they
may decrease the absolute level of profits they are designed to increase the stock price.
Thus, in this situation, maximizing the stock price acts as a perverse incentive.
Dividend Yield
Publicly traded companies often make periodic quarterly or yearly cash payments to their
owners, the shareholders, in direct proportion to the number of shares held. According to
US law, such payments can only be made out of current earnings or out of reserves
(earnings retained from previous years). The company decides on the total payment and
this is divided by the number of shares. The resulting dividend is an amount of cash per
share. The dividend yield is the dividend paid in the last accounting year divided by the
current share price.
If a stock paid out $5 per share in cash dividends to its shareholders last year, and its
price is currently $50, then it has a dividend yield of 10%.
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Historically, at severely high P/E ratios (such as over 100x), a stock has NO (0.0%) or
negligible dividend yield. With a P/E ratio over 100x, and supposing a portion of earnings
is paid as dividend, it would take over a century to earn back the purchase price. Such
stocks are extremely overvalued, unless a huge growth of earnings in the next years is
expected.
Earnings yield
The reverse (or reciprocal) of the P/E is the E/P, also known as the earnings yield. The
earnings yield is quoted as a percentage, and is useful in comparing a stock, sector, or the
market's valuation relative to bonds.
The earnings yield is also the cost to a publicly traded company of raising expansion
capital through the issuance of stock.
Related concepts
The P/E ratio relates to the equity value. The similar ratio on the enterprise value level is
EV/EBITDA. A similar measure can be defined for real estate, see Case-Shiller index.
PEG ratio is obtained by dividing the P/E ratio by the annual earnings growth rate. It is
considered a form of normalization because higher growth rate should cause higher P/E.
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Note that at the height of the Dot-com bubble P/E had risen to 46.50. It has declined to a
more sustainable region of 17. Its decline in recent years has been due to increasing
earnings.
Jeremy Siegel in Stocks for the Long Run, (2002 edition) had argued that with the
favorable developments like the lower capital gains tax rates and transaction costs, P/E
ratio in "low twenties" is sustainable, although higher than the historic average