Price-to-Earnings Ratio (P/E)
Explanation
The P/E ratio is the most widely used valuation metric in equity analysis. It divides a company's share price by its earnings per share (EPS). A P/E of 20 means investors are paying $20 for every $1 of annual profit.
Two versions exist: trailing P/E uses the last 12 months of actual earnings, while forward P/E uses analyst estimates for the next 12 months. Forward P/E is generally more useful for investment decisions because markets price future expectations.
The S&P 500's average P/E has historically ranged between 15 and 20. During the dot-com bubble (2000), it reached 44. During the 2008 financial crisis trough, it fell below 10. Context matters—growth companies typically command higher P/Es because their earnings are expected to grow faster.
Formula
| Variable | Meaning |
|---|---|
| P/E | Price-to-Earnings ratio |
| Share Price | Current market price per share |
| EPS | Earnings per share (trailing or forward) |
Example
Apple trades at $195 per share. Its trailing twelve-month EPS is $6.50. Its forward EPS estimate is $7.10.
Investors are paying 30 times current earnings or 27.5 times expected earnings. The lower forward P/E suggests analysts expect 9.2% earnings growth. Whether 30x is cheap or expensive depends on Apple's growth rate and the market environment.
How Stoquity Uses This
Stoquity's factor scoring model includes P/E as a component of the Value factor. The AI engine compares each stock's P/E to its sector median and historical range. Stocks trading below their 5-year average P/E score higher on value; those trading above score lower.
Common Mistakes
- A low P/E is not automatically cheap—it may reflect declining earnings or structural problems
- Comparing P/E ratios across sectors is misleading; tech companies naturally have higher P/Es than utilities
- Negative earnings make the P/E ratio meaningless, which is why other metrics like P/S are used for unprofitable companies
See P/E scores in action
Stoquity scores every stock on 24 factors including P/E-based valuation.
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