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Price–earnings ratio

The price–earnings ratio, also known as P/E ratio, P/E, or PER, is the ratio of a company's share (stock) price to the company's earnings per share. The ratio is used for valuing companies and to find out whether they are overvalued or undervalued.

Robert Shiller's plot of the S&P composite real price–earnings ratio and interest rates (1871–2012), from Irrational Exuberance, 2d ed.[1] In the preface to this edition, Shiller warns that "the stock market has not come down to historical levels: the price–earnings ratio as I define it in this book is still, at this writing [2005], in the mid-20s, far higher than the historical average. ... People still place too much confidence in the markets and have too strong a belief that paying attention to the gyrations in their investments will someday make them rich, and so they do not make conservative preparations for possible bad outcomes."

As an example, if share A is trading at $24 and the earnings per share for the most recent 12-month period is $3, then share A has a P/E ratio of $24/$3/year = 8 years. Put another way, the purchaser of the share is investing $8 for every dollar of annual earnings; or, if earnings stayed constant it would take 8 years to recoup the share price. 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.

Versions edit

 
S&P 500 shiller P/E ratio compared to trailing 12 months P/E ratio

There are multiple versions of the P/E ratio, depending on whether earnings are projected or realized, and the type of earnings.

  • "Trailing P/E" uses the weighted average share price of common shares in issue divided by the net income for the most recent 12-month period. This is the most common meaning of "P/E" if no other qualifier is specified. Monthly earnings data for individual companies are not available, and in any case usually fluctuate seasonally, so the previous four quarterly earnings reports are used and earnings per share are updated quarterly. Note, each company chooses its own financial year so the timing of updates varies from one to another.
  • "Trailing P/E from continued operations" uses operating earnings, which exclude earnings from discontinued operations, extraordinary items (e.g. one-off windfalls and write-downs), and accounting changes.
  • "Forward P/E": Instead of net income, this uses estimated net earnings over next 12 months. Estimates are typically derived as the mean of those published by a select group of analysts (selection criteria are rarely cited).

Some people mistakenly use the formula market capitalization/ net income to calculate the P/E ratio. This formula often gives the same answer as market price/ earnings per share, but if new capital has been issued it gives the wrong answer, as market capitalization = (market price) × (current number of shares), whereas earnings per share = net income/ weighted average number of shares.

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 attempt to "smooth" volatile or cyclical earnings, for example),[2] or "corrected" earnings figures that exclude certain extraordinary events or one-off gains or losses. The definitions may not be standardized. For companies that are loss-making, or whose earnings are expected to change dramatically, a "primary" P/E can be used instead, based on the earnings projections made for the next years to which a discount calculation is applied.

Interpretation edit

As the ratio of a stock (share price) to a flow (earnings per share), the P/E ratio has the units of time. It can be interpreted as the amount of time over which the company would need to sustain its current earnings in order to make enough money to pay back the current share price.[3] While the P/E ratio can in principle be given in terms of any time unit, in practice it is essentially always implicitly reported in years, with the unit of "years" rarely indicated explicitly. (This is the convention followed in this article.)[dubious ]

The price/earnings ratio (PER) is the most widely used method for determining whether shares are "correctly" valued in relation to one another. But the PER does not in itself indicate whether the share is a bargain. The PER depends on the market's perception of the risk and future growth in earnings. A company with a low PER indicates that the market perceives it as higher risk or lower growth or both as compared to a company with a higher PER. The PER of a listed company's share is the result of the collective perception of the market as to how risky the company is and what its earnings growth prospects are in relation to that of other companies. Investors use the PER to compare their own perception of the risk and growth of a company against the market's collective perception of the risk and growth as reflected in the current PER. If investors believe that their perception is superior to that of the market, they can make the decision to buy or sell accordingly.[4]

Historical P/E ratios for the U.S. stock market edit

 
Price–earnings ratios as a predictor of twenty-year returns based upon the plot by Robert Shiller (Figure 10.1,[1] source). The horizontal axis shows the real price–earnings ratio of the S&P Composite Stock Price Index as computed in Irrational Exuberance (inflation adjusted price divided by the prior ten-year mean of inflation-adjusted earnings). The vertical axis shows the geometric average real annual return on investing in the S&P Composite Stock Price Index, reinvesting dividends, and selling twenty years later. Data from different twenty-year periods is color-coded as shown in the key. See also ten-year returns. Shiller stated in 2005 that this plot "confirms that long-term investors—investors who commit their money to an investment for ten full years—did do well when prices were low relative to earnings at the beginning of the ten years. Long-term investors would be well advised, individually, to lower their exposure to the stock market when it is high, as it has been recently, and get into the market when it is low."[1]

Since 1900, the average P/E ratio for the S&P 500 index has ranged from 4.78 in Dec 1920 to 44.20 in Dec 1999.[5] However, except for some brief periods, during 1920–1990 the market P/E ratio was mostly between 10 and 20.[6]

The average P/E of the market varies in relation with, among other factors, expected growth of earnings, expected stability of earnings, expected inflation, and yields of competing investments. For example, when U.S. treasury bonds yield high returns, investors pay less for a given earnings per share and P/E's fall.[citation needed]

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).[citation needed]

Jeremy Siegel has suggested that the average P/E ratio of about 15 [7] (or earnings yield of about 6.6%) arises due to the long-term returns for stocks of about 6.8%. In Stocks for the Long Run, (2002 edition) he had argued that with favorable developments like the lower capital gains tax rates and transaction costs, P/E ratio in "low twenties" is sustainable, despite being higher than the historic average.

 

Set out below are the recent year end values of the S&P 500 index and the associated P/E as reported.[8] For a list of recent contractions (recessions) and expansions see U.S. Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions.

Date Index P/E EPS growth % Comment
2020-09-30 3362.99 34.24
2019-12-31 3230.78 23.16
2018-12-31 2506.85 18.94
2017-12-31 2673.61 24.33 12
2016-12-31 2238.83 23.68
2015-12-31 2043.94 23.62
2014-12-31 2058.90 20.12
2013-12-31 1848.36 18.45
2012-12-31 1426.19 16.49
2011-12-31 1257.60 14.46
2010-12-31 1257.64 16.26
2009-12-31 1115.10 21.88
2008-12-31 903.25 60.70
2007-12-31 1468.36 22.19 1.4
2006-12-31 1418.30 17.40 14.7
2005-12-31 1248.29 17.85 13.0
2004-12-31 1211.92 20.70 23.8
2003-12-31 1111.92 22.81 18.8
2002-12-31 879.82 31.89 18.5
2001-12-31 1148.08 46.50 −30.8 2001 contraction resulting in P/E peak
2000-12-31 1320.28 26.41 8.6 Dot-com bubble burst: 10 March 2000
1999-12-31 1469.25 30.50 16.7
1998-12-31 1229.23 32.60 0.6
1997-12-31 970.43 24.43 8.3
1996-12-31 740.74 19.13 7.3
1995-12-31 615.93 18.14 18.7
1994-12-31 459.27 15.01 18.0 Low P/E due to high recent earnings growth.
1993-12-31 466.45 21.31 28.9
1992-12-31 435.71 22.82 8.1
1991-12-31 417.09 26.12 −14.8
1990-12-31 330.22 15.47 −6.9 July 1990 – March 1991 contraction.
1989-12-31 353.40 15.45
1988-12-31 277.72 11.69 Bottom (Black Monday was 19 Oct 1987)

Note that at the height of the Dot-com bubble P/E had risen to 32. The collapse in earnings caused P/E to rise to 46.50 in 2001. It has declined to a more sustainable region of 17. Its decline in recent years has been due to higher earnings growth.

Due to the collapse in earnings and rapid stock market recovery following the 2020 Coronavirus Crash, the trailing P/E ratio reached 38.3 on October 12, 2020. This elevated level was only attained twice in history, 2001-2002 and 2008-2009.[9]

In business culture edit

The P/E ratio of a company is a major focus for many managers. They are usually paid in company stock or options on their company's stock (a form of payment that is supposed to align the interests of management with the interests of other stock holders). The stock price can increase in one of two ways: either through improved earnings or through an improved multiple that the market assigns to those earnings. In turn, the primary drivers for multiples such as the P/E ratio is through higher and more sustained earnings growth rates.

Consequently, managers have strong incentives to boost earnings per share, even in the short term, and/or improve long-term growth rates. This can influence business decisions in several ways:

  • If a company wants to acquire companies with a higher P/E ratio than its own, it usually prefers paying in cash or debt rather than in stock. Though in theory the method of payment makes no difference to value, doing it this way offsets or avoids earnings dilution (see accretion/dilution analysis).
  • Conversely, companies with higher P/E ratios than their targets are more tempted to use their stock to pay for acquisitions.
  • Companies with high P/E ratios but volatile earnings may be tempted to find ways to smooth earnings and diversify risk—this is the theory behind building conglomerates.
  • Conversely, companies with low P/E ratios may be tempted to acquire small high-growth businesses in an effort to "rebrand" their portfolio of activities and burnish their image as growth stocks and thus obtain a higher PE rating.
  • Companies try to smooth earnings, for example by "slush fund accounting" (hiding excess earnings in good years to cover for losses in lean years). Such measures are designed to create the image that the company always slowly but steadily increases profits, with the goal to increase the P/E ratio.
  • Companies with low P/E ratios are usually more open to leveraging their balance sheet. As seen above, this mechanically lowers the P/E ratio, which means the company looks cheaper than it did before leverage, and also improves earnings growth rates. Both of these factors help drive up the share price.
  • Strictly speaking, the ratio is measured in years, since the price is measured in dollars and earnings are measured in dollars per year. Therefore, the ratio demonstrates how many years it takes to cover the price, if earnings stay the same.

Investor expectations edit

In general, a high price–earning ratio indicates that investors are expecting higher growth of company's earnings in the future compared to companies with a lower price–earning ratio.[10] A low price–earning ratio may indicate either that a company may currently be undervalued or that the company is doing exceptionally well relative to its past trends. The price-to-earnings ratio can also be seen as a means of standardizing the value of one dollar of earnings throughout the stock market. In theory, by taking the median of P/E ratios over a period of several years, one could formulate something of a standardized P/E ratio, which could then be seen as a benchmark and used to indicate whether or not a stock is worth buying. In private equity, the extrapolation of past performance is driven by stale investments. State and local governments that are more fiscally stressed by higher unfunded pension liabilities assume higher portfolio returns through higher inflation assumptions, but this factor does not attenuate the extrapolative effects of past returns.[11]

Negative Earnings edit

When a company has no earnings or is posting losses, in both cases P/E will be expressed as "N/A." Though it is possible to calculate a negative P/E, this is not the common convention.

Related measures edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Shiller, Robert (2005). Irrational Exuberance (2d ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-12335-7.
  2. ^ Anderson, K.; Brooks, C. (2006). "The Long-Term Price-Earnings Ratio". The Long-Term Price-Earnings Ratio. SSRN 739664.
  3. ^ "Price Earnings Ratio".
  4. ^ "Valuation".
  5. ^ "Seeking Alpha blog comment..." Seekingalpha.
  6. ^ Is the P/E Ratio a Good Market-Timing Indicator?
  7. ^ "Is the S&P 500 Index now over-valued? What Return Can You Reasonably Expect From Investing in the S&P 500 Index?". investorsfriend.com. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
  8. ^ "S&P 500 Earnings and Estimate Report".
  9. ^ "S&P 500 PE Ratio Data". Retrieved 9 August 2023.
  10. ^ Ko, Chiu Yu. Applied Financial Economics -- Theory with Empirics: Price and Trading. Chiu Yu Ko.
  11. ^ Rauh, Joshua D. "The Return Expectations of Institutional Investors*". Hoover Institution.

price, earnings, ratio, redirects, here, other, topics, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sourc. P E redirects here For other topics see PE disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Price earnings ratio news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The price earnings ratio also known as P E ratio P E or PER is the ratio of a company s share stock price to the company s earnings per share The ratio is used for valuing companies and to find out whether they are overvalued or undervalued Robert Shiller s plot of the S amp P composite real price earnings ratio and interest rates 1871 2012 from Irrational Exuberance 2d ed 1 In the preface to this edition Shiller warns that the stock market has not come down to historical levels the price earnings ratio as I define it in this book is still at this writing 2005 in the mid 20s far higher than the historical average People still place too much confidence in the markets and have too strong a belief that paying attention to the gyrations in their investments will someday make them rich and so they do not make conservative preparations for possible bad outcomes P E Share PriceEarnings per Share displaystyle text P E frac text Share Price text Earnings per Share As an example if share A is trading at 24 and the earnings per share for the most recent 12 month period is 3 then share A has a P E ratio of 24 3 year 8 years Put another way the purchaser of the share is investing 8 for every dollar of annual earnings or if earnings stayed constant it would take 8 years to recoup the share price 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 Contents 1 Versions 2 Interpretation 3 Historical P E ratios for the U S stock market 4 In business culture 5 Investor expectations 5 1 Negative Earnings 6 Related measures 7 See also 8 ReferencesVersions edit nbsp S amp P 500 shiller P E ratio compared to trailing 12 months P E ratioThere are multiple versions of the P E ratio depending on whether earnings are projected or realized and the type of earnings Trailing P E uses the weighted average share price of common shares in issue divided by the net income for the most recent 12 month period This is the most common meaning of P E if no other qualifier is specified Monthly earnings data for individual companies are not available and in any case usually fluctuate seasonally so the previous four quarterly earnings reports are used and earnings per share are updated quarterly Note each company chooses its own financial year so the timing of updates varies from one to another Trailing P E from continued operations uses operating earnings which exclude earnings from discontinued operations extraordinary items e g one off windfalls and write downs and accounting changes Forward P E Instead of net income this uses estimated net earnings over next 12 months Estimates are typically derived as the mean of those published by a select group of analysts selection criteria are rarely cited Some people mistakenly use the formula market capitalization net income to calculate the P E ratio This formula often gives the same answer as market price earnings per share but if new capital has been issued it gives the wrong answer as market capitalization market price current number of shares whereas earnings per share net income weighted average number of shares 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 attempt to smooth volatile or cyclical earnings for example 2 or corrected earnings figures that exclude certain extraordinary events or one off gains or losses The definitions may not be standardized For companies that are loss making or whose earnings are expected to change dramatically a primary P E can be used instead based on the earnings projections made for the next years to which a discount calculation is applied Interpretation editAs the ratio of a stock share price to a flow earnings per share the P E ratio has the units of time It can be interpreted as the amount of time over which the company would need to sustain its current earnings in order to make enough money to pay back the current share price 3 While the P E ratio can in principle be given in terms of any time unit in practice it is essentially always implicitly reported in years with the unit of years rarely indicated explicitly This is the convention followed in this article dubious discuss The price earnings ratio PER is the most widely used method for determining whether shares are correctly valued in relation to one another But the PER does not in itself indicate whether the share is a bargain The PER depends on the market s perception of the risk and future growth in earnings A company with a low PER indicates that the market perceives it as higher risk or lower growth or both as compared to a company with a higher PER The PER of a listed company s share is the result of the collective perception of the market as to how risky the company is and what its earnings growth prospects are in relation to that of other companies Investors use the PER to compare their own perception of the risk and growth of a company against the market s collective perception of the risk and growth as reflected in the current PER If investors believe that their perception is superior to that of the market they can make the decision to buy or sell accordingly 4 Historical P E ratios for the U S stock market edit nbsp Price earnings ratios as a predictor of twenty year returns based upon the plot by Robert Shiller Figure 10 1 1 source The horizontal axis shows the real price earnings ratio of the S amp P Composite Stock Price Index as computed in Irrational Exuberance inflation adjusted price divided by the prior ten year mean of inflation adjusted earnings The vertical axis shows the geometric average real annual return on investing in the S amp P Composite Stock Price Index reinvesting dividends and selling twenty years later Data from different twenty year periods is color coded as shown in the key See also ten year returns Shiller stated in 2005 that this plot confirms that long term investors investors who commit their money to an investment for ten full years did do well when prices were low relative to earnings at the beginning of the ten years Long term investors would be well advised individually to lower their exposure to the stock market when it is high as it has been recently and get into the market when it is low 1 Since 1900 the average P E ratio for the S amp P 500 index has ranged from 4 78 in Dec 1920 to 44 20 in Dec 1999 5 However except for some brief periods during 1920 1990 the market P E ratio was mostly between 10 and 20 6 The average P E of the market varies in relation with among other factors expected growth of earnings expected stability of earnings expected inflation and yields of competing investments For example when U S treasury bonds yield high returns investors pay less for a given earnings per share and P E s fall citation needed 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 citation needed Jeremy Siegel has suggested that the average P E ratio of about 15 7 or earnings yield of about 6 6 arises due to the long term returns for stocks of about 6 8 In Stocks for the Long Run 2002 edition he had argued that with favorable developments like the lower capital gains tax rates and transaction costs P E ratio in low twenties is sustainable despite being higher than the historic average nbsp Set out below are the recent year end values of the S amp P 500 index and the associated P E as reported 8 For a list of recent contractions recessions and expansions see U S Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions Date Index P E EPS growth Comment2020 09 30 3362 99 34 242019 12 31 3230 78 23 162018 12 31 2506 85 18 94 2017 12 31 2673 61 24 33 122016 12 31 2238 83 23 68 2015 12 31 2043 94 23 62 2014 12 31 2058 90 20 12 2013 12 31 1848 36 18 45 2012 12 31 1426 19 16 49 2011 12 31 1257 60 14 46 2010 12 31 1257 64 16 26 2009 12 31 1115 10 21 88 2008 12 31 903 25 60 70 2007 12 31 1468 36 22 19 1 42006 12 31 1418 30 17 40 14 72005 12 31 1248 29 17 85 13 02004 12 31 1211 92 20 70 23 82003 12 31 1111 92 22 81 18 82002 12 31 879 82 31 89 18 52001 12 31 1148 08 46 50 30 8 2001 contraction resulting in P E peak2000 12 31 1320 28 26 41 8 6 Dot com bubble burst 10 March 20001999 12 31 1469 25 30 50 16 71998 12 31 1229 23 32 60 0 61997 12 31 970 43 24 43 8 31996 12 31 740 74 19 13 7 31995 12 31 615 93 18 14 18 71994 12 31 459 27 15 01 18 0 Low P E due to high recent earnings growth 1993 12 31 466 45 21 31 28 91992 12 31 435 71 22 82 8 11991 12 31 417 09 26 12 14 81990 12 31 330 22 15 47 6 9 July 1990 March 1991 contraction 1989 12 31 353 40 15 45 1988 12 31 277 72 11 69 Bottom Black Monday was 19 Oct 1987 Note that at the height of the Dot com bubble P E had risen to 32 The collapse in earnings caused P E to rise to 46 50 in 2001 It has declined to a more sustainable region of 17 Its decline in recent years has been due to higher earnings growth Due to the collapse in earnings and rapid stock market recovery following the 2020 Coronavirus Crash the trailing P E ratio reached 38 3 on October 12 2020 This elevated level was only attained twice in history 2001 2002 and 2008 2009 9 In business culture editThe P E ratio of a company is a major focus for many managers They are usually paid in company stock or options on their company s stock a form of payment that is supposed to align the interests of management with the interests of other stock holders The stock price can increase in one of two ways either through improved earnings or through an improved multiple that the market assigns to those earnings In turn the primary drivers for multiples such as the P E ratio is through higher and more sustained earnings growth rates Consequently managers have strong incentives to boost earnings per share even in the short term and or improve long term growth rates This can influence business decisions in several ways If a company wants to acquire companies with a higher P E ratio than its own it usually prefers paying in cash or debt rather than in stock Though in theory the method of payment makes no difference to value doing it this way offsets or avoids earnings dilution see accretion dilution analysis Conversely companies with higher P E ratios than their targets are more tempted to use their stock to pay for acquisitions Companies with high P E ratios but volatile earnings may be tempted to find ways to smooth earnings and diversify risk this is the theory behind building conglomerates Conversely companies with low P E ratios may be tempted to acquire small high growth businesses in an effort to rebrand their portfolio of activities and burnish their image as growth stocks and thus obtain a higher PE rating Companies try to smooth earnings for example by slush fund accounting hiding excess earnings in good years to cover for losses in lean years Such measures are designed to create the image that the company always slowly but steadily increases profits with the goal to increase the P E ratio Companies with low P E ratios are usually more open to leveraging their balance sheet As seen above this mechanically lowers the P E ratio which means the company looks cheaper than it did before leverage and also improves earnings growth rates Both of these factors help drive up the share price Strictly speaking the ratio is measured in years since the price is measured in dollars and earnings are measured in dollars per year Therefore the ratio demonstrates how many years it takes to cover the price if earnings stay the same Investor expectations editIn general a high price earning ratio indicates that investors are expecting higher growth of company s earnings in the future compared to companies with a lower price earning ratio 10 A low price earning ratio may indicate either that a company may currently be undervalued or that the company is doing exceptionally well relative to its past trends The price to earnings ratio can also be seen as a means of standardizing the value of one dollar of earnings throughout the stock market In theory by taking the median of P E ratios over a period of several years one could formulate something of a standardized P E ratio which could then be seen as a benchmark and used to indicate whether or not a stock is worth buying In private equity the extrapolation of past performance is driven by stale investments State and local governments that are more fiscally stressed by higher unfunded pension liabilities assume higher portfolio returns through higher inflation assumptions but this factor does not attenuate the extrapolative effects of past returns 11 Negative Earnings edit When a company has no earnings or is posting losses in both cases P E will be expressed as N A Though it is possible to calculate a negative P E this is not the common convention Related measures editCyclically adjusted price to earnings ratio Price to earnings growth ratio Present value of growth opportunities Price to dividend ratio Return on investment Social earnings ratio EV Ebitda Earnings yield the inverse of price earnings ratioSee also editCyclically adjusted price to earnings ratio Fundamental analysis Index of accounting articles Outline of economics Market value Price sales ratio Stock market bubble Stock market crash Stock valuation using discounted cash flows Value investing Valuation using multiples Tobin s qReferences edit a b c Shiller Robert 2005 Irrational Exuberance 2d ed Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 12335 7 Anderson K Brooks C 2006 The Long Term Price Earnings Ratio The Long Term Price Earnings Ratio SSRN 739664 Price Earnings Ratio Valuation Seeking Alpha blog comment Seekingalpha Is the P E Ratio a Good Market Timing Indicator Is the S amp P 500 Index now over valued What Return Can You Reasonably Expect From Investing in the S amp P 500 Index investorsfriend com Retrieved 18 December 2010 S amp P 500 Earnings and Estimate Report S amp P 500 PE Ratio Data Retrieved 9 August 2023 Ko Chiu Yu Applied Financial Economics Theory with Empirics Price and Trading Chiu Yu Ko Rauh Joshua D The Return Expectations of Institutional Investors Hoover Institution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Price earnings ratio amp oldid 1214005646, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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