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Glossary

What is P/E Ratio? Definition, Formula & How to Use It

Learn what price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio means, how to calculate it, and how investors use P/E ratios to value stocks and compare companies.

What is the Price-to-Earnings Ratio?

The price-to-earnings ratio (P/E ratio) is a valuation metric that compares a company’s stock price to its earnings per share. It tells you how much investors are willing to pay for each dollar of earnings, making it one of the most widely used metrics for stock valuation.

P/E Ratio Formula

$$\text{P/E Ratio} = \frac{\text{Stock Price}}{\text{Earnings Per Share (EPS)}}$$

Example Calculation

If a company has:

  • Stock price: $100 per share
  • Earnings per share: $5

P/E Ratio = $100 ÷ $5 = 20x

This means investors are paying $20 for every $1 of earnings.

Types of P/E Ratios

Trailing P/E (TTM)

  • Uses earnings from the past 12 months
  • Based on actual reported earnings
  • Most commonly cited P/E ratio

Forward P/E

  • Uses estimated future earnings (usually next 12 months)
  • Based on analyst projections
  • May be more relevant for fast-growing companies

How to Interpret P/E Ratios

P/E Range Interpretation
Under 15 May be undervalued or slow-growth
15-25 Fairly valued for average growth
25-40 Growth stock premium
40+ High growth expectations or speculative

High P/E Ratio Means:

  • Investors expect high future earnings growth
  • Stock may be overvalued
  • Common in tech and growth sectors

Low P/E Ratio Means:

  • Lower growth expectations
  • Stock may be undervalued
  • Could signal company problems
  • Common in mature industries

P/E Ratios by Sector

Different industries have different typical P/E ranges:

Sector Typical P/E Range
Technology 25-50x
Healthcare 20-35x
Consumer Staples 18-25x
Financials 10-15x
Utilities 15-20x
Energy 8-15x

Using P/E for Comparisons

P/E ratios are most useful when comparing:

  • Companies in the same industry
  • A company to its historical average
  • A stock to the overall market (S&P 500 averages ~20-25x)

Example Comparison

Company P/E Ratio
Apple 32x
Microsoft 35x
Alphabet 25x

Limitations of P/E Ratio

  1. Not useful for unprofitable companies: Can’t calculate P/E with negative earnings
  2. Earnings can be manipulated: Accounting choices affect EPS
  3. Ignores growth rates: A high P/E could be justified by high growth
  4. Ignores debt: Two companies with same P/E may have different leverage

PEG Ratio: Adjusting for Growth

The PEG ratio accounts for growth:

$$\text{PEG Ratio} = \frac{\text{P/E Ratio}}{\text{Earnings Growth Rate}}$$

A PEG of 1 suggests fair value relative to growth. Below 1 may indicate undervaluation.

This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.