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What Is P/E Ratio?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 9, 20265 min read
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The P/E (Price-to-Earnings) ratio is a valuation metric calculated as a company's stock price divided by its earnings per share.

Calculation

P/E Ratio = Stock Price ÷ Earnings Per Share

Example: Apple

  • Stock price: $150
  • Earnings per share (EPS): $6
  • P/E ratio: $150 ÷ $6 = 25

Interpretation: You're paying $25 for every $1 of annual earnings.

Interpretation

Low P/E (<12): Suggests stock is cheap

  • Either: Market is pessimistic, or company is in decline
  • Example: 2009 after financial crisis, S&P 500 P/E was 13 (cheap)

Fair P/E (15-20): Market values company at average

  • Typical for mature companies with steady growth

High P/E (>25): Suggests stock is expensive

  • Either: Market is optimistic about growth, or valuation bubble
  • Example: Tech stocks in 2000 peak, P/E of 40+
  • Example: Tesla at P/E of 70-100 (reflects growth expectations)

Historical average P/E: 16-18

Trailing vs. Forward P/E

Trailing P/E:

  • Based on past 12 months of earnings
  • Backward-looking
  • Useful for understanding what you paid

Forward P/E:

  • Based on projected next 12 months of earnings
  • Forward-looking
  • More useful for valuation (reflects what you expect to earn)

Example: Company that grew earnings 20% last year and is expected to grow 20% again

Trailing P/E: 25 Forward P/E: 20 (higher projected earnings make it less expensive)

Forward P/E is more useful, but future earnings are uncertain.

P/E and Growth

P/E should be compared to growth rate:

PEG Ratio = P/E Ratio ÷ Growth Rate

Example 1:

  • Stock A: P/E of 20, growth 5%
  • PEG: 20 ÷ 5 = 4 (expensive relative to growth)

Example 2:

  • Stock B: P/E of 40, growth 30%
  • PEG: 40 ÷ 30 = 1.3 (cheap relative to growth)

A PEG ratio near 1.0 suggests fair valuation given growth expectations.

Industry Variation

P/E varies dramatically by industry:

Utilities: P/E 12-16 (stable, low-growth) Banks: P/E 10-14 (stable, cyclical) Consumer goods: P/E 18-22 (stable, consistent) Tech: P/E 25-40+ (higher growth expectations) Biotech/Pharma: P/E 15-25 (high growth, patent risk)

Comparing a utility (P/E 14) to a tech company (P/E 40) and concluding the utility is cheaper is wrong—they have different growth profiles.

Earnings Manipulation

P/E can be misleading if earnings are manipulated:

Stock buybacks: Company buys its own shares, reducing share count

  • Earnings stay same; earnings per share rise
  • P/E looks lower even if nothing improved

One-time gains: Selling assets creates one-time earnings

  • Makes recurring earnings look artificially high
  • P/E looks low on inflated earnings

Accounting practices: Different depreciation methods, inventory accounting can affect reported earnings

This is why P/E must be combined with other metrics.

P/E in Market Cycles

Late expansion (late bull market):

  • P/E expands (rises)
  • Stock prices rise even though earnings growth slows
  • Example: 2000 tech bubble, S&P 500 P/E hit 44

Peak/early contraction (late bull → bear):

  • P/E contracts (falls)
  • Stock prices crash on declining earnings expectations

Trough/early expansion (bear → bull):

  • P/E is very low (attractive)
  • Stock prices start rising
  • Example: 2009 bottom, S&P 500 P/E was 13

S&P 500 Historical P/E

1950: ~8 (cheap) 1973: ~8 (cheap) 1987: ~18 (fair) 2000: ~30-44 (expensive; peak of dot-com bubble) 2009: ~13 (cheap; bottom of financial crisis) 2020: ~18-20 (fair) 2024: ~25 (slightly expensive)

Currently, S&P 500 P/E is about 25, slightly above historical average, suggesting valuations are moderately expensive.

P/E and Returns

Historically, investing when P/E is low (cheap valuations) produces better returns:

Investing at P/E of 12-15: Expected 10-year return ~8-10% Investing at P/E of 20-25: Expected 10-year return ~6-7% Investing at P/E of 30+: Expected 10-year return ~3-5%

The higher the current P/E, the lower the expected future return. This is mean reversion.

Limitations of P/E

1. Doesn't account for quality: High-quality company with stable earnings deserves higher P/E than low-quality company

2. Doesn't account for debt: Company A: P/E of 20, no debt | Company B: P/E of 20, high debt | Company B is riskier

3. Doesn't account for growth: A company with 20% growth deserves higher P/E than 0% growth company

4. Cyclical biases: Cyclical companies (banks, auto manufacturers) have low earnings in recessions, making P/E look high

5. Momentum effects: Some high-P/E stocks continue rising (momentum) even though valuations seem expensive

Using P/E Effectively

1. Compare within industry: Utility P/E of 14 vs. tech P/E of 35 isn't directly comparable

2. Check forward P/E: More forward-looking than trailing

3. Combine with other metrics: P/E + P/B (price-to-book) + debt + growth rate

4. Understand the cycle: High P/E at bull market peak is riskier than high P/E at bull market start

5. Don't rely solely on P/E: Fundamental analysis requires multiple metrics

The Bottom Line

P/E ratio is a useful valuation metric but incomplete. A low P/E doesn't guarantee a good investment (could be declining), and a high P/E doesn't guarantee a bad investment (could be growing rapidly).

Use P/E as one component of valuation analysis, comparing to historical norms, industry averages, and growth expectations.

◆ Sources

  1. P/E Ratio Explained — Investopedia
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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