P/E – Price-to-Earnings Ratio

By Bulios Research Updated 04.04.2026

Price-to-Earnings Ratio (P/E) is the most widely used valuation metric in the stock market. It indicates how many dollars investors pay for one dollar of annual company earnings.

How P/E is Calculated

Basic formula:

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

Or equivalently:

\text{P/E} = \frac{\text{Market Capitalization}}{\text{Net Income}}

  • EPS is net income divided by the number of shares
  • TTM (trailing twelve months) or forward EPS is used

Trailing vs. Forward P/E

Variant Earnings Source Use Case
Trailing P/E Earnings over the last 12 months Historical valuation
Forward P/E Expected earnings for the next 12 months Future valuation

Forward P/E is more useful for growing companies but depends on the accuracy of analyst estimates.

How to Interpret the Result

The value indicates how many years it would take to "recoup" the investment from earnings (at constant earnings).

P/E Interpretation
< 10 Potentially undervalued or problems
10–15 Low valuation
15–20 Average valuation
20–30 Above-average valuation
> 30 Premium valuation, high growth expectations

Example: A stock costs $500 and EPS is $25. P/E is 20. Investors pay $20 for every $1 of annual earnings.

What Affects P/E

High P/E may indicate:

  • Expected earnings growth – investors pay a premium for future growth
  • Quality business – stable, predictable earnings
  • Low risk – less volatile industry
  • Overvaluation – overly optimistic expectations

Low P/E may indicate:

  • Slow growth – company isn't growing
  • Cyclical peak – temporarily high earnings
  • Problems – declining profitability
  • Undervaluation – market overlooks quality

Industry Differences

P/E varies significantly by industry:

  • Utilities – 12–18 (stable, slow growth)
  • Banks – 8–15 (cyclical)
  • Consumer Staples – 15–25 (stable)
  • Industrials – 12–20 (cyclical)
  • Healthcare – 15–25 (growth)
  • Technology – 20–40+ (high growth)

When P/E Fails

P/E has limitations:

  • Negative earnings – P/E cannot be calculated
  • Cyclical companies – P/E is low at cycle peak (high earnings)
  • Accounting earnings – can be manipulated
  • Different accounting standards – international comparison is difficult
  • Debt – high debt increases P/E (interest reduces earnings)

P/E vs. Other Metrics

Metric Advantage Over P/E
EV/EBITDA Neutral to debt
P/FCF Actual cash flow instead of accounting earnings
PEG Accounts for growth
P/S Works for unprofitable companies

Shiller P/E (CAPE)

For evaluating the entire market, CAPE (Cyclically Adjusted P/E) is used:

\text{CAPE} = \frac{\text{Price}}{\text{Average Earnings over 10 Years (inflation-adjusted)}}

CAPE smooths cyclical fluctuations and better predicts long-term market returns.

How to Use the Indicator in Practice

For comprehensive valuation, combine P/E with:

  • PEG – accounting for growth
  • EV/EBITDA – comparison with different debt levels
  • P/FCF – earnings quality
  • ROE – profitability

Always compare with:

  • Company's historical P/E
  • Competitors' P/E
  • Overall market P/E

Practical Tip

Low P/E isn't automatically a buying opportunity. Always ask "why is P/E low?" It could be a value trap – a company that looks cheap but has structural problems. A quality company with high P/E may be a better investment than a troubled company with low P/E.

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