Trailing Price-To-Earnings - Trailing P/E

  

Categories: Company Valuation

See: Trailing Earnings. See: Price-to-Earnings-Ratio.

It's how you value stocks: The company whatever.com just reported $1.02 in earnings. The quarter before, they reported 98 cents, the quarter before that was 90 cents, and the quarter before that was 80 cents. So the trailing P/E, with the stock at $100, was 100/3.7, or about 28x earnings, with that trailing $3.70 a share in reported earnings.

This number doesn't adjust for balance sheet issues, like companies with tons of cash and no debt, and vice versa. To do that, you need to look at Enterprise-to-EBITDA valuation metrics. So, um, do that.

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Finance: What is Price-to-earnings-to-gr...5 Views

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Finance Allah shmoop what is priced toe earnings to growth

00:06

or a peg ratio You know what the P E

00:10

ratio is right And if you don't I'll check out

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our fine opus on said Subject Here it's him up

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So price here's build a bore Stock trading at forty

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bucks a share It had net income or earnings last

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year of two bucks a share in trades at yes

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twenty times earnings So that's a P and in hee

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price and in earnings there it trades at twenty times

00:31

earnings Um yeah So what does that mean Well if

00:36

it held the earnings flat and basically all of its

00:38

earnings was cash earnings Not like some fancy accounting trick

00:42

Well if earnings were flat for twenty years well the

00:45

company would have made back all of its valuation in

00:48

cash profits and everyone would yawn right Twenty years at

00:52

two bucks a year twenty times two is forty right

00:54

Well that company would have paid up five percent cash

00:57

return yield Right Two bucks in earnings over forty bucks

01:00

a share to over forty in California and in Texas

01:04

is five percent So is that a good return about

01:06

return Was there a lot of risk in that number

01:08

Growth shrinkage Wealth in a peg ratio Earnings growth is

01:13

taken into consideration when evaluating the ratios of a stock

01:17

So twenty times earnings is kind of a ho hum

01:19

multiple But this company has no growth so that twenty

01:22

times is probably a pretty high multiple as a multiple

01:25

You know all things considered like twenty years a long

01:28

time to get all your money back What if earnings

01:30

were doubling each year for the next five years Like

01:32

earnings went from two to four to eight to sixteen

01:35

to thirty two bucks a share Well then twenty times

01:37

earnings was ludicrously cheap Growth was one hundred percent versus

01:42

that zero percent where twenty times earnings Look you know

01:45

decent Well the basic idea and this one is coined

01:47

by Peter Lynch the famed portfolio manager who brought Fidelity

01:51

to fame Is that a peg ratio of one means

01:54

that a stock is basically fairly priced that is P

01:57

E ratios need contexts specifically the context of earnings growth

02:02

The formula takes the P E ratio say it's a

02:04

twenty and then puts it over the annual earnings per

02:08

share growth number and note that it's per share not

02:11

just overall company earnings Like if a company grew earnings

02:15

by acquiring for stock a lot of competitors well it's

02:18

share count would balloon While it's earnings grew fast as

02:21

well but likely the dilution and suffered would mitigate most

02:25

of the upside in earnings growth So on our twenty

02:27

times earnings number a company with no growth gives us

02:30

a peg ratio of twenty over zero which is an

02:34

undefined number But peg ratio is all about how expensive

02:38

the price to earnings ratio is relative to the growth

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of the company Wow we did not see that plot 00:02:45.65 --> [endTime] twist coming yellow

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