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Price-earnings ratio

The price-earnings ratio (P/E) divides the current share price by earnings per share, showing how many times current earnings investors will pay for a share. A high P/E reflects expectations of strong future growth or low perceived risk.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkRelative valuation

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A company's shares trade at €36 and last year's earnings per share were €2.40, giving a price-earnings ratio of 15: share price divided by EPS. Investors are paying €15 for every €1 of current annual earnings. A P/E of 25 at a peer looks expensive by comparison, reflecting higher growth expectations, lower perceived risk, or both, rather than a fixed rule about value.

Where it fits
SubjectCorporate FinanceCoreTopicBusiness Valuation & DCFCoreTopicBond & Equity ValuationCore

The formula

LaTeX
PE=Share priceEPS\frac{P}{E} = \frac{\text{Share price}}{\text{EPS}}

Variables

Price-earnings ratio: how many euros investors pay per euro of current annual earnings (also called the earnings multiple)
Current market price per ordinary share
Earnings per share: net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders ÷ weighted average ordinary shares in issue

The forward P/E replaces trailing EPS with next year's forecast EPS and is more informative for valuation purposes. Applying a peer-group P/E to a company's EPS gives an estimated fair value per share.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

Vantage SA's shares trade at €45. The company reported earnings per share of €3.00 for the year just ended, and analysts forecast EPS of €3.75 for the coming year. What are the trailing and forward P/E ratios respectively?

Select an answer to check your understanding.