The price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) is one popular way to measure a stock’s value, but there are other tools that can be more helpful and sometimes more reveali
Every day, huge institutional investors make buy and sell decisions based on stocks’ fundamental value.
The price-to-earnings ratio (P/E), or the ratio between the stock price and earnings per share, is one popular way to determine valuation. But just knowing the P/E is like being a football coach who only analyzes his opponent’s offense and fails to consider its defense, special teams, and coaching philosophy. To really understand a stock’s value and trade more effectively, investors need to learn about and apply some other tools, as well as dig deeper into companies’ fundamentals.
For one thing, P/E alone can be misleading.
P/E can sometimes lead investors in the wrong direction. Imagine two stocks in the same sector. We’ll call them stock A and stock B. Stock A has a P/E of 10, and stock B has a P/E of 15. At first glance, stock A would seem to be a better value than stock B, because investors can buy it for a lower price compared to earnings than its competitor.
Not so fast. P/E doesn’t take into account other key factors that help determine stock price, including the company’s growth.
“If one stock is at a 10 P/E and one is at 15, and you ask me which one is the better value, I’d say I don’t know,” said Stephen Biggar, director of product strategy for Argus Research. “The one at 15 may be growing 18%, and the one at 10 may only be growing 10%. I’d prefer to pay 15 times for 18% growth than 10 times for 10% growth. Most metrics by themselves can’t be used in a vacuum; you have to look at growth rates and risk.”
The price/earnings to growth ratio, or PEG, tells a more complete story than P/E alone because it takes growth into account. Investors are often willing to pay a higher premium for greater earnings growth, whether past growth or estimated future growth.
The lower the PEG, the more undervalued the stock. Let’s say that stock A, with its 10 P/E, has forward annual earnings growth estimated at 10% for the next five years. To determine PEG, the P/E ratio is divided by earnings growth, in this case yielding a PEG of 1. Stock B, with its 15 P/E, has forward annual earnings growth estimated at 20% over the next five years, for a PEG of 0.75. Stock B has a lower PEG than stock A, meaning that by this measure, it’s actually the better value. Generally, a PEG below 1 means this metric considers a stock undervalued.
When a company doesn’t have earnings, investors can compare its stock price to its sales to help determine value.
Another helpful tool is price-to-book value, which compares a company's stock price to the value of its assets on the balance sheet. A lower price-to-book value can sometimes indicate that the stock is at a reasonable valuation.
Some investors value a stock by how much cash flow the company generates. They may monitor mergers and acquisitions in the company’s industry to see the type of valuations given to the company’s competitors. If the company pays dividends, they can check the dividend yield and whether it’s increasing.
P/E, PEG, price/book, and price/sales can all be found on tdameritrade.com. Log in, enter the stock symbol, and choose the Valuation tab. You’ll see a screen like figure 1.
All of these tools are helpful, but investors who rely only on numbers to value a stock are like that football coach who knows all the offensive statistics of his opponent but doesn’t research the opposing coach’s decision-making history. A company isn’t a football team, but the same thinking applies.
“In some cases, a company has a terrific product, it’s ahead of the market in terms of execution, has strong technology, or a strong brand name,” Biggar said. “Analysts take these things into account as part of the overall mix. Do they have the right set of products, a sustainable growth rate, a good management team? Many times, the multiple you put on a stock is based on your comfort level in the execution. One stock may be growing 15%, but deserves a 20 multiple. Another stock growing 15% may deserve only a 15 multiple.”
These fundamentals can’t be gleaned by looking at a valuation multiple. It takes research. To get a sense of how analysts view a company, go to tdameritrade.com, choose a symbol, and then go to the Analyst Reports tab, which brings up the screen in figure 2.
Asked which valuation method he’d choose if he could only have one, Biggar said P/E is the quick and dirty way.
“But make sure you have a growth component there,” Biggar added. “Virtually all of these valuation techniques come with caveats and things you have to look out for. It’s not a one size fits all.”
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