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Price-to-Earnings Ratio

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Acronyms 0.01 sec.
Price-Earnings Ratio
The price of a security per share at a given time divided by its annual earnings per share. Often, the earnings used are trailing 12 month earnings, but some analysts use other forms. The P/E ratio is a way to help determine a security's stock valuation, that is, the fair value of a stock in a perfect market. It is also a measure of expected, but not realized, growth. Companies expected to announce higher earnings usually have a higher P/E ratio, while companies expected to announce lower earnings usually have a lower P/E ratio. See also: PEG

Price-to-earnings ratio (P/E). The price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) is the relationship between a company's earnings and its share price, and is calculated by dividing the current price per share by the earnings per share.

A stock's P/E, also known as its multiple, gives you a sense of what you are paying for a stock in relation to its earning power.

For example, a stock with a P/E of 30 is trading at a price 30 times higher than its earnings, while one with a P/E of 15 is trading at 15 times its earnings. If earnings falter, there is usually a sell-off, which drives the price down. But if the company is successful, the share price and the P/E can climb even higher.

Similarly, a low P/E can be the sign of an undervalued company whose price hasn't caught up with its earnings potential. Conversely, a low P/E can be a clue that the market considers the company a poor investment risk.

Stocks with higher P/Es are typical of companies that are expected to grow rapidly in value. They're often more volatile than stocks with lower P/Es because it can be more difficult for the company's earnings to satisfy investor expectations.

The P/E can be calculated two ways. A trailing P/E, the figure reported in newspaper stock tables, uses earnings for the last four quarters. A forward P/E generally uses earnings for the past two quarters and an analyst's projection for the coming two.



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The deal may lure investors back to bank shares trading at a 67 per cent discount to their five-year average price-to-book ratio and a 48 per cent discount to the average price-to-earnings ratio, Credit Suisse's Hawa wrote.
Following the recent rally, the S& P 500 index is now trading on a 2009 price-to-earnings ratio of 22 times.
Stocks, as evaluated by their price-to-earnings ratios, are undervalued to the point where they could draw enough investors to spark a recovery before the end of 2009.
 
 
 
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