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Price-to-Sales Ratio |
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Price-to-Sales Ratio The price of a security per share divided by its company's trailing 12-month sales per share. The price-sales ratio is a way to help determine a security's stock valuation, that is, the fair value of a stock in a perfect market. However, it is considered less accurate than the price-earnings ratio because it does not incorporate non-sales related revenues or expenses. As such, it is used in place of the price-earnings ratio only if a company is unprofitable and therefore has no earnings. Price-to-sales ratio. A price-to-sales ratio, or a stock's market price per share divided by the revenue generated by sales of the company's products and services per share, may sometimes identify companies that are undervalued or overvalued within a particular industry or market sector. For example, a corporation with sales per share of $28 and a share price of $92 would have a price-to-sales ratio of 3.29, while a different stock with the same sales per share but a share price of $45 would have a ratio of 1.61. Some financial analysts and money managers suggest that, since sales figures are less easy to manipulate than either earnings or book value, the price-to-sales ratio is a more reliable indicator of how the company is doing and whether you are likely to profit from buying its shares. Other analysts believe that steady growth in sales over the past several years is a more valuable indicator of a good investment than the current price-to-sales ratio. Price-to-Sales Ratio (Price/Sales) ![]() What Does Price-to-Sales Ratio (Price/Sales) Mean? A ratio that values a stock relative to its past performance, other companies, or the overall market; it is calculated by dividing a stock's current price by its revenue per share for the trailing 12 months, as shown here: The ratio also is referred to as a stock's PSR. Investopedia explains Price-to-Sales Ratio (Price/Sales) The price-to-sales ratio varies substantially across industries. Therefore, it is used mainly to compare like companies in the same industry. Also, because the ratio does not take any expenses or debt into account, it is somewhat limited in the story it tells. Related Terms: How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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