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Encyclopedia > PEG ratio

The PEG ratio is a valuation metric for determining the relative trade-off between the price of a stock, the earnings generated per share (EPS), and the company's expected future growth.
left ( frac{P/E}{Growth} right )
A lower ratio is "better" (cheaper) and a higher ratio is "worse" (expensive). A PEG ratio that gets close to 2 or higher is generally believed to be expensive, that is, the price paid appears to be too high relative to the estimated future growth in earnings. Image File history File links Broom_icon. ...


It is generally accepted that a PEG ratio of 1 represents a reasonable trade-off between cost (as expressed by the P/E ratio) and growth: the stock is reasonable valued given the expected growth. If a company is growing at 30% a year, for example, then the stock's P/E could be as high as approximately 30. PEG ratios between 1 and 2 are therefore considered to be in the range of normal values. The P/E ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) of a stock (also called its earnings multiple, or simply multiple, P/E, or PE) is used to measure how cheap or expensive its share price is. ...


The PEG ratio is commonly used and provided by various sources of financial and stock information. The PEG ratio is only a rule of thumb despite its wide use, and has no accepted underlying mathematical basis; the PEG ratio's validity at extremes in particular (when used, for example, with low-growth companies) is highly questionable. It is generally only applied to so-called growth companies (those growing earnings significantly faster than the market).


When the PEG is quoted in public sources it may not be clear whether the earnings used in calculating the PEG is the past year's EPS or the expected future year's EPS; it is considered preferable to use the expected future growth rate.

Contents

Advantages

Investors may prefer the PEG ratio because it explicitly puts a value on the expected growth in earnings of a company. The PEG ratio can offer a suggestion of whether a company's high P/E ratio reflects an excessively high stock price or is a reflection of promising growth prospects for the company.


Disadvantages

The PEG ratio is less appropriate for measuring companies without high growth. Large, well-established companies, for instance, may offer dependable dividend income, but little opportunity for growth. It has been suggested that ex-dividend date be merged into this article or section. ...


A company's growth rate is an estimate. It is subject to the limitations of projecting future events. Future growth of a company can change due to any number of factors: market conditions, expansion setbacks, and hype of investors.


The convention that (PEG=1) is appropriate is somewhat arbitrary and considered a rule of thumb metric. Mathematically, growth faster than growth of the economy cannot be infinite (or the company would eventually become larger than the economy), and the PEG ratio does not correct for the period of time that faster-than-normal growth will continue. Hence, the PEG ratio lacks a coherent conceptual framework, and is used solely as an indication of the extent of the growth/price trade-off.


At extremes, and particularly for low-growth companies, the PEG ratio implies valuations that may appear to be nonsensical. For example, the PEG ratio "rule of thumb" implies that a company with 1% growth in earnings per annum should have a P/E ratio between 1 and 2, a level that would appear to be extremely low.


References

External links

  • Investopedia - PEG Ratio
  • Yahoo! Stock screener - Sorted by "PEG Ratio using future EPS and future growth rates"


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  Results from FactBites:
 
PEG Ratio (549 words)
The PEG ratio was developed to address shortcomings in the use of the P/E ratio.
As a general rule of thumb, when the PEG ratio is approaching a value of 1.0, the firm's equity is considered "fairly" valued.
The PEG ratio of comparable firms will be affected by the composition of the firm (i.e., business mix, risk and growth profiles).
PEG Ratio: how accurate is it? (389 words)
The PEG approach is a simple valuation tool, popularized by Peter Lynch and The Motley Fool among many others.
This calculator lets you compare the PEG approximation with the "correct" results from the cash flows calculator for different rates of "G":
Finally, note that properly speaking the PEG ratio is defined as (P/E) / G. So the quote and formula from the top of the page are equivalent to saying that if a company is fairly priced, its PEG ratio ought to equal 1.0.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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