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Glossary
Valuation
intermediate

Price-to-Earnings Ratio

A valuation metric comparing a company’s share price to its earnings per share.

Also known as
PE
P/E
price earnings ratio

The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio measures the price an investor pays for each dollar of a company’s annual earnings. A high P/E can mean a stock is expensive, or that investors expect strong future growth; a low P/E can signal undervaluation, or it can reflect real concerns about the business.

P/E is most meaningful when comparing companies within the same industry, since average P/E levels vary significantly across sectors.

Formula

P/E = \frac{\text{Market Price per Share}}{\text{Earnings per Share}}

Examples

Worked example

A stock trading at $50 with $5 in annual earnings per share has a P/E of 10 — investors are paying $10 for every $1 of annual earnings.