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Finance: What is the Price-To-Earnings Ratio? 217 Views


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Description:

What is the price-to-earnings ratio? It's the price of the stock divided by its earnings. Stock price: $14; earnings: $1. The P-E ratio then is 14.

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Transcript

00:00

Finance a lash up What is the price to earnings

00:05

ratio All right You just inherited a thousand shares of

00:09

whatever dot com which trades publicly for twenty bucks a

00:12

share And you also inherited a thousand shares of pepsi

00:17

And that stock trades publicly for forty bucks a share

00:20

Your sister got the pewter bunny rabbit collection but well

00:24

you can live with that fact that you take the

00:26

thousand shares All right so what on earth do you

00:28

do now What do you do with these things Well

00:31

you have no idea Because you're an orthodontist and you

00:34

have your hands in wet mouths all day Well if

00:37

you'd inherited a truckload of floss well then we totally

00:40

know what to do with it All right Will you

00:42

check out the brokerage reports from morgan stanley on whatever

00:46

dot com it has one hundred million dollars in revenue

00:49

and no earnings no profits Well what Our earnings again

00:54

Oh yeah This revenues from whatever's app sales at a

01:00

buck Each one hundred million of them minus its cost

01:03

of goods sold Well it had to pay fifty million

01:05

bucks to apple and others to get it saps out

01:08

There well then it had a small army of engineers

01:11

and product people on payroll to build The app will

01:13

subtract another thirty million box then it had rent in

01:17

legal expenses and health care insurance and office things like

01:20

computers and app servers All of that added up to

01:23

be twenty million dollars and because of the accounting laws

01:25

you have to subtract it all last year Even though

01:27

the app it lasts a long time i had to

01:29

take it all off the top It had a hundred

01:32

million dollars in revenues and a hundred million dollars in

01:34

expenses and no earnings but it has fifty million shares

01:39

outstanding which when multiplied by twenty bucks a share that's

01:43

What the market's paying for it twenty dollars share It

01:46

gives it a market value of a billion bucks Take

01:49

the shares outstanding kinds of market price to get what

01:52

the company's worth at least according to wall street buying

01:54

and selling the shares Oh it has fifty million dollars

01:56

in cash on the books and no debt so the

01:59

market is valuing the equity of the company at nine

02:04

hundred fifty million dollars meaning it's valuing the earnings power

02:08

Of the company in the future in his hands at

02:11

nine Fifty alright so you wonder forth an honest and

02:15

would be flossed cellar that you are How khun something

02:18

with no profits no earnings be worth a billion dollars

02:24

Well you read through the report which notes that the

02:26

revenues are growing really fast like one hundred percent a

02:29

year and that the market whoever that is believes that

02:34

the company will have two hundred million in revenues next

02:37

year and for hundred million the following year and on

02:40

four hundred million of revenues it will have one hundred

02:43

million dollars in net earnings It'll also produce fifty million

02:48

in cash along the way so in two years it

02:50

will have one hundred million dollars in cash on the

02:52

books and no debt If you go back and think

02:54

about that that you could subtract one hundred million from

02:57

the billion and it's the nine hundred million of equity

03:00

value back we'll get All right So you ponder that

03:05

means that today at a billion dollars i'm paying if

03:08

i buy it at twenty bucks a share i'm paying

03:12

nine times the earnings expected in two years Two years

03:17

From now for the equity value of this company huh

03:22

Well is nine times earnings cheap expensive Attaway frame the

03:26

notion Well the average snp company trades it about sixteen

03:31

times two years out earning something like that But the

03:34

average company is totally different from whatever dot com The

03:37

average company is like a caterpillar Tractors or well pepsi's

03:41

kind of average Wells fargo kind of average Well it's

03:46

a mature company unlike whatever dot com and the people

03:49

who write for shmoop but not mature way No Well

03:52

caterpillar has been around for a century has a stable

03:55

set of fires And you know what are the odds

03:58

People still need tractors to mine food in five years

04:01

You have pretty good odds whereas whatever dot com might

04:05

have totally evaporated by them Yeah well what about revenue

04:09

growth Yep Caterpillars matured gross revenues that only about eight

04:12

percent a year in a good year And it has

04:15

a lot of capital expenses Well every decade or so

04:18

it needs a new smelting plant to smelt engines and

04:21

redo its manufacturing process Tio you know keep up with

04:25

the joneses or rather the blues or chains Oh and

04:29

it pays a small dividend yeah helps well tough company

04:32

to compare with whatever dot com but caterpillar trades at

04:35

about sixteen times thiss years earnings and it'll grow earning

04:38

slowly and you note that it trades at fifteen times

04:42

and extras projected earnings and fourteen times the following year's

04:45

earnings So that's interesting caterpillar trades at a hire multiple

04:51

on two year forward earnings than whatever dot com who

04:53

does that make sense It's nowhere near ist sexy a

04:56

company but it must be the risk the market is

05:00

discounting a lot of risk because the odds that whatever

05:03

dot com doesn't make its four hundred million dollars in

05:07

projected app sales in two years well that's pretty good

05:11

could earn a lot less so you know you get

05:14

it You'll keep your shares of whatever dot com if

05:16

you believe they'll really hit the one hundred million in

05:19

earnings on four hundred million of revenues two years from

05:22

now and you'll dump the shares if you don't Well

05:25

what about pepsi Well that's company that financially sounds a

05:27

lot more like caterpillar than whatever dot com the risk

05:31

of people still drinking highly addictive caffeinated fizzy water and

05:35

salted potatoes in five years left pepsi sells a lot

05:38

of data chips Yeah really good odds Pepsi grows a

05:41

bit faster than caterpillar it has a bit higher margins

05:44

and it acquires competitors all the time dipping its toes

05:48

even outside the food and snacks arena So it has

05:50

a really big playing field that it plays on by

05:53

a lot of things and there's that global warming thing

05:56

People drink more when it's hot right So pepsi learn

05:59

about two bucks a share this year and it trades

06:02

that twenty times earnings or forty dollars Well because pepsi

06:05

has long term distribution contract with grocery stores and vending

06:09

machines and theme parks and other weird places it sells

06:12

its wears well pepsi has a pretty highly predictable earning

06:16

stream So when peopie tells the street that it'll learned

06:20

to twenty next year in two forty the following year

06:23

what likelihood Very high that it hits those numbers are

06:26

maybe does little better because it has a history of

06:28

under promising and over delivering and on its two bucks

06:31

forty and earnings at forty dollars pep trades at a

06:34

bit of a premium to the stock market overall that

06:37

to forty and earnings on a forty dollars a share

06:39

price today means that peopie trades at sixteen point six

06:43

times two years out Earnings well the overall stock market

06:47

trades at sixteen times this year's earnings because well earnings

06:50

are growing It trades it about fifteen times earnings two

06:53

years out Why all of these crazy comparisons That air

06:57

probably confusing you well because price to earnings ratios are

07:01

just one measure of the value of a company relative

07:05

to everything else The p e ratio is just one

07:09

metric investors used to measure the value of a company

07:13

and the basic foundation of the idea is simple If

07:16

you invest a dollar in a company today you want

07:19

to be paid back either by getting cash distributions coming

07:23

to you That overtime are much greater than that dollar

07:26

you put in like big dividends and so on Or

07:29

you want the asset itself to simply appreciate it A

07:32

healthy fast pace about eight dollars worth of stock Well

07:35

you want that stock to double every you know three

07:38

four five six years something like that Alright we'll announce

07:41

for your sister's rabbit collection Well that things should multiply

07:44

At a good rate too unless she decides to separate 00:07:47.975 --> [endTime] them

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