Is there a P/E ratio, from a fundamental perspective which defines "cheap" in these really large stocks, a level at which you start getting interested in the price compared to the earnings? If so, what is your level? P/E<=10?
I think average PE for top stocks is about 14 so anything sub 10 where you think the earnings are stable/growing would be worth a look imo
Really PE shouldnt be used alone and note that the data can also depend where you are getting the PE figure from. If it is historic and based on numbers before a profit down/upgrade then the quoted stats will be wrong.
Hi guys,
I am curious for the input of fundamental traders about a simple question:
Assume you have an investing mandate to invest in ASX20 securities using P/E to define "value".
Is there a P/E ratio, from a fundamental perspective which defines "cheap" in these really large stocks, a level at which you start getting interested in the price compared to the earnings? If so, what is your level? P/E<=10?
If you are after a simple "indicator" whether the market presents value, then a historical PE of the stock in question may be a better metric...
If you are after a simple "indicator" whether the market presents value, then a historical PE of the stock in question may be a better metric...
Hey skc, thanks for the response as well.
So there is no "overall market" P/E at which you would be interested in any large stock from any sector if the price was right?
Short answer – NO.
Slightly longer answer.
Growth and profitability drive cash flow and in turn valuation. Price/current earnings tell you nothing about these aspects going forward. P/E tells you nothing about the financial structure either.
Sure. I would say 8x or lower would make big cap shares very attractive from a historical perspective, irrespective of the sector.
Hey craft, another thanks for the response.
I understand and appreciate your input here. I hope you understood my question correctly, I am not asking whether or not you would/do use P/E to value stocks, I'm simply asking if you had to use P/E to value stocks in the ASX20, is there any number at which you would deem stocks to be "value" above which is "expensive"? If your answer to that question is no, that's ok, just want to clarify we are talking about the same "no". I am not trying to build a valuation model or anything, just had a few thoughts on the tram this morning that I thought you guys might be able to help answer.
Thanks for clarifying your no and giving in-depth justification for your answer craft, definitely appreciate it.
Just to make clear, this isn't for a scan and the assumption is that I have perfect earnings data.
Hi guys,
I am curious for the input of fundamental traders about a simple question:
Assume you have an investing mandate to invest in ASX20 securities using P/E to define "value".
Is there a P/E ratio, from a fundamental perspective which defines "cheap" in these really large stocks, a level at which you start getting interested in the price compared to the earnings? If so, what is your level? P/E<=10?
. Limiting the initial universe limits the number of positions needed to exploit if you do turn something up, thats a good start.
Top decile of ROIC/net debt would be my choice to investigate. Obscure enough to stay robust, picks up the drivers of value and financial structure.
Sinner,
In response to your question, i would start to get interested in a single digit PE ratio.
Have you thought about using dividend yield? I would be getting interested in any ASX20 stock that has a double digit grossed up dividend yield especially when comparing the difference to 1 year term deposits against long term average difference. See below.
http://www.macquarie.com.au/mgl/au/.../november-2011/investment-strategy-sleep-well
Cheers
Oddson
Question
Looking back say 5 yrs.
Which has had the best growth and dividend return
Low P/E
High P/E
Or is it not discernable?
Is there perhaps a range?
How much does a companies P/E vary year upon year?
Are P/E ratios ( low ones ) a reliable gauge to share price growth.
Surely someone would have a paper on this!
The Low P/E Effect and Abnormal Returns for Australian Industrial Firms
Simone Kelly
Bond University - Finance
Jenna McClean
UBS
Ray McNamara
Bond University - School of Business
August 25, 2008
21st Australasian Finance and Banking Conference 2008 Paper
Abstract:
While the low P/E effect has been examined rather extensively in international markets particularly in the US, there is a notable absence of Australian market-based P/E studies. This research examines the relationship between the investment performance of Australian Industrial common stock and their P/E ratios in an attempt to uncover potential for a P/E based trading strategy. The excess and differential returns of P/E ranked portfolios containing 1310 Industrial firms over a 9 year period (January 1998 to December 2006) are examined. The results show the existence of a low P/E effect in the Australian capital market. Furthermore, the superior returns of low P/E stocks increase when a consensus of two business failure prediction models is applied to the portfolio of low P/E stocks. The statistically significant risk-adjusted returns afforded to hypothetical investors over the sample period (up to 12 ¿% per annum), not only provide support for a P/E based trading strategy, but also suggest a violation of the semi-strong form of the Efficient Market Hypothesis.
Purely out of curiosity, if I took the top decile of ASX200 based on ROIC/net debt and asked you to invest monthly in that universe using only P/E, would you have a number or would it still be no?
Obviously I agree with craft. Wouldn't seriously look at buying any of them until I looked at the capital structure & profitability metrics. No point buying at any P/E if the E is going backwards or is not likely to go any where for years.
Sinner - I ripped the text out of SKC's post because I am lazy.
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