PEG Ratio

A valuation metric that adjusts the P/E ratio by the expected earnings growth rate.

Fundamental Analysis

Definition

The PEG ratio refines the P/E by incorporating growth, helping identify whether a high P/E is justified by strong earnings growth or represents overvaluation. A PEG of 1.0 suggests fair value relative to growth, below 1.0 suggests undervaluation, and above 1.0 suggests premium pricing.

functions Formula

PEG = P/E Ratio / Annual EPS Growth Rate (%)

lightbulb Example

A stock has a P/E of 30 and expected EPS growth of 25% per year. PEG = 30/25 = 1.2. A competitor with P/E of 20 and 10% growth has PEG = 2.0, making it relatively more expensive despite the lower P/E.

verified_user Key Points

  • PEG < 1.0 often signals undervaluation relative to growth
  • Uses forward growth estimates which can be unreliable
  • Most useful for growth stock comparison
  • Doesn't work well for cyclical or declining companies

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