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The fact that expectations/assumptions about future earnings may be wrong? There are companies with P/E ratios in the 100s (I work for one with a P/E of about 30!) but it doesn't mean that these are a bargain. P/E is not the same as CAR for example. Looking at P/E alone when choosing stocks doesn't make sense.Or what am I misunderstanding??
What precisely do you mean by this? Company profits (not necessarily paid out to shareholders or reflected in share price in part or full)? Dividends? Capital appreciation? Something else? You still seem to be confusing P/E ratios with guaranteed returns, interest rates or something like that.a share that say returns a profit of €0.10 for the year
Thanks
What I am saying is that if you invest €1.00 in a share that say returns a profit of €0.10 for the year that is a 10% return, or a P/E of 10.
My point is that a lot of companies have seen their share nose dive recently, as a result I would have expected to hear more noise about profit warnings etc - I havent, have you?
So I am figuring that the stock market is a kin to a bargain basement at the moment particularly in the banking sector.
So what I am saying is that certain banks on the ISEQ have fallen by 25%+ in recent times, yet has there been any indicator that the banks earnings are forecasted to drop by so much?? I dont think so, maybe I'm naive but I think there are bargains galore out there.
I don't know what you mean either do be honest. Are you talking about dividend yield or soemething?
Also as for Irish banks, there may not be profit warnings but Davy stockbrokers have lowered future growth and earnings and reduced target share price.
This might be a waste of time but here goes anyway!
The NPV formula is: r = E/P + g [or P = E/(r-g)], where r = required rate of return, E = EPS, P = share price and g = expected long-term growth rate.
Suppose share X has E = 1 and g = 6%, and the rate of return investors require is 10%, then P = 1/(.1-.06) = 25.
Now suppose that expectations for this company change slightly so that E = 0.95 and g = 5.5% and also the risk premium required by investors increases slightly so r = 10.5%. In this case P = .95/(.105-.055) = 19. So even a 5% decrease in EPS expected for the year can easily result in a large fall in the share price in certain circumstances, in this case 24%.
You state the "rate of return investors require"...this seems a bit vague to me.
The confusion sets in when I look at certain irish banks in todays stock market that are trading with a P/E ratio of less than 8.
So if I were to invest in one share of these banks I would effectively be getting a share that returns a profit of over 12.5% in one year for that share.
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