In This Article:
The goal of this article is to teach you how to use price to earnings ratios (P/E ratios). We’ll show how you can use GHCL Limited’s (NSE:GHCL) P/E ratio to inform your assessment of the investment opportunity. GHCL has a price to earnings ratio of 5.85, based on the last twelve months. That corresponds to an earnings yield of approximately 17%.
View our latest analysis for GHCL
How Do I Calculate GHCL’s Price To Earnings Ratio?
The formula for P/E is:
Price to Earnings Ratio = Price per Share ÷ Earnings per Share (EPS)
Or for GHCL:
P/E of 5.85 = ₹213.5 ÷ ₹36.49 (Based on the year to March 2018.)
Is A High Price-to-Earnings Ratio Good?
A higher P/E ratio means that buyers have to pay a higher price for each ₹1 the company has earned over the last year. That is not a good or a bad thing per se, but a high P/E does imply buyers are optimistic about the future.
How Growth Rates Impact P/E Ratios
P/E ratios primarily reflect market expectations around earnings growth rates. That’s because companies that grow earnings per share quickly will rapidly increase the ‘E’ in the equation. That means unless the share price increases, the P/E will reduce in a few years. Then, a lower P/E should attract more buyers, pushing the share price up.
GHCL shrunk earnings per share by 4.0% last year. But EPS is up 30% over the last 5 years.
How Does GHCL’s P/E Ratio Compare To Its Peers?
The P/E ratio indicates whether the market has higher or lower expectations of a company. The image below shows that GHCL has a lower P/E than the average (16.4) P/E for companies in the chemicals industry.
This suggests that market participants think GHCL will underperform other companies in its industry. Many investors like to buy stocks when the market is pessimistic about their prospects. It is arguably worth checking if insiders are buying shares, because that might imply they believe the stock is undervalued.
Remember: P/E Ratios Don’t Consider The Balance Sheet
The ‘Price’ in P/E reflects the market capitalization of the company. In other words, it does not consider any debt or cash that the company may have on the balance sheet. In theory, a company can lower its future P/E ratio by using cash or debt to invest in growth.
Such spending might be good or bad, overall, but the key point here is that you need to look at debt to understand the P/E ratio in context.
GHCL’s Balance Sheet
GHCL has net debt worth 63% of its market capitalization. If you want to compare its P/E ratio to other companies, you should absolutely keep in mind it has significant borrowings.