A Rising Share Price Has Us Looking Closely At Intense Technologies Limited's (NSE:INTENTECH) P/E Ratio

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Intense Technologies (NSE:INTENTECH) shares have had a really impressive month, gaining 38%, after some slippage. But shareholders may not all be feeling jubilant, since the share price is still down 30% in the last year.

Assuming no other changes, a sharply higher share price makes a stock less attractive to potential buyers. While the market sentiment towards a stock is very changeable, in the long run, the share price will tend to move in the same direction as earnings per share. The implication here is that deep value investors might steer clear when expectations of a company are too high. One way to gauge market expectations of a stock is to look at its Price to Earnings Ratio (PE Ratio). A high P/E ratio means that investors have a high expectation about future growth, while a low P/E ratio means they have low expectations about future growth.

View our latest analysis for Intense Technologies

How Does Intense Technologies's P/E Ratio Compare To Its Peers?

Intense Technologies's P/E of 6.87 indicates relatively low sentiment towards the stock. If you look at the image below, you can see Intense Technologies has a lower P/E than the average (12.3) in the software industry classification.

NSEI:INTENTECH Price Estimation Relative to Market, September 25th 2019
NSEI:INTENTECH Price Estimation Relative to Market, September 25th 2019

Intense Technologies's P/E tells us that market participants think it will not fare as well as its peers in the same industry. While current expectations are low, the stock could be undervalued if the situation is better than the market assumes. You should delve deeper. I like to check if company insiders have been buying or selling.

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 even if the current P/E is high, it will reduce over time if the share price stays flat. Then, a lower P/E should attract more buyers, pushing the share price up.

Intense Technologies's earnings made like a rocket, taking off 486% last year.

A Limitation: P/E Ratios Ignore Debt and Cash In The Bank

One drawback of using a P/E ratio is that it considers market capitalization, but not the balance sheet. That means it doesn't take debt or cash into account. Theoretically, a business can improve its earnings (and produce a lower P/E in the future) by investing in growth. That means taking on debt (or spending its cash).

Such expenditure might be good or bad, in the long term, but the point here is that the balance sheet is not reflected by this ratio.