A Sliding Share Price Has Us Looking At Goal Forward Holdings Limited's (HKG:1854) P/E Ratio

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To the annoyance of some shareholders, Goal Forward Holdings (HKG:1854) shares are down a considerable 30% in the last month. Given the 75% drop over the last year, some shareholders might be worried that they have become bagholders. What is a bagholder? It is a shareholder who has suffered a bad loss, but continues to hold indefinitely, without questioning their reasons for holding, even as the losses grow greater.

All else being equal, a share price drop should make a stock more attractive to potential investors. 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 long term investors have an opportunity when expectations of a company are too low. One way to gauge market expectations of a stock is to look at its Price to Earnings Ratio (PE Ratio). A high P/E implies that investors have high expectations of what a company can achieve compared to a company with a low P/E ratio.

Check out our latest analysis for Goal Forward Holdings

Does Goal Forward Holdings Have A Relatively High Or Low P/E For Its Industry?

Goal Forward Holdings's P/E of 10.51 indicates relatively low sentiment towards the stock. We can see in the image below that the average P/E (18.2) for companies in the consumer retailing industry is higher than Goal Forward Holdings's P/E.

SEHK:1854 Price Estimation Relative to Market April 29th 2020
SEHK:1854 Price Estimation Relative to Market April 29th 2020

Goal Forward Holdings'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. It is arguably worth checking if insiders are buying shares, because that might imply they believe the stock is undervalued.

How Growth Rates Impact P/E Ratios

Earnings growth rates have a big influence on P/E ratios. 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. So while a stock may look expensive based on past earnings, it could be cheap based on future earnings.

Goal Forward Holdings saw earnings per share decrease by 60% last year. But it has grown its earnings per share by 34% per year over the last three years.

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. So it won't reflect the advantage of cash, or disadvantage of debt. 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).