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What is a price-earnings ratio?

It helps to assess value

The price-earnings (PE) ratio is what investors are willing to pay for a rand of earnings. To get the PE ratio, divide a company’s share price by its earnings per share (EPS). Price means the actual price of the share on the stock exchange at a given point in time and represents what investors are willing to pay for that company. EPS represents the portion of the company’s profits allocated to each share – the total profit divided by the number of shares in issue. If a company’s share price is R120, and its EPS is R10, its PE will be R12. This means an investor would be willing to pay R12 for R1 of earnings. It is important to note that the PE is based on historical ­earnings.

The concept of normal earnings

One of the problems with taking a PE based on historical earnings at face value is that profits can be cyclical. For example, a commodity company that reported profits for the year ending six months ago would have earned these profits on commodity prices that are now, on average, 12 months old. If the commodity price has changed over the past 12 months, its current profit run rate could be much higher or lower than the last reported numbers and the market will try to anticipate this change in the share price. This adjustment for anticipated changes in earnings will appear as a high or low PE.

So instead of using actual earnings, we prefer to assess the level of profitability and profit growth we think is sustainable over time, which we refer to as “normalised” or “trendline” earnings. This allows us to pick out two factors in estimating a share’s fundamental value: our estimate of future earnings, and the price we would be prepared to pay for each rand of those earnings.

Ignoring the impact of short-term changes to profit, a higher PE ratio indicates perceived better growth prospects, or less risk to profits, than the average company. Thus, besides other factors, a company with a proven long-term track record of growing profits will normally trade at a high PE ratio and a company with low growth, or a patchy profit history, will trade at a lower PE ratio.

Poor reporting, transparency or governance may ­affect investors’ perceptions of risk and so reduce the PE ratio they are prepared to pay for earnings.

Context counts

We also consider PE ratios in context.

First, we look at what other investments are available at the time. Interest rates on cash are low and the prices of bonds and property funds are high. This might explain why current PE ratios are also high.

Second, we consider at what PE we think we might be able to buy or sell a share in the future. The long-term history of the FTSE/JSE All Share Index (Alsi) is shown in Graph 1. The trendline PE for the Alsi is 21x, which is well above the long-term average of 12x.

Holding cash, even when it is not paying very much in interest, lets us buy shares in the future when they return to more normal valuations.

What can you do?

A “balanced” unit trust, where the investment ­manager looks for the best value investments across ­different asset classes on your behalf, can provide you with some comfort and protection from dramatic ­fluctuations in return. However, in an environment of high prices, you should prepare yourself for less exciting returns.

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