Sent: Thursday, October 12, 2000 8:41
PM
Subject: Re: Re: [sharechat] P/E
Ratios
Hi David:
Interesting comments re. PEs. I'm also interested to see
that you rate the PEG.
My understanding of the PEG ( and I am keen to be corrected)
is that it is a ratio arrived at by dividing the present PE by the historical
annual growth rate. It uses the rule of thumb that if a company is fairly
valued the PE should equal the Growth Rate.
So if Cranium Corporation (CRAC:NZSE) has a PE today of 10 and for the
past 5 years it's EPS have grown at 10% then PEG = 10/10 = 1 indicating it is
fairly valued. If for some reason the market unfairly sells down the stock but
the fundamentals are still sound then the PEG would drop. So if Mr. Market
drops the PE to 7 the PEG would be 7/10 = .7 indicating a possible good
buy.
Again it is a rule of thumb and most important it
should be used in conjunction with and in the context of other measures we
have been discussing on the Buffett thread.
If we apply it to two companies we are considering adding to our "??
Portfolio" (we need a name) say BCH and WHS we get two quite different
PEGs.
BCH: PE = 59, Growth Rate = 22% so PEG = 59 / 22 = 2.68 indicating
it's price is getting up there.
WHS: PE = 24, GR = 29% so PEG = 24 / 29 = .83 indicating slightly
undervalued.
I would be interested to know how others
interpret the PEG and how much importance they place on it as an
indicator.
Cheers, Brian