Stock Multiples: How to Tell When a Stock is Cheap/Expensive

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P/E means jackshit. If you follow P/Es then you would have got cucked bad with MU and AAPL. I like how soy boys make videos on youtube with some BS and other soy boys lap it up.

👍︎︎ 27 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies

just buy high then sell low. this is time tested and recommended by /r/wallstreetbets to trade stock

👍︎︎ 9 👤︎︎ u/soAsian 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies

👆 found the OP balls deep in MU $90Cs

👍︎︎ 5 👤︎︎ u/gizamo 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies

p/e alone means nothing.

forward p/e and peg combined with p/e gives better details, but still even then company value and innovation and news will still move stock any which way.

there is some value in learning technical and fundamental analysis, at least that way you don't have to rely solely on watercooler and tv bald man screaming stock picks alone

edit: watching whole video, it's actually not that bad and goes on to mention other factors.

👍︎︎ 4 👤︎︎ u/itsokma 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies

P/E lags like a mf

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/PapaQsHoodoo 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies

This guy is blindingly white

👍︎︎ 4 👤︎︎ u/dsbtc 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies

I use P/E, P/B, dividend yield and my evaluation of the product/service of the company and its future to dertermine if I buy a stock or not. Just relying one 1 number is not a good idea at all

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/Cre8or_1 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies

Ignore him. He has no soul.

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Jan 06 2019 🗫︎ replies
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you want to invest in the stock but have no idea whether or not now is a good time to buy sure you've heard the age-old buy low sell high but what does that really mean when does the stock's price considered low $10 a share $100 there's no perfect answer to these questions but there are ways to at least gauge how expensive or achievement stock is you see by using something called a multiple we can figure out how much we're paying for stocks underlying business and if this price has changed over time interested we'll dive into the topic and more on today's plain bagel you may have noticed that when you google search a stock like well Google for example you end up with a series of search results as well as some basic details about the ticker in there you have your stocks open price market capitalization and dividend yield but also lists something called the p/e ratio of the company the p/e is an example of what's called a multiple a ratio that compares a stock's price to some fundamental number generally speaking the higher the multiple the more expensive a stock is considered think that as like a price per pound at a butcher shop in shopping for pork beef or chicken it's difficult to compare the total prices since the quantity you get is different for each cut but if you look at the price per pound you can easily figure out which cut is the best bang for your buck multiples work in a similar way allowing us to compare the price of a stock to the underlying fundamentals you get with the purchase now there are hundreds of different multiples that investors can use including the evie to a bita price to book value big setter etcetera some of the multiples are industry specific whereas others are more broad in nature and each carries a different implication but the p/e ratio which stands for the price to earnings ratio is one of the most straightforward and popular it's easy enough to calculate since you take the stock's price and divide it by the company's earnings per share for example if plain bagel Co had 1 million shares outstanding each of which we're trading out of price of $30 and last year their net income was 2 million dollars the stock's p/e ratio would be 15 times this p/e ratio is known as a trailing p/e because we're calculating it using historical information and it's one of the easiest multiples to understand it basically represents how much an investor is willing to pay per dollar of company's profits so for plain bagel Co we are paying a price equal to 15 times our share of the company's profit so the trailing p/e helps conceptualize how much we're paying for a stock but it does have its shortcomings the biggest one being that it is backwards looking whereas many believe that markets are forward-looking if a company is expected to release a new product enter a new market or improve its operations in the future then a stock will likely trade higher something that the trail he wouldn't take into account using past earnings to explain this Sox current price because of this many investors prefer instead to use what's known as a forward multiple in this case the forward p/e which divides a stock's price by how much the company is expected to make next year for example let's say that plain bagel Co is expected to launch a new bagel product next year and as a result analysts are expecting earnings to increase to 2.5 million dollars next year in this case assuming everything else remains unchanged plain bagel COEs forward p/e multiple would equal 12 times now the clear problem with for multiples is that they rely on forecasts which may not pan out but they can still help gauge the value of a stock and how much investors are paying up for a company's potential profit so for a play megacode our forward looking p/e is 12 times great but what does that mean well by itself not a whole lot you see multiples are relative measure sure understanding how long it will take for your stock to pay for itself is useful but to understand whether the level is attractive or not we've got to compare it to other multiples we could for example compare the p/e ratio to plain bagel COEs historical p/e ratios to see how it has changed over time this will give us an idea of whether investors are valuing the company higher lower than normal if the company's earnings are expected to increase but the price of the stock has fallen it would mean that the multiple has contracted and investors don't value the profitability of the firm as much as they used to alternatively if earnings are falling but the prices risen well the multiple has expanded meaning people are paying more for less profit we could also compare the p/e multiple to the stock's long-term average to see whether the margin is larger or smaller than normal if the stocks ten-year average p/e is 15 times for example we can assume that the stock's multiple is temporarily cheaper than normal and may warn to buy if we pick up the stock in the multiple later expands back to its long term average then we could earn a return even if that company's earnings are flat a key assumption here is that a multiple is expected to revert to its mean over time and while that doesn't always hold true investors sometimes look for extreme variations from the mean with many believing that short-term volatility in the stock small which could be caused by a bad press release or negative near-term headwind will eventually subside causing the multiple to return to its normal level assuming a company's core business remains unchanged awesome so if I find a company that's trading out of multiple below its historical average I'm good to buy right well not quite sure understanding where the company's stock value stands relative to its past is great but you need to compare the value to other stocks as well in the same industry in our analogy if you found pork on sale for $6 a pound they may still be too expensive if a butcher down the road is offering pork for a regular price of $2.50 a pound similarly if we need to gauge the value of a stock relative to its peers so let's take plain bagel Co and compare to sesame sands and the Hangul bagel which are trading at for PE s of 13 times and 7 times respectively if you compare plain bagel COEs 12 times multiple to its pier average of 10 times well then we can see that the stock is actually more expensive than other bagel companies on average all right so the stock is cheaper than it normally is but more expensive than its peers so should I buy or sell or what well as great as it would be to have a one number basis for making investment decisions it's simply not that simple multiples are limited in the amount of insight they provide with a p/e multiple for example we are taking into account the company's growth rate sure compared to peers plain bagel COEs p/e of 12 times may seem expensive but a plain bagel Co is also growing its earnings at a faster pace the multiple may be justified this is why high growth companies like those in the tech space tend to have higher multiples than stocks and slower moving areas like utilities on the other side of the spectrum just because a company is trading at a p/e below its peers or even below its historical average doesn't mean it's a good buy the multiple compression could be justified if the company's fundamentals have deteriorated what do I mean by that well let's go back to our analogy imagine you're at the butcher shop and you see two steaks trading at $10 a pound and $3 a pound looking for some value you pick up the $3 cut but when you get home you find that the steak you bought has expired and that it's a lower quality cut you're not even sure if it's actually a beef anymore so aside from learning that there's probably something wrong with three dollar steak what's the lesson here well just because something is cheap doesn't mean you should buy it a lower stocks p/e may reflect a justified devaluation of the company maybe for the plain bagel ko keto diets are expected to kill the bagel industry or maybe the companies facing regulation that will prevent it from making its staple plain bagel these are things that would hurt plain bagel COEs future profitability and even though the multiple would contract it doesn't make the company and goodbye because the company's core long term prospects have deteriorated that's the thing about multiples they are pretty meaningless without context and chasing low multiples without an understanding of a company's core business and future prospects may leave you it was something called a value trap a stock that looks cheap compared to its historical crisis but continues to fall even further because of a deterioration in the firm's fundamentals so why discuss multiples if they could mean that a stock is both over and undervalued well it's not that multiples are useless they are a handy way to quickly understand a stock's price level but as I said at the beginning they are a rough gauge of a stock's value at best some investors even contest that the p/e multiple is incredibly limited because of its use of accounting earnings numbers which may be easily altered by management assumptions and non-cash items so while multiples can certainly help you make investment decisions we need to ensure that your decision itself is based on a thorough understanding of a firm's operations and its future prospects not just the stocks multiple a good approach is to find companies you like based on their fundamentals and then find some appropriate multiple to understand the firm's valuation after the fact looking for cheap stocks first mainly be with a portfolio of low quality holdings after all as warren buffett says it's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price so next time you find a stock trading at a low multiple or a stake selling at three dollars a pound make sure to check the fundamentals and the stakes expiration and that the steak is actually steak but with that said we're out of time if you like this video please hit the like button and if you like we're doing here please subscribe hit the bell icon to make sure you get notifications about future videos if you have any feedback or topics you'd like us to cover in future videos leave a comment down below for the plain bagel my name is Richard coffin thanks for joining me today [Music]
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Channel: The Plain Bagel
Views: 1,092,529
Rating: 4.9383059 out of 5
Keywords: The Plain Bagel, Stock Multiples, P/E, PE Ratio, Stock Multiples Explained, Valuation Multiples Explained, PE Ratio Explained, P/E Ratio
Id: 21STUhQ-iP0
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Length: 9min 47sec (587 seconds)
Published: Fri Nov 09 2018
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