CONCEPT · July 8, 2026
TO GET ITWhat the P/E ratio is (and why everyone watches it)
The P/E compares a stock's price with its profit. It turns 'expensive' or 'cheap' into a single number you can compare.
WHAT IT COMPARES
price
against profit
WHAT IT MEASURES
years
of earnings you pay
S&P AVERAGE
~17x
historical reference
THE IDEA
20x
paying 20 times annual profit
If a company earns $5 per share and the stock costs $100, its P/E is 20: you pay 20 years of current profit. Nothing more, nothing less.
THE RULE
SIMPLE RULE20x
20x
= 20 years of current profit
The P/E doesn't say whether something is a good investment. It says how much future expectation is already in the price.
A P/E of 20 means that, if profit never changed, it would take you 20 years to earn back what you paid, from profit alone.
- PAYBACK
- — How long it takes to earn back what you paid, from profit alone.
- EXPECTATION
- — What the market believes the company will earn in the future.
KEY IDEA
CONCEPTA number, not a verdict
“The P/E doesn't tell you a stock is expensive: it tells you how much optimism you have to accept to buy it at that price.”
The P/E is the starting point of valuation, not the end. It only makes sense once you compare it.
- VALUATION
- — Estimating what a company is really worth versus its price.
- OPTIMISM
- — Growth expectations the market already pays for in advance.
VISUAL
HOW IT WORKSHigher P/E, more years you pay up front
A P/E of 5 pays back in 5 years; one of 30, in 30. That's why paying more only makes sense if profit will grow.
Direct relationship: if profit never changed, the P/E is literally the years it takes to earn back your investment.
- AXIS
- — The chart's reference line. Here, P/E along the bottom and years on the left.
- GROWTH
- — Profit rising over time, which shortens the real payback.
THREE KEYS
COMMON MISTAKEThree things the P/E doesn't tell you on its own
IT NEEDS COMPARISON
A P/E of 25 is high for a bank and low for a tech firm. Compare it with its sector, its history, and the bond.
PAST OR FUTURE
Trailing P/E uses profit already reported; forward P/E uses expected profit. The future is what moves the price.
HIGH CAN BE WORTH IT
A fast-growing company justifies a high P/E: you pay more today because it will earn far more tomorrow.
The classic mistake is reading the P/E in isolation. Without context, a number means neither expensive nor cheap.
- TRAILING
- — P/E from the last 12 months of profit already known.
- FORWARD
- — P/E from the EXPECTED profit of the next year.
WHAT DRIVES IT
EXAMPLEWhat justifies a high or low P/E (illustrative)
That's why two identical companies can carry very different P/Es: what the market expects of each one differs.
A 'fair' P/E isn't fixed: it depends on several factors. Split is approximate and educational, not an exact formula.
- MULTIPLE
- — Another name for the P/E: the multiple paid per unit of profit.
- RATES
- — The interest safe money pays; it competes with stocks.
EXAMPLES
TO SEE ITFive ETFs with very different P/Es
| QQQ | ~ | → high P/E | Nasdaq, growth tech. P/E typically well above the average. |
| SPYG | ~ | → high P/E | S&P 500 growth. You pay a high multiple for more expected growth. |
| VOO | ~ | → mid P/E | The whole S&P 500. Its P/E is the market's overall reference. |
| VTV | ~ | → low P/E | Value: mature, stable firms. Multiple below the average. |
| VYM | ~ | → low P/E | High dividend. Typically low P/E, settled businesses paying out cash. |
These funds group styles with opposite typical P/Es. They illustrate the concept, not a recommendation or same-day prices.
- ETF
- — A listed basket that groups many stocks into one product.
- GROWTH / VALUE
- — Growth = expansion at a high price; Value = cheap, solid companies.
WRAP-UP
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- P/E
- — Price over profit: how many years of earnings you pay for a stock.
- FORWARD
- — The P/E based on expected future profit.