CONCEPT · July 8, 2026

TO GET IT

What 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historical reference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 RULE

20x

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

CONCEPT

A 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.
Ronfy Analysis · Editorial

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 WORKS

Higher P/E, more years you pay up front

P/E 20 = 20 YEARSP/E 20 = 20 YEARS
P/E 5P/E 10P/E 15P/E 20P/E 25P/E 30

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 MISTAKE

Three things the P/E doesn't tell you on its own

  1. 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.

  2. PAST OR FUTURE

    Trailing P/E uses profit already reported; forward P/E uses expected profit. The future is what moves the price.

  3. 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

EXAMPLE

What justifies a high or low P/E (illustrative)

EXPECTED GROWTH: 45%INTEREST RATES: 25%BUSINESS RISK: 20%MARKET MOOD: 10%S&P AVERAGE~17x
EXPECTED GROWTHMore future ahead = higher P/E45%
INTEREST RATESLow rates justify paying more today25%
BUSINESS RISKMore uncertainty = lower P/E20%
MARKET MOODHype inflates or deflates the multiple10%

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 IT

Five ETFs with very different P/Es

QQQ~ high P/ENasdaq, growth tech. P/E typically well above the average.
SPYG~ high P/ES&P 500 growth. You pay a high multiple for more expected growth.
VOO~ mid P/EThe whole S&P 500. Its P/E is the market's overall reference.
VTV~ low P/EValue: mature, stable firms. Multiple below the average.
VYM~ low P/EHigh 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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Can you read a P/E now?

Next time you hear 'stocks are expensive,' you'll know what to ask: expensive compared with what?

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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.

Sources: 📘 Concept · 🧮 Valuation

Editorial content. Not financial advice.

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