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PER: The Essential Metric Every Investor Must Master
When we talk about choosing companies to invest in the stock market, there is an indicator that is practically mandatory in any serious analysis: the PER (Price/Earnings Ratio) or Price/Earnings ratio. Along with EPS (Earnings Per Share), it forms the dynamic duo of fundamental analysis. This article will guide you through everything you need to know about this metric: what it is, how to use it correctly, and, most importantly, how to avoid the most common mistakes.
Understanding the PER: Beyond the Formula
The PER is fundamentally a ratio that compares the market price paid for a share with the profits the company generates. If a company has a PER of 15, it means that its current annual profit would need fifteen years to equal its current market value.
Although it seems simple, the PER occupies a central place among the six most critical ratios in fundamental analysis:
The interesting thing is that the PER not only tells us if a stock is expensive or cheap at this moment but can also reveal how the market perceives the company’s future growth. For example, Meta (formerly Facebook) experienced a sharp decline at the end of 2022, not because of its profits, but because the increase in interest rates by the FED changed expectations about tech stocks. In contrast, Boeing showed a more predictable behavior, with the PER remaining in a consistent range while the stock fluctuated accordingly.
Two Ways to Calculate the PER
Calculating the PER is accessible to anyone, but there are two equivalent approaches:
Method 1 (At the company level): Market Capitalization ÷ Total Net Profit
Method 2 (Per share level): Share Price ÷ Earnings Per Share (EPS)
Both formulas produce the same result. For example, if a company has a market capitalization of $2.6 billion and net profits of $658 million, its PER would be 3.95. Or if the share price is $2.78 with an EPS of $0.09, we get a PER of 30.9.
Where to Find the PER and How to Interpret It
The good news is that you don’t need to calculate anything manually. On any financial platform (from Infobolsa in Spain to Yahoo! Finance in the US), the PER appears listed alongside other data such as market cap, EPS, and 52-week range. Keep in mind that in Anglo-Saxon markets, they often use “P/E” instead of “PER.”
PER Interpretation Ranges
However, these numbers are only guidelines. A consistently low PER does not always mean “a bargain,” especially if the company is in operational decline. History is full of companies with attractive PERs that collapsed.
PER vs. Shiller PER: The Battle of Time
The Shiller PER is a variant that attempts to correct the “short-sightedness” of the traditional PER. While the PER conventional is based on 12 months of profits, the Shiller PER averages profits over the last 10 years adjusted for inflation, divided by the current market capitalization. The theory holds that this 10-year perspective allows predicting profits for the next 20 years.
The difference is crucial: the PER is a snapshot, while the Shiller PER is a slow-motion film. Both have advocates and detractors.
The Normalized PER: Deepening Financial Health
There is a more sophisticated version called normalized PER, which adjusts the formula to better reflect operational reality:
(Market Capitalization - Liquid Assets + Financial Debt) ÷ Free Cash Flow
This approach reveals anomalies that the simple PER can hide. The classic example: when Santander bought Banco Popular for “1 euro,” it was actually assuming colossal debt that other banks rejected. The normalized PER would have shown this reality more clearly.
Why Different Sectors Use Different PERs
Here’s the real secret: you cannot compare the PER of Arcelor Mittal (2.58 in metallurgy) with that of Zoom Video (202.49 in technology) expecting the same interpretation.
The metallurgy industry, banking, and other cyclical sectors naturally maintain low PERs. Tech and biotech companies typically show high PERs as the norm. That’s why value comparators like Horos Value Internacional (PER 7.249) versus its category (14.559) or Cobas Internacional (PER 5.466) carefully select companies from comparable sectors.
Cyclical companies present a special challenge: during the peak of the cycle, they show low PER; during depression, they show high PER. Timing based solely on PER in these cases is risky.
The Virtues (and Limitations) of the PER
Advantages:
Limitations:
Combining the PER with the Complete Arsenal
A wise investor never relies solely on the PER. It should be complemented with:
Check what generates profits: business growth or one-time asset sales? That distinction is critical.
The Connection to Value Investing: PER as a Compass
Value Investing is built on the premise of “finding good businesses at a fair price.” The PER is the compass pointing toward undervalued companies. Specialized funds like Horos Value Internacional deliberately maintain a PER lower than their category peers, seeking that gap between intrinsic value and market price.
The Verdict: PER is Necessary but Insufficient
The PER is an indispensable tool for the modern investor. It provides a quick and reliable way to assess whether a company is expensive or cheap relative to others. However, a strategy based solely on chasing low PERs will inevitably fail.
Many companies on the brink of collapse have low PER precisely because no one trusts them. The solution: spend at least 10 minutes exploring the operational structure of any company before investing. Combine the PER with other ratios, understand the sector, verify management quality. This way, you will build a solid, diversified, and truly profitable investment approach.
Fundamental analysis is not an exact science, but it is a discipline. The PER is your first step, not your final destination.