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Trailing P/E Ratio

Trailing price-to-earnings ratio, often called trailing P/E Ratio, is a valuation metric that compares a company’s current stock price to its past earnings per share.

In fundamental investing, trailing P/E Ratio helps investors evaluate how much the market is paying for a company’s actual reported earnings, usually from the last 12 months.

Why Trailing P/E Ratio Matters

Trailing P/E Ratio matters because it is based on earnings that have already been reported.

Unlike forward P/E Ratio, which relies on forecasts, trailing P/E Ratio uses historical earnings. This makes it useful for understanding what investors are paying for the company’s recent profitability.

Fundamental investors use trailing P/E Ratio to answer:

“How much am I paying for this company’s actual recent earnings?”

For example, a stock trading at a 15x trailing P/E Ratio means investors are paying $15 for every $1 of earnings the company generated over the trailing period.

Trailing P/E Ratio Formula

The trailing P/E Ratio formula is:

Trailing P/E Ratio = Current Stock Price ÷ Trailing Earnings Per Share

A common version uses trailing 12-month earnings:

Trailing P/E Ratio = Current Stock Price ÷ Trailing 12-Month EPS

Another version is:

Trailing P/E Ratio = Market Capitalization ÷ Trailing 12-Month Net Income

Where:

Current Stock Price = The current market price per share

Trailing 12-Month EPS = Earnings per share from the most recent four quarters

Example of Trailing P/E Ratio

Suppose a company’s stock trades at $80 per share.

Over the last 12 months, the company earned $4 per share.

Trailing P/E Ratio = $80 ÷ $4
Trailing P/E Ratio = 20x

This means the stock trades at 20 times trailing earnings.

Another way to say it:

Investors are paying $20 for every $1 of earnings the company generated over the last 12 months.

Trailing P/E Ratio in Fundamental Investing

In fundamental investing, trailing P/E Ratio is used to compare a company’s current market price to actual earnings.

Investors may use trailing P/E Ratio to evaluate:

  • Current stock valuation
  • Historical profitability
  • Earnings quality
  • Comparison with industry peers
  • Comparison with the company’s historical valuation
  • Whether earnings are growing or declining
  • Whether the stock price is reasonable relative to reported earnings

Trailing P/E Ratio is especially useful for companies with stable, recurring, and predictable earnings.

Trailing P/E Ratio vs. Forward P/E Ratio

Trailing P/E Ratio uses past earnings, usually from the last 12 months.

Forward P/E Ratio uses expected future earnings.

Trailing P/E Ratio = Current Price ÷ Trailing 12-Month EPS

Forward P/E Ratio = Current Price ÷ Forecasted Earnings Per Share

Trailing P/E Ratio is based on actual reported results. Forward P/E Ratio is based on estimates.

MetricEarnings UsedMain StrengthMain Weakness
Trailing P/E RatioHistorical earningsBased on reported resultsMay not reflect future earnings
Forward P/E RatioForecasted earningsReflects future expectationsForecasts may be wrong

Both ratios are useful. Trailing P/E Ratio shows what investors are paying for past earnings. Forward P/E Ratio shows what investors are paying for expected future earnings.

Trailing P/E Ratio vs. Price-to-Earnings Ratio (P/E Ratio)

Trailing P/E Ratio is a type of price-to-earnings ratio (P/E Ratio).

The general P/E Ratio compares price to earnings. Trailing P/E Ratio specifically uses past earnings.

In simple terms:

P/E Ratio = Price compared to earnings

Trailing P/E Ratio = Price compared to actual recent earnings

When investors refer to the P/E Ratio, they may mean trailing P/E Ratio, forward P/E Ratio, normalized P/E Ratio, or another version. Always check which earnings figure is being used.

High Trailing P/E Ratio vs. Low Trailing P/E Ratio

A high trailing P/E Ratio may mean investors are paying a high price for recent earnings. This can reflect strong growth expectations, high business quality, optimism, or overvaluation.

A low trailing P/E Ratio may mean the stock is cheap compared to recent earnings. It can also signal weak growth, declining earnings, high debt, cyclicality, or business risk.

Trailing P/E LevelPossible Interpretation
High trailing P/E RatioStrong growth expectations, high business quality, optimism, or overvaluation.
Low trailing P/E RatioLower valuation, slower growth, higher risk, or possible undervaluation.
Rising trailing P/E RatioStock price may be rising faster than earnings, or earnings may be falling.
Falling trailing P/E RatioStock price may be falling, or earnings may be rising faster than price.

A trailing P/E Ratio should always be interpreted alongside earnings durability and business quality.

What Is a Good Trailing P/E Ratio?

There is no universal good trailing P/E Ratio.

A good trailing P/E Ratio depends on the company’s industry, growth rate, balance sheet, earnings quality, interest rates, competitive position, and risk.

A company with strong earnings growth, high return on invested capital (ROIC), and a durable economic moat may justify a higher trailing P/E Ratio. A cyclical or declining company may deserve a lower trailing P/E Ratio.

The better question is:

“Is the trailing P/E Ratio reasonable compared to the company’s future earnings power and risk?”

Trailing P/E Ratio and Earnings Quality

Trailing P/E Ratio is only as useful as the earnings behind it.

Reported earnings may be affected by:

  • One-time gains
  • One-time losses
  • Restructuring charges
  • Asset impairments
  • Temporary tax benefits
  • Accounting estimates
  • Cyclical peak profits
  • Temporary margin changes

If trailing earnings are unusually high, the trailing P/E Ratio may make the stock look cheaper than it really is. If trailing earnings are unusually low, the trailing P/E Ratio may make the stock look more expensive than it really is.

This is why investors often compare trailing P/E Ratio with normalized earnings, earnings power, and free cash flow.

Trailing P/E Ratio and Cyclical Companies

Trailing P/E Ratio can be misleading for cyclical companies.

At the top of a cycle, earnings may be temporarily high. This can make the trailing P/E Ratio look low, even if the stock is not truly cheap.

At the bottom of a cycle, earnings may be temporarily low. This can make the trailing P/E Ratio look high, even if the stock is attractive based on normalized earnings.

For cyclical companies, investors often review:

  • Normalized Earnings
  • Earnings Power
  • Free Cash Flow
  • Enterprise Value (EV)
  • Net Debt
  • Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)
  • Industry cycle position

Trailing P/E Ratio and Intrinsic Value

Trailing P/E Ratio can help investors evaluate valuation, but it does not directly measure intrinsic value.

Intrinsic value depends on the future cash flows or earnings a business can generate, not just the earnings it produced over the last 12 months.

A stock with a low trailing P/E Ratio may be undervalued if earnings are durable and the business has strong fundamentals. A stock with a high trailing P/E Ratio may still be undervalued if future earnings grow significantly.

Investors should use trailing P/E Ratio with deeper analysis, including:

  • Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
  • DCF Model
  • Free Cash Flow
  • Earnings Power
  • Normalized Earnings
  • Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)
  • Economic Moat
  • Competitive Advantage
  • Margin of Safety

Trailing P/E Ratio vs. Earnings Yield

Trailing P/E Ratio and earnings yield show the same price-to-earnings relationship from opposite directions.

Trailing P/E Ratio = Price ÷ Trailing Earnings

Trailing Earnings Yield = Trailing Earnings ÷ Price

Example:

Trailing P/E RatioTrailing Earnings Yield
5x20.0%
10x10.0%
20x5.0%
25x4.0%
50x2.0%

A higher trailing P/E Ratio means a lower trailing earnings yield. A lower trailing P/E Ratio means a higher trailing earnings yield.

Trailing P/E Ratio vs. Price-to-Free-Cash-Flow Ratio

Trailing P/E Ratio uses accounting earnings.

The price-to-free-cash-flow ratio uses free cash flow.

Trailing P/E Ratio = Market Capitalization ÷ Trailing Net Income

Price-to-Free-Cash-Flow Ratio = Market Capitalization ÷ Free Cash Flow

A company may have a low trailing P/E Ratio but weak free cash flow if it requires heavy capital expenditures or has poor cash conversion.

Free cash flow can help investors test whether reported earnings are supported by real cash generation.

Limitations of Trailing P/E Ratio

Trailing P/E Ratio is useful, but it has limitations.

Common limitations include:

  • It uses past earnings, not future earnings.
  • It may be distorted by one-time gains or losses.
  • It can be misleading for cyclical companies.
  • It does not directly account for debt.
  • It may not work for unprofitable companies.
  • It can ignore capital expenditure needs.
  • It may make low-quality businesses look cheap.
  • It may make high-quality growth companies look expensive.
  • It depends heavily on whether trailing earnings are sustainable.

Trailing P/E Ratio should be a starting point, not a complete valuation method.

Common Trailing P/E Ratio Mistakes

Common mistakes include:

  • Assuming a low trailing P/E Ratio always means a stock is cheap
  • Assuming a high trailing P/E Ratio always means a stock is expensive
  • Ignoring earnings quality
  • Using peak-cycle earnings for cyclical companies
  • Ignoring debt and interest expense
  • Ignoring free cash flow conversion
  • Comparing companies from unrelated industries
  • Ignoring expected future earnings changes
  • Treating trailing P/E Ratio as intrinsic value
  • Failing to normalize unusual earnings

A trailing P/E Ratio only becomes useful when investors understand the earnings behind the ratio.

Trailing P/E Ratio in Business Quality Analysis

Trailing P/E Ratio becomes more useful when combined with business quality analysis.

A company may deserve a higher trailing P/E Ratio if it has:

  • Durable earnings growth
  • High return on invested capital (ROIC)
  • Strong free cash flow conversion
  • Low debt
  • Pricing power
  • A strong economic moat
  • Good capital allocation
  • Predictable earnings power

A company may deserve a lower trailing P/E Ratio if it has:

  • Declining revenue
  • Weak margins
  • High debt
  • Cyclical peak earnings
  • Poor free cash flow conversion
  • Weak competitive advantage
  • Poor capital allocation

A good investment is not simply a stock with a low trailing P/E Ratio. It is a stock priced attractively relative to future earnings, business quality, and risk.

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