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What is the pe value of the stock?

P/E ratio is generally 15-20 times more reasonable. But every industry is different, so the P/E ratio cannot be generalized. Generally speaking, the P/E ratio should be compared with the industry average. If it is higher than the industry average, it may be overestimated. Being below the industry average means being underestimated. In addition, under normal circumstances, the P/E ratio of White Horse Stock is normal between 10-20; In a bull market, the price-earnings ratio of white horse stocks generally exceeds 30, even if it is overestimated, so it is relatively reasonable to be below 30.

P/E ratio is also called PE, and the calculation formula is: P/E ratio = share price ÷ net profit per share, and share price refers to the cost of buying one share; Earnings per share refers to the income obtained by holding a stock in that year.

What is the price-earnings ratio of the stock? What does the stock price-earnings ratio tell us? P/E ratio, also known as expected annualized rate of return or P/E ratio, is the ratio of the stock market price to its expected annualized earnings per share, and the calculation formula is:

P/E ratio = (current market price per share)/(after-tax profit per share)

To put it simply, the P/E ratio is the number of years you can get back the principal according to this expected annualized rate of return in the future. From this point of view, of course, the smaller the better.

Generally speaking, the lower the P/E ratio, the less active the stocks are in the A-share market, and such stocks are only suitable for long-term investment. So how normal is the P/E ratio?

Generally speaking, the price-earnings ratio is:

Less than 0 means that the company's profit is negative (because the profit is negative, the software that calculates the price-earnings ratio generally displays "-").

0- 13: the value is underestimated.

14-20: that is, the normal level.

2 1-28: The value is overvalued.

More than 28: reflecting the existence of speculative bubbles in the stock market.

The lower the P/E ratio, the better. It is better to underestimate it to the normal level.

The P/E ratio is inherently insufficient in judging whether the average price of the stock market is reasonable, and it is unscientific to judge whether the stock price is too high or too low only by using the P/E ratio as an indicator.

Defects in the calculation method itself. The choice of sample stocks of constituent stock index is arbitrary. The average price-earnings ratio calculated by various countries and markets is related to the sample stocks selected. If the sample is adjusted, the average P/E ratio will also change. Even in the comprehensive index, there is a problem that the impact of loss-making stocks and meager profit stocks on P/E ratio is discontinuous.