23-06-2011, 08:15 AM
Interesting article - I thought investors should ALWAYS look at the fundamentals? Who buys just based on PER anyway?
Jun 23, 2011
Do low P/E ratios mean bargain buys?
Stock valuations are at post-crisis lows, but investors must also look at fundamentals
By Jonathan Kwok
THE market selldown in recent weeks has left valuations of Singapore stocks at post-crisis lows.
Investors have driven the benchmark Straits Times Index down by about 7 per cent from its peak this year, on fears of Greek debt and an anaemic American recovery.
The historical price-earnings (P/E) ratio of the index is at about 10.3, the lowest since the first quarter of 2009, when the market bottomed out during the financial crisis.
Some bargain-hunters might be tempted back by the falling valuations, but analysts urge caution, saying that P/E ratios should be only a 'quick and dirty' way of selecting stocks, and that many other factors have to be studied.
Historical P/E ratio is calculated by dividing a firm's current stock price by its latest full-year earnings per share. The calculation can indicate if a share price is high or low compared with the firm's profits.
Analysts often compare a company's ratio with others in the same industry, although this is not a perfect method either, as firms can differ markedly even in the same sector, and so have different P/E valuations.
A Straits Times check showed some firms trading below the valuations of their peers.
In the agricultural sector, mushroom grower Yamada Green Resources' P/E of 1.5 is much lower than the industry P/E average of 10, excluding loss-making companies. Palm oil giant Golden Agri-Resources is at 4.3 while rubber company Sri Trang Agro-Industry is at 6.8.
Yamada could be trading cheaper because it does not grow the same products as its peers. It is also based in China and may have suffered from the lack of confidence in S-chips.
Builder UE E&C is at a P/E of 2 after falling from its 48-cent offer price in February to its last traded price of 40.5 cents.
Steelmaker Sapphire Corp, which has a significant part of its operations in China, is at a P/E of 2.3, while Chip Eng Seng is at 2.6. The average for construction firms is 7.9.
Asia Power Corp, which runs power plants in China, could also be a victim of a low appetite for mainland firms.
Its P/E of 3.6 is much lower than fellow power, gas and water firms SP AusNet and CitySpring Infrastructure Trust. Australia-based SP AusNet is at 11.2 while CitySpring, a business trust which holds assets in Singapore and Australia, is at 12.6.
The finance sector has some large divergences. Its average is 15.8 but investment firm Transpac is at 5.6, and general insurer SHC Capital is at 5.8.
It is a similar story for some restaurants and hotels. Eatery operator Inno-Pacific Holdings is trading at a P/E of just 0.9, while hotel operator Overseas Union Enterprise is at 3.6. Tung Lok, which runs Chinese restaurants, is at 6.4, compared with the sector average of 18.2.
Property stocks, including those that operate in overseas real estate markets, have an average P/E of 11.4. MacarthurCook Property Securities Fund, which invests indirectly in Australian properties, has a P/E of 1.2.
Ho Bee Investment is trading at 3.3 while Hongkong Land is at 3.5.
But analysts warned that while low P/E values could indicate that a stock could be undervalued, the issue is more complex.
'Using P/E is a quick and dirty way and we really use it only as a guide rather than as a rule,' said Sias Research vice-president Roger Tan.
'There are many companies that are now trading at a bargain looking at the P/E ratios, but investors have to really check the company's business model and fundamentals first before applying this rule.'
For instance, a company could have seen an abnormal rise or fall in profit for the past year, which would make its P/E an inaccurate indicator of its true value, market watchers said.
Mr Tan added that a low P/E could also mean that investors are sceptical about the company maintaining its profit trajectory.
Observers point out that S-chips are suffering from low P/E ratios as investors have turned wary after a series of corporate governance scandals.
In an extreme case, China Sun Biochem's P/E is just 0.8. The stock was suspended after encountering accounting irregularities two years ago, and is in the process of being liquidated.
FibreChem Technologies, also suspended from trade and another victim of an accounting scandal, has a P/E of 0.9. It is now in talks with a potential investor.
jonkwok@sph.com.sg
Jun 23, 2011
Do low P/E ratios mean bargain buys?
Stock valuations are at post-crisis lows, but investors must also look at fundamentals
By Jonathan Kwok
THE market selldown in recent weeks has left valuations of Singapore stocks at post-crisis lows.
Investors have driven the benchmark Straits Times Index down by about 7 per cent from its peak this year, on fears of Greek debt and an anaemic American recovery.
The historical price-earnings (P/E) ratio of the index is at about 10.3, the lowest since the first quarter of 2009, when the market bottomed out during the financial crisis.
Some bargain-hunters might be tempted back by the falling valuations, but analysts urge caution, saying that P/E ratios should be only a 'quick and dirty' way of selecting stocks, and that many other factors have to be studied.
Historical P/E ratio is calculated by dividing a firm's current stock price by its latest full-year earnings per share. The calculation can indicate if a share price is high or low compared with the firm's profits.
Analysts often compare a company's ratio with others in the same industry, although this is not a perfect method either, as firms can differ markedly even in the same sector, and so have different P/E valuations.
A Straits Times check showed some firms trading below the valuations of their peers.
In the agricultural sector, mushroom grower Yamada Green Resources' P/E of 1.5 is much lower than the industry P/E average of 10, excluding loss-making companies. Palm oil giant Golden Agri-Resources is at 4.3 while rubber company Sri Trang Agro-Industry is at 6.8.
Yamada could be trading cheaper because it does not grow the same products as its peers. It is also based in China and may have suffered from the lack of confidence in S-chips.
Builder UE E&C is at a P/E of 2 after falling from its 48-cent offer price in February to its last traded price of 40.5 cents.
Steelmaker Sapphire Corp, which has a significant part of its operations in China, is at a P/E of 2.3, while Chip Eng Seng is at 2.6. The average for construction firms is 7.9.
Asia Power Corp, which runs power plants in China, could also be a victim of a low appetite for mainland firms.
Its P/E of 3.6 is much lower than fellow power, gas and water firms SP AusNet and CitySpring Infrastructure Trust. Australia-based SP AusNet is at 11.2 while CitySpring, a business trust which holds assets in Singapore and Australia, is at 12.6.
The finance sector has some large divergences. Its average is 15.8 but investment firm Transpac is at 5.6, and general insurer SHC Capital is at 5.8.
It is a similar story for some restaurants and hotels. Eatery operator Inno-Pacific Holdings is trading at a P/E of just 0.9, while hotel operator Overseas Union Enterprise is at 3.6. Tung Lok, which runs Chinese restaurants, is at 6.4, compared with the sector average of 18.2.
Property stocks, including those that operate in overseas real estate markets, have an average P/E of 11.4. MacarthurCook Property Securities Fund, which invests indirectly in Australian properties, has a P/E of 1.2.
Ho Bee Investment is trading at 3.3 while Hongkong Land is at 3.5.
But analysts warned that while low P/E values could indicate that a stock could be undervalued, the issue is more complex.
'Using P/E is a quick and dirty way and we really use it only as a guide rather than as a rule,' said Sias Research vice-president Roger Tan.
'There are many companies that are now trading at a bargain looking at the P/E ratios, but investors have to really check the company's business model and fundamentals first before applying this rule.'
For instance, a company could have seen an abnormal rise or fall in profit for the past year, which would make its P/E an inaccurate indicator of its true value, market watchers said.
Mr Tan added that a low P/E could also mean that investors are sceptical about the company maintaining its profit trajectory.
Observers point out that S-chips are suffering from low P/E ratios as investors have turned wary after a series of corporate governance scandals.
In an extreme case, China Sun Biochem's P/E is just 0.8. The stock was suspended after encountering accounting irregularities two years ago, and is in the process of being liquidated.
FibreChem Technologies, also suspended from trade and another victim of an accounting scandal, has a P/E of 0.9. It is now in talks with a potential investor.
jonkwok@sph.com.sg
My Value Investing Blog: http://sgmusicwhiz.blogspot.com/