High Earnings Growth Does Not Justify High Price/Earnings

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  • Stock market valuations are driven more by investor risk appetite, as reflected in the P/E ratio, than by earnings growth alone.
  • The current market P/E of 30 is historically high, indicating strong investor willingness to take risk for future earnings streams.
  • Even with high earnings growth, returns could be negative if P/E ratios contract toward historical norms, highlighting the risk of overpaying.
  • Return expectations should focus on potential P/E expansion or contraction, not just projected earnings growth, as investor sentiment is crucial.

I’ve been reading a lot lately that the stock market is priced just right because earnings growth is expected to be high, growing at double digits. But earnings growth is not the sole determinant of stock price. Investor preference for risk versus return is the primary determinant, as reflected in the price/earnings (P/E) ratio.

Setting a P/E Ratio

P/E is the price you’re willing to pay for each dollar of earnings. The P/E on the stock market is currently 30, meaning that investors are paying $30 for each dollar of current earnings. Why would anyone pay $30 in order to get $1 back? Because investors are buying the stream of future earnings. That $30 buys participation in all future earnings, with high expected growth on key stocks shown as follows.

Estimated

Sure, expected growth is high. But how do we know that $30 is the “right” price to pay? We need to estimate what our return will be based not just on earnings growth but also on changes in P/E, whether expansion or contraction. P/E reflects investor appetite for risk. The current P/E is very high relative to history, implying high willingness to take risk. However, if investors become more cautious, P/Es will contract.