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P/E Ratio Explained: How to Actually Use It (Indian Market Edition)

P/E ratio is the most cited valuation metric on Indian financial media and the most misused. This guide breaks down forward vs trailing P/E, sector-relative valuation, PEG ratio, and the four mistakes that cause retail investors to misread P/E year after year.

10 min readPublished 23 May 2026

Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio is the most cited valuation metric on Indian financial media — and the most misused. CNBC anchors quote it, retail investors compare it across stocks, and 80% of the time the comparison is structurally invalid. This guide breaks down what P/E actually tells you, when it's useful, and the four mistakes that cost retail investors money.

The formula and what it represents

P/E = Price per share / Earnings per share

Translation: how many rupees you're paying for ₹1 of annual profit. A stock at ₹500 with EPS ₹25 has P/E 20 — you're paying ₹20 for every rupee the company earns annually.

Inverted: P/E of 20 = earnings yield of 5% (1/20). Useful when comparing equity yield to bond yield. If 10-year G-Sec is 7% and a stock yields 5%, you're betting on earnings growth to make up the gap.

Trailing P/E vs Forward P/E — the most important distinction

Trailing P/E (TTM): Price ÷ EPS of last 4 quarters. The number every Indian financial site publishes by default. Accurate, historical, doesn't require forecasting.

Forward P/E: Price ÷ estimated next-12-months EPS. Reflects what the market expects forward. More forward-looking but depends on estimate accuracy.

For a high-growth company growing earnings 30%, forward P/E is ~23% lower than trailing P/E. Reliance trailing P/E might be 25× while forward P/E is 19× — same stock, very different valuation read.

Rule: Use forward P/E for growth stocks. Use trailing P/E for stable/cyclical stocks (forward estimates are noisy at the cycle turn).

The Indian market context (P/E benchmarks)

Index / SectorMedian P/E (10-yr)Current P/ERead
Nifty 50~22~24Slightly above median; not extreme
Nifty Bank~18~17At/below median; cycle-dependent
Nifty IT~24~28Premium to median; growth concerns priced in
Nifty FMCG~45~48Premium category; consumption growth expectations
Nifty Auto~22~24Cyclical; pre-launch vs post-launch P/E swings wildly
Nifty Pharma~24~30Premium to historical median; export sentiment positive

Source: NSE sectoral indices. Numbers change quarterly — verify on the day you check.

The PEG Ratio — P/E adjusted for growth

PEG = P/E ÷ Earnings Growth Rate (%)

A stock with P/E 30 growing 30%/year has PEG 1.0 — fair value. A stock with P/E 30 growing 10% has PEG 3.0 — overvalued. PEG normalises P/E by accounting for growth.

Peter Lynch's rule: PEG < 1 = potentially undervalued. PEG 1-2 = fair. PEG > 2 = expensive.

Indian large-caps often trade at PEG 1.5-3 because growth visibility is high. Don't expect PEG < 1 in quality names — that's usually a sign of broken business or imminent earnings cut.

The 4 mistakes that destroy P/E analysis

Mistake 1: Comparing P/E across sectors

FMCG trades at 40-50× P/E because of stable cash flows + high ROE. PSU banks trade at 8-12× P/E because of cyclical earnings + regulatory drag. Saying “HUL is more expensive than SBI” based on P/E is meaningless — different business models warrant different P/E ranges.

Fix: Compare P/E only within the same sector / industry. Use sector median as benchmark.

Mistake 2: Ignoring cyclicals

Cyclical stocks (steel, cement, banks, auto) invert P/E at cycle peaks and troughs:

Tata Steel at the 2020 trough had P/E of 80+ (earnings near zero) — and that was the buying opportunity. By the 2021 peak, P/E dropped to 4× — and that was the selling opportunity.

Fix: For cyclicals, use 5-year average P/E or Price/Book ratio, not current P/E.

Mistake 3: Treating low P/E as automatically cheap

A stock at P/E 5× often deserves to be at P/E 5×. Low P/E names usually have:

Yes Bank, DHFL, Coffee Day all traded at “cheap” P/E before going to zero.

Fix: Check ROE, debt, governance before treating low P/E as opportunity. Cheap is cheap for a reason.

Mistake 4: Treating high P/E as automatically expensive

Asian Paints traded at 50-60× P/E for 15 years and compounded at 25% CAGR. HDFC Bank traded at 25× P/E consistently and delivered 20% CAGR. High P/E reflects sustainable competitive advantages (moat, ROE, growth visibility).

Fix: Use PEG or ROE-adjusted P/E. High P/E with high ROE is often justified; high P/E with low ROE is the red flag.

Industry-specific P/E rules

The practical P/E checklist

  1. Use trailing P/E for stable businesses, forward P/E for growth businesses.
  2. Compare ONLY within the same sector / industry.
  3. Cross-check with PEG (account for growth) and Price/Book (account for asset intensity).
  4. Don't buy just because P/E is low — investigate why.
  5. Don't skip just because P/E is high — investigate whether ROE + growth justify it.
  6. For cyclicals, use 5-year average P/E, not current.

Run sector-relative P/E checks on stocks you're researching using the P/E Fair Value calculator. Pair it with the DCF Lite calculator for a more rigorous valuation view.

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