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Trailing P/E

Trailing P/E (also known as P/E TTM, for “Trailing Twelve Months”) is one of the most fundamental tools in an investor's kit. It’s a valuation ratio that measures a company's current share price relative to its actual, historical earnings. The calculation is simple: you take the current market price of a single share and divide it by the company's Earnings Per Share (EPS) over the previous 12 months. Think of it as a price tag that tells you how many dollars you're paying for every one dollar of profit the company has already made. It’s the investing equivalent of looking in the rearview mirror—it shows you exactly where the company has been, which is a solid, factual starting point. But as any good driver knows, you can't navigate the road ahead by only looking back.

How It Works

The Simple Math Behind Trailing P/E

Calculating the trailing P/E is refreshingly straightforward. You don't need a degree in advanced mathematics, just two pieces of data:

The formula is: Trailing P/E = Current Share Price / Past 12 Months' EPS For example, let's say “Innovate Corp.” is trading at $50 per share. Over the last four quarters, its reported EPS were $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, and $1.25.

  1. Step 1: Add up the last 12 months of earnings: $1.00 + $1.25 + $1.50 + $1.25 = $5.00
  2. Step 2: Divide the share price by the total EPS: $50 / $5.00 = 10

The trailing P/E for Innovate Corp. is 10. This means investors are currently willing to pay $10 for every $1 of the company's past year's profits.

Where to Find It

The good news is you rarely have to calculate this yourself. The trailing P/E is a standard metric available on virtually all major financial news and data websites, such as Yahoo! Finance, Google Finance, Bloomberg, and your online broker's portal. It's usually listed right next to the stock price.

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly

Like any tool, the trailing P/E has its strengths and weaknesses. Understanding them is key to using it effectively.

The Bad: Its Blind Spots

A Value Investor's Perspective

For followers of Value Investing, the trailing P/E is a cherished tool, but one that must be handled with care and context.

A Tool, Not a Rule

The father of value investing, Benjamin Graham, used the Price-to-Earnings Ratio (P/E) as a primary screening metric. A low trailing P/E can be a flashing light indicating a potentially undervalued company worth investigating further. However, it's just the start of the homework, not the end. A cheap P/E might signal a bargain, or it might signal a “value trap”—a company whose business is in a permanent decline. The low P/E is the invitation to pop the hood and inspect the engine, not to buy the car on the spot.

Comparing with Other P/E Flavors

To get a fuller picture, smart investors compare the trailing P/E to other “flavors” of the ratio:

The Bottom Line

The trailing P/E is an indispensable, easy-to-use metric that gives you a quick and objective read on a company's valuation based on its recent performance. It's a fantastic first-glance tool for identifying potential investment candidates. However, it only tells part of the story—the part that has already happened. Never make an investment decision based on the trailing P/E alone. Use it to build your list of interesting companies, then roll up your sleeves and do the real work of understanding the business and its future.