Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Price-to-Sales Ratio (P/S)====== The [[Price-to-Sales Ratio (P/S)]] (also known as the P/S ratio or sales multiple) is a valuation metric that compares a company's stock price to its revenues. It's a simple, yet powerful tool that shows how much investors are willing to pay for every dollar of the company's sales. Think of it as a price tag on a company's sales stream. The ratio is calculated in one of two ways: by dividing the company's total [[Market Capitalization]] by its total [[Revenue]] over the past twelve months, or on a per-share basis, by dividing the [[Share Price]] by its [[Sales per Share]]. A lower P/S ratio often suggests that a stock might be undervalued, while a higher one could indicate it's overvalued. It's particularly cherished by investors for its ability to value companies that are not yet profitable or are in deeply cyclical industries, where earnings can be volatile or even negative. ===== Why Bother with Sales? ===== When the famous [[Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio]] is available, why would an investor turn to sales? The answer lies in the reliability and stability of the "top line." ==== The Beauty of the Top Line ==== Sales figures, which are found at the very top of a company's [[income statement]], are generally considered more difficult to manipulate than earnings. A company's bottom-line profit, or [[Earnings per Share (EPS)]], can be influenced by a variety of accounting choices and non-cash expenses, such as: * Aggressive or conservative [[depreciation]] schedules. * Different methods for valuing [[inventory]]. * One-time write-downs or restructuring charges. Sales, on the other hand, are a more straightforward measure of business activity. A dollar of revenue is a dollar of revenue. This purity makes the P/S ratio a clean, simple starting point for analysis. ==== A Lifeline for Valuing Growth and Cyclicals ==== The P/S ratio truly shines where the P/E ratio fails. * **Growth Companies:** Imagine a young, disruptive technology company pouring every penny back into research, development, and marketing. It might be growing sales at 50% per year but has no profits to show for it yet. Its P/E ratio would be negative or undefined, making it useless for valuation. The P/S ratio, however, provides a tangible way to measure its market value against its rapidly expanding sales. * **Cyclical Companies:** Consider an automaker or a steel manufacturer. During an economic boom, their profits soar, and their P/E ratios look tiny and attractive. But during a recession, they can post massive losses, sending their P/E ratios into meaningless territory. Their sales, while they do fluctuate, are typically far more stable than their wild-swinging profits. The P/S ratio provides a more consistent valuation yardstick across the entire economic cycle. ===== A Value Investor's Toolkit: Using the P/S Ratio Wisely ===== Like any tool, the P/S ratio is most effective when used correctly. For a value investor, it's about finding bargains the market has overlooked. ==== The Rule of Thumb ==== The legendary investor [[Ken Fisher]] was instrumental in popularizing the P/S ratio. His research led to some general guidelines that are still useful today: * **P/S below 0.75:** Look closely! This could be a potential deep value opportunity, a company the market has unfairly punished. * **P/S around 1.0:** Generally considered a reasonable valuation for a stable, healthy company. * **P/S above 3.0:** Tread with caution. This often implies very high growth expectations are priced in, making the stock vulnerable to any disappointment. //Crucially, these are not rigid rules but rather signposts for further investigation.// ==== Context is King: Comparing Apples to Apples ==== A "good" P/S ratio is highly dependent on the industry. A software-as-a-service (SaaS) company with fat 80% [[profit margins]] will naturally and justifiably trade at a much higher P/S ratio than a supermarket chain operating on razor-thin 2% margins. To use the P/S ratio effectively, you must compare a company to: - Its own historical P/S ratio range. - The current P/S ratios of its direct competitors in the same industry. A company trading below its historical and industry-average P/S ratio is a much more compelling candidate for a value investment than one with a low P/S in an absolute sense. ===== The Caveats: What the P/S Ratio Hides ===== The simplicity of the P/S ratio is both its greatest strength and its most significant weakness. By focusing only on the top line, it ignores two critical components of a business: **profitability** and **debt**. A company could have a wonderfully low P/S ratio because it's generating massive sales, but it might be losing money on every single sale. Without profits, a business cannot survive in the long run. Similarly, the ratio tells you nothing about the company's [[balance sheet]]. A firm might be boosting its sales through a mountain of debt, creating a risky situation that the P/S ratio completely misses. For this reason, a savvy investor //never// uses the P/S ratio in isolation. It should be part of a broader analytical dashboard that includes an examination of profit margins and a review of balance sheet health using metrics like the [[Price-to-Book (P/B) Ratio]] and the [[Debt-to-Equity Ratio]].