Here's Another Stock Picking Tool for Your Kit

Stocks that are trading at low PEG ratios

Author's Avatar
Nov 18, 2024
Summary
  • Stocks that have low price earnings to growth ratios
Article's Main Image

November 18, 2024 (Maple Hill Syndicate) – Here's a stock
picking tool you might not have thought about. It's called the PEG ratio.

The PEG ratio is a ratio of two ratios:

The numerator, or top line, is a stock's price/earnings ratio, expressed simply as a number. This is the stock's price divided by per-share earnings. If Superlative Entertainment shares sell for $40 and the company's profits are $4 a share, the price/earnings ratio is 10.

The denominator (divisor, or bottom number) is the stock's growth rate, expressed simply as a number. If Superlative Entertainment is growing its earnings at 20% a year, the denominator is 20.

So, Superlative Entertainment's PEG ratio would be 10 divided by 20, or 0.5. That's a very good ratio indeed.

The classic way to use the PEG ratio is to look for stocks with a PEG ratio less than 1.0. Only about 10% of U.S. stocks currently can jump that hurdle.

Here are five that I think deserve consideration.

Applied Materials

Applied Materials Inc. (AMAT, Financial), based in Santa Clara, California, is the world's second largest maker of semiconductor manufacturing equipment. The largest is AMSL Holding NV (ASML, Financial), with headquarters in the Netherlands.

Applied Materials sells for about 19 times earnings and its five-year earnings growth rate is about 21%. That produces a PEG ratio of 0.90. The question is whether the company has hit a wall. Last year, growth slowed to 3% for revenue and 6% for profits.

If the current trade tension between the U.S. and China turns into an outright trade war, it would slam Applied Materials, which gets a sizeable chunk of revenue from China. On balance, I think it's a risk worth taking.

Regeneron

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. (REGN, Financial), based in Tarrytown, New York, concentrates on drugs to combat eye disease, heart disease, cancer and inflammation. Its after-tax profit margin is a nice fat 33%. Its PEG ratio is 0.98.

Regeneron does sell some drugs in China, but I believe it would be less impacted by a potential trade war than most technology companies would be. The stock sells for about $757 and the average one-year target among Wall Street analysts is $1,093. Of 29 analysts who follow it, 21 rate it a “buy.”

NVR

NVR Inc. (NVR, Financial) is a homebuilder whose stock I owned for about six years (2012-2018). During that time, it was one of the best gainers I've ever had. Probably I shouldn't have parted with it, since it's up 147% in the past five years.

NVR builds houses in 14 states, but gets a lot of its revenue (about 22%) from the Washington D.C. area. Under both Republican and Democratic administrations, the federal government has grown, helping to keep housing demand in the D.C. area strong.

In the past, excessive debt has been the Achilles heels of many homebuilders. Not NVR, though. It has $2.46 in cash for every dollar of debt, and debt is equal to only 24 percent of the company's net worth.

The PEG ratio NVR is 0.82.

Zoom Video

Many people got to know Zoom Video Communications Inc. (ZM, Financial) during the pandemic, while offices and schools went “remote” and people met “by Zoom.” The company has more competition now than it did then, and the stock price is down 85% from the peak reached in 2020.

Nonetheless, Zoom's revenue for the latest fiscal year -- $4.5 billion -- is substantial, and considerably above the level at the height of the pandemic.

The PEG ratio is only 0.43. That's because many people feel the company's growth is in the past. Analysts are pessimistic. The stock stands at about $81 and the average analyst's guess is that it will subside to about $77. I think the company might surprise to the upside.

HP

Investors are enthralled with artificial intelligence. Making printers and selling the ink to refill them, seems like an old fashioned business by comparison.

Nonetheless, HP Inc. (HPQ, Financial) has achieved 14.5% growth in earnings the past five years. The stock sells for a price/earnings ratio of 12.9. That works out to a PEG ratio of 0.89, which gets me interested.

HP stock also has some dividend appeal. It yields 3% in dividends, and has increased its dividend at a 14% annual clip the past three years.

PEG ratios are not easy to find. Gurufocus.com is one handy source; however, it charges a membership fee and it calculates the ratio a bit differently than I do.

If you don't mind calculating the ratio yourself, you can find relevant figures in many places, such as Yahoo Finance, Forbes.com, Morningstar.com and the web sites of many brokerage houses.

Disclosure: I own Applied Materials for some of my clients.

John Dorfman is chairman of Dorfman Value Investments LLC in Boston, Massachusetts, and a syndicated columnist. His firm or clients may own or trade securities discussed in this column. He can be reached at [email protected].

Disclosures

I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and have no plans to buy any new positions in the stocks mentioned within the next 72 hours. Click for the complete disclosure