We know how to read the financial statements; now we must determine if the numbers on them are "cheap" or "expensive."
Chapter 7: Valuation β The Price is What You Pay, Value is What You Get
1. The Supermarket Analogy
Imagine you walk into a supermarket to buy toothpaste.
- Toothpaste A costs βΉ100.
- Toothpaste B costs βΉ500.
You immediately know B is "expensive." Why? Because you have an internal anchor of what toothpaste is worth.
In the stock market, the "Price" (displayed on Equiscale's terminal) tells you nothing in isolation. A stock at βΉ2,000 can be "cheaper" than a stock at βΉ50.
To judge value, we need Valuation Ratios.
2. The P/E Ratio (Price-to-Earnings)
This is the most common metric in the world.
$$P/E = \frac{\text{Market Price per Share}}{\text{Earnings Per Share (EPS)}}$$
- The Meaning: It tells you how much you are paying for βΉ1 of earnings.
- The Indian Context:
- Nifty 50 Average P/E: Historically ~20x.
- Undervalued: If the market P/E drops below 15x (e.g., during Covid crash), itβs a sale.
- Overvalued: If the market P/E crosses 25x, itβs a bubble.
- The Trap: A low P/E isn't always good. Sometimes a company is cheap because it is dying (Value Trap). Always ask: Why is this cheap?
3. The P/B Ratio (Price-to-Book)
Used primarily for Banks and NBFCs (like HDFC Bank, Bajaj Finance).
$$P/B = \frac{\text{Market Price}}{\text{Book Value (Net Worth)}}$$
- The Logic: For a factory, book value (machinery) depreciates. For a bank, book value (money) is the raw material.
- The Benchmark: In India, a high-quality private bank usually trades at 3x - 4x Book Value. A PSU bank might trade at 0.5x - 1x.
4. PEG Ratio (Price/Earnings-to-Growth)
Developed to fix the flaws of the P/E ratio.
If a company is growing at 50% per year, it deserves a high P/E.
$$PEG = \frac{P/E \text{ Ratio}}{\text{Annual Growth Rate}}$$
- Peter Lynchβs Rule:
- PEG < 1: Undervalued (Buy).
- PEG = 1: Fairly Valued.
- PEG > 2: Expensive.
In high-growth India, finding stocks with PEG < 1 is the "Holy Grail."
5. Intrinsic Value & Margin of Safety
Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing, taught us that every stock has an Intrinsic Value (True Worth).
If the Intrinsic Value is βΉ100, you should not buy it at βΉ100. You should buy it at βΉ70.
The βΉ30 difference is your Margin of Safety.
It is your cushion against being wrong. If you buy at a discount, even if the company performs strictly "okay," you won't lose money.
Summary
Valuation is the difference between a great company and a great investment.
Infosys is a great company. But buying Infosys at a P/E of 100x would be a terrible investment.
Your job as an analyst is not just to find good businesses, but to wait patiently until the market offers them at a "mismatch" price.
Class assignment:
Log in to Equiscale's screener.
- Filter for companies with a P/E Ratio below 15.
- Add a second filter: Profit Growth > 20%.
- This list (Low P/E + High Growth) is your hunting ground for potential "PEG < 1" multi-baggers.