ValuationTelecom

P/E Ratio (Price-to-Earnings Ratio) in Telecom

How to interpret and apply p/e ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) when analyzing telecom stocks in US (NYSE/Nasdaq) markets, with reference to international markets like India.

Quick Recap: What is P/E Ratio (Price-to-Earnings Ratio)?

The P/E ratio measures how much investors pay for each dollar (or rupee) of a company's earnings. It's calculated by dividing the stock price by earnings per share (EPS).

P/E Ratio = Stock Price Γ· Earnings Per Share (EPS)

How P/E Ratio (Price-to-Earnings Ratio) Works Differently in Telecom

High capex (spectrum + towers), oligopoly market, ARPU-driven, heavy debt from spectrum auctions.

Typical Ranges for Telecom

Typical P/E Ratio30-60x (often valued on EV/EBITDA instead)

General benchmark: Varies by sector. US benchmarks: S&P 500 trailing P/E ~22, Tech (NASDAQ-100) 28-40, Financials 12-18, Consumer Staples 22-30, Energy 10-15. Or international markets like India: IT 20-35, Banking 10-20, FMCG 30-50.

Sector data last reviewed: 2026-04

Example Telecom Companies to Analyze

Indian Market (NSE / BSE)

Filter telecom stocks by p/e ratio and other metrics:

Key Takeaways

  • P/E Ratio (Price-to-Earnings Ratio) in telecom should be compared against sector peers in the same market (US S&P 500 / Russell or Indian NSE / BSE), not the broad market average.
  • Sector characteristics: High capex (spectrum + towers), oligopoly market, ARPU-driven, heavy debt from spectrum auctions.
  • Cross-list peers across markets, large-cap US names often set the global benchmark, while Indian peers can trade at different multiples due to growth and liquidity differences.
  • Always cross-check with other metrics. No single ratio tells the full story.

Learn More in the Academy

Dive deeper into p/e ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) and related concepts:

← Full P/E Ratio (Price-to-Earnings Ratio) Guide

P/E Ratio (Price-to-Earnings Ratio) in Other Sectors