When close to half the companies in the United States have price-to-earnings ratios (or "P/E's") above 19x, you may consider Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. (NYSE:ABG) as an attractive investment with its 13x P/E ratio. Nonetheless, we'd need to dig a little deeper to determine if there is a rational basis for the reduced P/E.
Asbury Automotive Group could be doing better as its earnings have been going backwards lately while most other companies have been seeing positive earnings growth. The P/E is probably low because investors think this poor earnings performance isn't going to get any better. If this is the case, then existing shareholders will probably struggle to get excited about the future direction of the share price.
Keen to find out how analysts think Asbury Automotive Group's future stacks up against the industry? In that case, our free report is a great place to start.
How Is Asbury Automotive Group's Growth Trending?
There's an inherent assumption that a company should underperform the market for P/E ratios like Asbury Automotive Group's to be considered reasonable.
If we review the last year of earnings, dishearteningly the company's profits fell to the tune of 58%. The last three years don't look nice either as the company has shrunk EPS by 27% in aggregate. So unfortunately, we have to acknowledge that the company has not done a great job of growing earnings over that time.
Looking ahead now, EPS is anticipated to climb by 35% per annum during the coming three years according to the nine analysts following the company. Meanwhile, the rest of the market is forecast to only expand by 11% per annum, which is noticeably less attractive.
With this information, we find it odd that Asbury Automotive Group is trading at a P/E lower than the market. It looks like most investors are not convinced at all that the company can achieve future growth expectations.
What We Can Learn From Asbury Automotive Group's P/E?
We'd say the price-to-earnings ratio's power isn't primarily as a valuation instrument but rather to gauge current investor sentiment and future expectations.
We've established that Asbury Automotive Group currently trades on a much lower than expected P/E since its forecast growth is higher than the wider market. There could be some major unobserved threats to earnings preventing the P/E ratio from matching the positive outlook. It appears many are indeed anticipating earnings instability, because these conditions should normally provide a boost to the share price.
Before you settle on your opinion, we've discovered 4 warning signs for Asbury Automotive Group (1 makes us a bit uncomfortable!) that you should be aware of.
If P/E ratios interest you, you may wish to see this free collection of other companies with strong earnings growth and low P/E ratios.
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