PE Ratio Chart

Historical PE Ratio Data

View and export this data back to 2008. Upgrade now.
Date Value
December 30, 2008 0.2515
December 29, 2008 0.2656
December 26, 2008 0.3096
December 24, 2008 0.2963
December 23, 2008 0.3081
December 22, 2008 0.307
December 19, 2008 0.3046
December 18, 2008 0.2963
December 17, 2008 0.2161
December 16, 2008 0.209
December 15, 2008 0.209
December 12, 2008 0.229
December 11, 2008 0.2208
December 10, 2008 0.2208
December 09, 2008 0.2066
December 08, 2008 0.2113
December 05, 2008 0.2267
December 04, 2008 0.2333
December 03, 2008 0.2361
December 02, 2008 0.2609
December 01, 2008 0.2485
November 28, 2008 0.2243
November 26, 2008 0.2243
November 25, 2008 0.1783
November 24, 2008 0.209
Date Value
November 21, 2008 0.1771
November 20, 2008 0.1818
November 19, 2008 0.1771
November 18, 2008 0.2361
November 17, 2008 0.268
November 14, 2008 0.2775
November 13, 2008 0.307
November 12, 2008 0.3046
November 11, 2008 0.2597
November 10, 2008 0.2739
November 07, 2008 0.268
November 06, 2008 0.3081
November 05, 2008 0.3235
November 04, 2008 0.3188
November 03, 2008 0.3093
October 31, 2008 0.3294
October 30, 2008 0.353
October 29, 2008 0.3684
October 28, 2008 0.366
October 27, 2008 0.3542
October 24, 2008 0.4132
October 23, 2008 0.4392
October 22, 2008 0.4604
October 21, 2008 0.5148
October 20, 2008 0.5171

Price to Earnings Ratio (PE Ratio) Definition

The Price to Earnings Ratio (PE Ratio) is calculated by taking the stock price / EPS Diluted (TTM). This metric is considered a valuation metric that confirms whether the earnings of a company justifies the stock price. There isn't necesarily an optimum PE ratio, since different industries will have different ranges of PE Ratios. Because of this, PE Ratio is great to evaluate from a relative standpoint with other similar companies.

Read full definition.

PE Ratio Range, Past 5 Years

--
Minimum
--
Maximum
--
Average
--
Median