PE Ratio Chart

Historical PE Ratio Data

View and export this data back to 2001. Upgrade now.
Date Value
March 30, 2007 9.791
March 29, 2007 9.738
March 28, 2007 9.422
March 27, 2007 9.633
March 26, 2007 9.738
March 23, 2007 10.53
March 22, 2007 10.53
March 21, 2007 10.79
March 20, 2007 10.79
March 19, 2007 10.37
March 16, 2007 10.95
March 15, 2007 10.26
March 14, 2007 10.26
March 13, 2007 9.738
March 12, 2007 9.949
March 09, 2007 9.896
March 08, 2007 10.21
March 07, 2007 10.16
March 06, 2007 10.16
March 05, 2007 10.48
March 02, 2007 10.63
March 01, 2007 9.843
February 28, 2007 10.00
February 27, 2007 10.26
February 26, 2007 11.05
Date Value
February 23, 2007 10.53
February 22, 2007 11.32
February 21, 2007 11.37
February 20, 2007 11.69
February 16, 2007 11.84
February 15, 2007 11.26
February 14, 2007 10.90
February 13, 2007 11.05
February 12, 2007 10.69
February 09, 2007 9.738
February 08, 2007 9.212
February 07, 2007 9.212
February 06, 2007 8.422
February 05, 2007 8.422
February 02, 2007 8.685
February 01, 2007 8.685
January 31, 2007 8.475
January 30, 2007 8.685
January 29, 2007 8.843
January 26, 2007 9.001
January 25, 2007 9.475
January 24, 2007 9.054
January 23, 2007 8.896
January 22, 2007 9.212
January 19, 2007 9.370

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