Trailing PE & Forward PE – What Investors Must Know Before Relying on Valuation Ratios

Introduction

The price-to-earnings (PE) ratio has long been one of the most trusted financial ratios for stock valuation. However, modern market behaviour has made it clear that PE alone is no longer a reliable decision-making tool.

In this article, let’s explore the difference between Trailing PE and Forward PE, how each works, their real-world relevance, and when to ignore them altogether.

What is Trailing PE Ratio (TTM)?

Trailing PE stands for Trailing Twelve-Month Price to Earnings Ratio.

Formula:

Trailing PE = Current Market Price / EPS (last 12 months)

This ratio tells you how much investors are willing to pay today for ₹1 of past earnings.

It’s backwards-looking — based on reported earnings, not future potential.

What is the Forward PE Ratio?

Forward PE tells you how much an investor is paying today for ₹1 of expected future earnings, usually based on the next 12 months of projections.

Formula:

Forward PE = Current Market Price / Estimated EPS (next 12 months)

These estimates are often sourced from analysts or company guidance.

Rule of Thumb:

  • If Forward PE < Trailing PE → Future earnings are expected to improve → seen as positive
    • Yes, it is wise to invest after checking other fundamental factors like the PEG ratio.
  • If Forward PE > Trailing PE → Future earnings growth is weak or slowing → seen as negative or Earnings are expected to slow down or Decline.
    • Is It Wise to Invest? Only if:
      • You have the conviction that the earnings decline is temporary, or
      • The company has a turnaround plan or cyclical recovery ahead, or
      • You’ve done deep fundamental analysis beyond PE ratios.

When This Works — and When It Doesn’t

Stable Large-Cap Companies

  • If Forward PE < Trailing PE, it may signal undervaluation.
  • Works well for long-term, steady-growth companies (e.g., FMCG, IT).

High-Growth Stocks

  • Forward PE can be higher than Trailing PE — and that’s okay!
  • Future earnings may surge rapidly, temporarily inflating the forward PE.
  • Don’t penalise growth stocks for this — focus on EPS momentum instead.

Is It Safe to Buy High PE Ratio Stocks?

Old wisdom says, “Avoid stocks with PE>30, ” but the rule is outdated.

Why?

  • PE is a static snapshot
  • Doesn’t reflect growth velocity
  • Many stocks with a PE>50 (e.g., Nestle, Britannia) delivered massive returns

Instead, focus on:

  • Quarterly EPS, revenue, and operating profit growth
  • Ideally, look for 20%–50% YoY or QoQ growth

Avoid buying low-growth stocks just because the PE is low

  • To set target price estimates for the next 12 months
  • To read analyst reports and consensus expectations
  • To compare large-cap stocks for long-term portfolios
🔍 So, When Is the PE Ratio Actually Useful?

However, it’s no longer a standalone buy/sell signal.

Don’t Buy Low PE Stocks Blindly

A PE of 10–15 doesn’t mean a stock is cheap.

Unless the company is growing earnings at 20% or more per quarter, that “low PE” is likely a value trap.

What’s the Right Way to Value Stocks Today?

Start combining:

  • PE Ratio
  • Growth Rate
  • Use the PEG Ratio (Price/Earnings to Growth) → We’ll explain this in our next blog & video!
Conclusion
  • PE ratio has evolved — it’s no longer a silver bullet
  • Trailing and Forward PE give context, not answers
  • Use them with growth metrics, not in isolation
  • Focus on consistent revenue, EPS, and OPM growth
  • PEG ratio offers better clarity for fast-growing companies

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