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Screen of the Week

PEG Ratio

By: Kevin Matras
November 03, 2009 | Comments: 2
Recommended this article (1)
BUCY | DV | IMA | OSIS | SCHL
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This week, I'm going to focus on a simple strategy that uses the PEG Ratio for determining a company's under- or overvaluation.

Let's first start with a definition.

A PEG ratio is simply the:

P/E Ratio divided by the Growth Rate

A value of 1 or less is considered good (at par or undervalued), while a value of greater than 1 is, in general, not as good (overvalued).

Once again, the PEG Ratio is simply the P/E Ratio divided by the Growth Rate. Many believe this ratio tells a more complete story than just the P/E.

A company with a P/E Ratio of 25 and a Growth Rate of 20 would have a PEG Ratio of 1.25 (25 / 20 = 1.25).

While a company with a P/E Ratio of 40 and a Growth Rate of 50 would have a PEG Ratio of 0.8.

Traditionally, investors would look at the stock with the lower P/E Ratio and deem it a bargain (undervalued). But looking at it closer, you can see it doesn't have the growth rate to justify its P/E.

The stock with the P/E of 40, though, is actually the better bargain since its PEG Ratio is lower (0.8), implying it's undervalued with more potential value. (Undervalued in relation to its projected growth rate.)

In other words, the lower the PEG, the better the value, because the investor would be paying less for each unit of earnings growth.

So for this week's screen, we're going to use the PEG ratio to find value.

Let’s first start with:

  • Zacks Rank less than or equal to 2
    (Only stocks with a Zacks Rank of Strong Buy or Buy get through.)

  • Average Broker Rating less than or equal to 2.5
    (The brokers too have to be on board as well. Only companies in the better part of a Strong Buy or Buy are allowed.)

  • Projected One Year Growth Rate >= 20
    (Strong performers are what we're looking for.)

  • PEG Ratio less than 1
    (P/E using F(1) divided by its F(1) projected growth rate.) (We're using a classic, text book example to identify undervalued stocks.)

  • Price >= $5

Here are 5 stocks from this week's list (for Tuesday, 11/3/09):

BUCY - Snapshot Report Bucyrus International, Inc.
DV - Analyst Report DeVry Inc.
IMA - Snapshot Report Inverness Medical Innovations, Inc.
OSIS - Snapshot Report OSI Systems, Inc.
SCHL - Snapshot Report Scholastic Corp.

Sign up now for your 2-week free trial to the Research Wizard and get the rest of the stocks on this list and start using this screen in your own trading. Or create your own strategies and test them first before you invest. Know what to buy and when to sell.

Get started with your free trial today.

Disclosure: Officers, directors and/or employees of Zacks Investment Research may own or have sold short securities and/or hold long and/or short positions in options that are mentioned in this material. An affiliated investment advisory firm may own or have sold short securities and/or hold long and/or short positions in options that are mentioned in this material.

Disclosure: Performance information for Zacks’ portfolios and strategies are available at: http://www.zacks.com/performance.


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13
days
ago
kmatras wrote...
Antonio, there are many screens doing spectacular, not only this year but even in the bear market of 2008. Please look at the Big Money Zacks strategy, the Filtered Zacks Rank strategies, the Zacks Rank 5 or 4 to 1 strategy and the R-Squared EPS Growth strategy, just to name a few.
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17
days
ago
Antonio Ferrer wrote...
Dear Kevin: I am worried, I read all your posts on your great screens but I downloaded the trial screener (with 2 years backtesting) and after backtesting most of the SOW strategies none of them really outperform the S&P in this time frame.. I'm considering subscribing but this gives me serious doubts.. is there a report on historic returns on all the different screening strategies you have? (not only the top 10 screening strategies book that I already read).. thanks!!
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