When close to half the companies in Hong Kong have price-to-earnings ratios (or "P/E's") above 12x, you may consider Metallurgical Corporation of China Ltd. (HKG:1618) as an attractive investment with its 8.4x P/E ratio. However, the P/E might be low for a reason and it requires further investigation to determine if it's justified.
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While the market has experienced earnings growth lately, Metallurgical Corporation of China's earnings have gone into reverse gear, which is not great. It seems that many are expecting the dour earnings performance to persist, which has repressed the P/E. If this is the case, then existing shareholders will probably struggle to get excited about the future direction of the share price.
See our latest analysis for Metallurgical Corporation of China
The only time you'd be truly comfortable seeing a P/E as low as Metallurgical Corporation of China's is when the company's growth is on track to lag the market.
If we review the last year of earnings, dishearteningly the company's profits fell to the tune of 37%. This means it has also seen a slide in earnings over the longer-term as EPS is down 51% in total over the last three years. Accordingly, shareholders would have felt downbeat about the medium-term rates of earnings growth.
Shifting to the future, estimates from the seven analysts covering the company suggest earnings should grow by 26% each year over the next three years. Meanwhile, the rest of the market is forecast to only expand by 15% each year, which is noticeably less attractive.
In light of this, it's peculiar that Metallurgical Corporation of China's P/E sits below the majority of other companies. Apparently some shareholders are doubtful of the forecasts and have been accepting significantly lower selling prices.
While the price-to-earnings ratio shouldn't be the defining factor in whether you buy a stock or not, it's quite a capable barometer of earnings expectations.
We've established that Metallurgical Corporation of China currently trades on a much lower than expected P/E since its forecast growth is higher than the wider market. When we see a strong earnings outlook with faster-than-market growth, we assume potential risks are what might be placing significant pressure on the P/E ratio. At least price risks look to be very low, but investors seem to think future earnings could see a lot of volatility.
Before you take the next step, you should know about the 2 warning signs for Metallurgical Corporation of China (1 is significant!) that we have uncovered.
Of course, you might also be able to find a better stock than Metallurgical Corporation of China. So you may wish to see this free collection of other companies that have reasonable P/E ratios and have grown earnings strongly.
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