Eiffage SA's (EPA:FGR) Price Is Right But Growth Is Lacking

Simply Wall St · 09/28 06:32

With a price-to-earnings (or "P/E") ratio of 8.7x Eiffage SA (EPA:FGR) may be sending bullish signals at the moment, given that almost half of all companies in France have P/E ratios greater than 15x and even P/E's higher than 26x are not unusual. However, the P/E might be low for a reason and it requires further investigation to determine if it's justified.

Eiffage certainly has been doing a good job lately as its earnings growth has been positive while most other companies have been seeing their earnings go backwards. It might be that many expect the strong earnings performance to degrade substantially, possibly more than the market, which has repressed the P/E. If not, then existing shareholders have reason to be quite optimistic about the future direction of the share price.

Check out our latest analysis for Eiffage

pe-multiple-vs-industry
ENXTPA:FGR Price to Earnings Ratio vs Industry September 28th 2024
Want the full picture on analyst estimates for the company? Then our free report on Eiffage will help you uncover what's on the horizon.

How Is Eiffage's Growth Trending?

In order to justify its P/E ratio, Eiffage would need to produce sluggish growth that's trailing the market.

Taking a look back first, we see that the company managed to grow earnings per share by a handy 8.3% last year. This was backed up an excellent period prior to see EPS up by 70% in total over the last three years. Therefore, it's fair to say the earnings growth recently has been superb for the company.

Shifting to the future, estimates from the analysts covering the company suggest earnings should grow by 6.1% per annum over the next three years. With the market predicted to deliver 14% growth each year, the company is positioned for a weaker earnings result.

In light of this, it's understandable that Eiffage's P/E sits below the majority of other companies. It seems most investors are expecting to see limited future growth and are only willing to pay a reduced amount for the stock.

The Final Word

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 Eiffage maintains its low P/E on the weakness of its forecast growth being lower than the wider market, as expected. Right now shareholders are accepting the low P/E as they concede future earnings probably won't provide any pleasant surprises. Unless these conditions improve, they will continue to form a barrier for the share price around these levels.

Before you take the next step, you should know about the 2 warning signs for Eiffage that we have uncovered.

If P/E ratios interest you, you may wish to see this free collection of other companies with strong earnings growth and low P/E ratios.