Potential Upside For Eni S.p.A. (BIT:ENI) Not Without Risk

Simply Wall St · 06/19 04:28

With a median price-to-earnings (or "P/E") ratio of close to 16x in Italy, you could be forgiven for feeling indifferent about Eni S.p.A.'s (BIT:ENI) P/E ratio of 17x. While this might not raise any eyebrows, if the P/E ratio is not justified investors could be missing out on a potential opportunity or ignoring looming disappointment.

While the market has experienced earnings growth lately, Eni's earnings have gone into reverse gear, which is not great. It might be that many expect the dour earnings performance to strengthen positively, which has kept the P/E from falling. You'd really hope so, otherwise you're paying a relatively elevated price for a company with this sort of growth profile.

See our latest analysis for Eni

pe-multiple-vs-industry
BIT:ENI Price to Earnings Ratio vs Industry June 19th 2025
If you'd like to see what analysts are forecasting going forward, you should check out our free report on Eni.

What Are Growth Metrics Telling Us About The P/E?

There's an inherent assumption that a company should be matching the market for P/E ratios like Eni's to be considered reasonable.

If we review the last year of earnings, dishearteningly the company's profits fell to the tune of 27%. As a result, earnings from three years ago have also fallen 65% overall. Accordingly, shareholders would have felt downbeat about the medium-term rates of earnings growth.

Looking ahead now, EPS is anticipated to climb by 32% per year during the coming three years according to the analysts following the company. Meanwhile, the rest of the market is forecast to only expand by 19% per year, which is noticeably less attractive.

In light of this, it's curious that Eni's P/E sits in line with the majority of other companies. Apparently some shareholders are skeptical of the forecasts and have been accepting lower selling prices.

The Key Takeaway

Generally, our preference is to limit the use of the price-to-earnings ratio to establishing what the market thinks about the overall health of a company.

We've established that Eni currently trades on a 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 pressure on the P/E ratio. At least the risk of a price drop looks to be subdued, but investors seem to think future earnings could see some volatility.

Before you settle on your opinion, we've discovered 1 warning sign for Eni that you should be aware of.

Of course, you might also be able to find a better stock than Eni. So you may wish to see this free collection of other companies that have reasonable P/E ratios and have grown earnings strongly.