What Moncler S.p.A.'s (BIT:MONC) P/E Is Not Telling You

Simply Wall St · 06/25 04:20

Moncler S.p.A.'s (BIT:MONC) price-to-earnings (or "P/E") ratio of 20.6x might make it look like a sell right now compared to the market in Italy, where around half of the companies have P/E ratios below 16x and even P/E's below 10x are quite common. Nonetheless, we'd need to dig a little deeper to determine if there is a rational basis for the elevated P/E.

Moncler's earnings growth of late has been pretty similar to most other companies. One possibility is that the P/E is high because investors think this modest earnings performance will accelerate. If not, then existing shareholders may be a little nervous about the viability of the share price.

View our latest analysis for Moncler

pe-multiple-vs-industry
BIT:MONC Price to Earnings Ratio vs Industry June 25th 2025
Keen to find out how analysts think Moncler's future stacks up against the industry? In that case, our free report is a great place to start.

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

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

Retrospectively, the last year delivered a decent 4.4% gain to the company's bottom line. This was backed up an excellent period prior to see EPS up by 60% in total over the last three years. So we can start by confirming that the company has done a great job of growing earnings over that time.

Turning to the outlook, the next three years should generate growth of 9.7% per year as estimated by the three analysts watching the company. With the market predicted to deliver 20% growth each year, the company is positioned for a weaker earnings result.

With this information, we find it concerning that Moncler is trading at a P/E higher than the market. It seems most investors are hoping for a turnaround in the company's business prospects, but the analyst cohort is not so confident this will happen. There's a good chance these shareholders are setting themselves up for future disappointment if the P/E falls to levels more in line with the growth outlook.

What We Can Learn From Moncler's P/E?

We'd say the price-to-earnings ratio's power isn't primarily as a valuation instrument but rather to gauge current investor sentiment and future expectations.

We've established that Moncler currently trades on a much higher than expected P/E since its forecast growth is lower than the wider market. When we see a weak earnings outlook with slower than market growth, we suspect the share price is at risk of declining, sending the high P/E lower. Unless these conditions improve markedly, it's very challenging to accept these prices as being reasonable.

Before you take the next step, you should know about the 1 warning sign for Moncler that we have uncovered.

You might be able to find a better investment than Moncler. If you want a selection of possible candidates, check out this free list of interesting companies that trade on a low P/E (but have proven they can grow earnings).