Preformed Line Products (PLPC) Could Be 72% Above Fair Value After Cramer Attention

Simply Wall St · 1d ago

Media attention around Preformed Line Products (PLPC) has intensified after Jim Cramer spotlighted the stock on Mad Money, linking its business to electric grid upgrades and AI data center infrastructure spending.

See our latest analysis for Preformed Line Products.

At a share price of $345.65, Preformed Line Products has seen strong momentum this year, with a year to date share price return of 63.10% and a 1 year total shareholder return of 121.34% that outpaces its 97.87% 3 year total shareholder return. This suggests interest has intensified recently, helped by media coverage and attention on grid and AI infrastructure spending, even though the 30 day share price return declined 9.08% after a 15.79% gain over 90 days.

If Cramer’s grid and AI theme has you thinking about related opportunities, this could be a useful moment to review 34 power grid technology and infrastructure stocks.

Bulls see Preformed Line Products as a core grid and AI infrastructure supplier whose recent surge reflects durable demand, while bears worry the story has run ahead of the numbers. Which side does the current valuation appear to support?

Price-to-Earnings of 49.3x: Is it justified?

At $345.65, Preformed Line Products is trading on a P/E of 49.3x, which is higher than its peers and the wider US Electrical industry.

The P/E ratio compares the company’s share price to its earnings per share, so a higher multiple usually reflects stronger growth expectations or a premium story that investors are willing to pay for.

For Preformed Line Products, the current multiple stands above the peer average P/E of 34.7x and the US Electrical industry average of 38.1x. It also sits well above an estimated fair P/E of 30.9x that the market could move towards if sentiment cools or earnings catch up more slowly than hoped.

To see how that fair ratio is estimated and what would need to change for the current pricing to look more reasonable, review the Explore the SWS fair ratio for Preformed Line Products.

Result: Price-to-Earnings of 49.3x (OVERVALUED)

However, Preformed Line Products faces clear risks if enthusiasm for grid and AI spending cools, or if its P/E stays high while earnings and margins fail to keep pace.

Find out about the key risks to this Preformed Line Products narrative.

Another View: What Does the SWS DCF Model Say About Preformed Line Products?

While the P/E of 49.3x paints Preformed Line Products as expensive relative to peers, the SWS DCF model goes further and suggests the stock is trading well above an estimated future cash flow value of $95.18 per share. If both earnings and cash flow signals point to a full price, how comfortable are you paying up for the current story?

For a closer look at how this cash flow view is built and where assumptions matter most, take a few minutes to review the Look into how the SWS DCF model arrives at its fair value.

PLPC Discounted Cash Flow as at Jul 2026
PLPC Discounted Cash Flow as at Jul 2026

Simply Wall St performs a discounted cash flow (DCF) on every stock in the world every day (check out Preformed Line Products for example). We show the entire calculation in full. You can track the result in your watchlist or portfolio and be alerted when this changes, or use our stock screener to discover 47 high quality undervalued stocks. If you save a screener we even alert you when new companies match - so you never miss a potential opportunity.

Next Steps

Does this mix of enthusiasm and caution around Preformed Line Products match your own read of the story, or raise fresh questions about the risk reward trade off? Act quickly by reviewing how the upside and downside stack up in the 1 key reward and 1 important warning sign.

Looking for more investment ideas beyond Preformed Line Products?

If the Preformed Line Products story has sharpened your focus, do not stop here, broaden your watchlist with other stocks that fit clear, focused criteria.

This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.