Is There Value in Silicon Solar PV? [View article]
Rana - If you google PEG, you will get: The PEG ratio, Price/Earnings To Growth, is a valuation metric for determining the relative trade-off between the price of a stock, the earnings generated per share (EPS), and the company's expected growth.(Price/Annual Earnings)/%Annual Growth. If a company is growing at 30% a year, then the stock's P/E could be 30 to have a PEG of 1. PEG ratios between 1 and 2 are therefore considered to be in the range of normal values. A crude analysis suggests that companies with PEG values between 0 to 1 may provide higher returns.
A lower ratio is "better" (cheaper) and a higher ratio is "worse" (expensive). A PEG ratio that approaches two or goes higher than 2 is believed to be too high. This means that the price paid appears to be much too high relative to the projected earnings growth.
They also say that some people use high future growth rates , as much as five years out, which can be set arbitrarily high. I used only the numbers in the tables, and did not attempt to project out in this new industry.
Tonny - CSUN only produced 9MW of 17.2% efficiency cells in Q1 and their last 4 qtrs eps were $-0.09, $-0.11, $-0.06, and $0.01 and they just closed a Convertible Sr note offering to increase production and improve product efficiency. They are behind the curve of these other Silicon companies in product and earnings growth.
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Rana - If you google PEG, you will get:
Jul 15 10:21 am
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All Comments by Jim Brown »Is There Value in Silicon Solar PV? [View article]
The PEG ratio, Price/Earnings To Growth, is a valuation metric for determining the relative trade-off between the price of a stock, the earnings generated per share (EPS), and the company's expected growth.(Price/Annual Earnings)/%Annual Growth. If a company is growing at 30% a year, then the stock's P/E could be 30 to have a PEG of 1. PEG ratios between 1 and 2 are therefore considered to be in the range of normal values. A crude analysis suggests that companies with PEG values between 0 to 1 may provide higher returns.
A lower ratio is "better" (cheaper) and a higher ratio is "worse" (expensive). A PEG ratio that approaches two or goes higher than 2 is believed to be too high. This means that the price paid appears to be much too high relative to the projected earnings growth.
They also say that some people use high future growth rates , as much as five years out, which can be set arbitrarily high. I used only the numbers in the tables, and did not attempt to project out in this new industry.
Tonny - CSUN only produced 9MW of 17.2% efficiency cells in Q1 and their last 4 qtrs eps were $-0.09, $-0.11, $-0.06, and $0.01 and they just closed a Convertible Sr note offering to increase production and improve product efficiency. They are behind the curve of these other Silicon companies in product and earnings growth.