Why Most Investors Misinterpret the P/E Ratio
The P/E ratio is one of the most misunderstood metrics in investing — here's how to avoid common traps when using it to evaluate stocks.

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Growth-adjusted valuations that reveal what Lynch would call cheap.
View Lynch's valuationsNo. In stable, cash-generative businesses like BRK.B, low multiples can signal undervaluation. The key is understanding why the multiple is low.
A low P/E ratio doesn't always mean a stock is cheap. In fact, relying on this metric alone can lead to costly investing mistakes.
Investors see INTC trading at ~10x earnings and assume it's undervalued. Meanwhile, NVDA trades near 60x earnings and continues to deliver outsized returns. The disconnect? Earnings growth tells the real story. While NVDA has grown revenue at roughly 25% annually, INTC has been flat to negative. Low multiples often reflect poor future prospects, not bargain pricing.
Between 2016-2021, AMD traded at an average P/E of 45x while INTC hovered around 12x. Yet AMD returned ~1,200% versus INTC's ~50%. Why? Investors pay for future earnings, not past results. A high P/E with strong growth can be cheaper than a low P/E with stagnation.
| Ticker | P/E | Fwd P/E | 5Y Rev CAGR | Net Margins |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAPL | ~28 | ~25 | ~8% | ~25% |
| MSFT | ~34 | ~30 | ~14% | ~30% |
| INTC | ~10 | ~15 | ~-2% | ~15% |
| AMD | ~45 | ~28 | ~25% | ~18% |
| NVDA | ~60 | ~35 | ~25% | ~23% |
The ratio breaks down in three scenarios:
From 2016-2026, NVDA compounded revenue at ~25% annually while INTC stagnated. Despite NVDA trading at 5x INTC's multiple, it delivered ~500% higher returns. Critics argue this framework breaks down during recessions, but even in 2022's downturn, NVDA recovered faster due to its superior growth profile.
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