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Price vs value

The single most useful mental model in long-term investing — explained without jargon, with the sector-by-sector cheatsheet that most beginners never get.

Step 1

Two numbers, not one

Open any stock app and you see one big number — the price. That's only half the picture.

Price is what the market quotes right now. It changes every second the market is open and reflects mood as much as it reflects math.

Value is what the business is actually worth — a function of profits, growth, debt, the strength of the brand. It changes slowly, over months and quarters.

Price
$182
moves every second
Value
$175
moves with the business

Step 2

They eventually agree

Over a single day, price swings around like crazy. Over a single year, it still does. Over 10 years, price tends to follow value pretty closely — because the underlying business either delivered or it didn't, and the market eventually notices.

The long-term investor's job is to estimate value reasonably well and then have the patience to let price catch up.

ValuePrice10 years →

Step 3

Voting vs weighing machine

A classic line from Ben Graham: in the short term, the market is a voting machine — whoever shouts loudest moves the price. In the long term, it's a weighing machine — what actually matters is how much profit the business produces.

Day-traders try to predict the voting machine. Long-term investors try to weigh the business.

🗳️
Short-term:
voting machine
vs
⚖️
Long-term:
weighing machine

Step 4

The most common ruler: P/E

The price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) is the simplest valuation number. It asks: how many dollars are you paying for one dollar of yearly profit?

A P/E of 8 means you're paying $8 per $1 of profit — looks cheap. A P/E of 60 means you're paying $60 per $1 — the market expects big growth ahead. Neither number is good or bad on its own; it depends on the business and the sector.

P/E ratio

8
Cheap
18
Fair
35
Pricey
60
Lofty

Step 5

The trap that catches beginners

Sometimes a stock looks cheap because it should be. The price fell, the P/E shrank — but the underlying business is falling faster. Earnings drop next quarter, the P/E re-expands, and the stock falls more.

This is a value trap. The first defense: before celebrating a low P/E, check whether the business is getting stronger or weaker.

Price (falling)Earnings (falling faster)⚠ trap

Step 6

One ruler doesn't fit every business

P/E is useful for steady businesses with real profits. It's less useful for fast-growing software companies (look at P/S and growth), banks (P/B and ROE), real estate (FFO and AFFO), and so on.

The mistake is comparing a tech company's P/E to a utility's P/E and concluding the tech one is "expensive". They're using different rulers. The cheatsheet below maps eight major sectors to the metrics that actually matter for each.

One size doesn't fit all

Tech / SaaSP/S, growth, gross margin
BanksP/B, ROE, NIM
REITsFFO yield, AFFO
UtilitiesDividend yield, P/E

Cheatsheet

How to evaluate companies in 8 major sectors

Different businesses need different rulers. The metrics most beginners anchor on (P/E, P/B) work brilliantly for some sectors and mislead badly in others. Below is a practical map of which numbers actually matter where, and why.

Technology / SaaS

Examples: Microsoft, NVIDIA, Salesforce, Adobe

  • Revenue growth (YoY)

    Software businesses are valued on future, not current, profits. A 30% grower at 50x earnings can be cheaper than a 5% grower at 20x.

  • Price-to-Sales (P/S)

    Many SaaS names reinvest everything into growth, so they barely have earnings. P/S sidesteps that. 5-10x P/S is normal for high-quality software; over 20x is rich.

  • Gross margin

    Tells you whether the underlying product economics are good. Top SaaS: 75-85%. Hardware/infra: 40-60%. A SaaS company with 40% gross margin has a problem.

  • Rule of 40

    Revenue growth % + profit margin %. A healthy software business clears 40. Under 25 means growth has stalled and margins haven't compensated.

Watch out

P/E alone misleads here. Many tech names trade at 30-100x earnings precisely because growth is high and reinvested. Use it last, not first.

Banks & financials

Examples: JPMorgan, Bank of America, Wells Fargo

  • Price-to-Book (P/B)

    Banks ARE their balance sheet — loans, deposits, capital. P/B compares price to book value. Big US banks typically trade 1.0-1.5x; under 1.0 hints at problems or pessimism; over 2.0 is rare and premium.

  • Return on Equity (ROE)

    How much profit they squeeze from each dollar of capital. 12-15% is solid for a large bank; under 8% is weak; over 20% should be investigated for risk.

  • Net Interest Margin (NIM)

    The spread between what they earn on loans and what they pay on deposits. Falling NIM in a rising-rate environment is a yellow flag.

  • Loan-loss provisions

    Banks set aside money for loans they expect to go bad. Rising provisions = they see trouble coming.

Watch out

Bank earnings can swing wildly with credit cycles. A 'cheap' P/E often means earnings are about to drop as credit losses rise.

Healthcare & pharma

Examples: Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer, UnitedHealth, Eli Lilly

  • Pipeline value (qualitative)

    For pharma, today's earnings can come from drugs that lose patent protection soon (the 'patent cliff'). What's coming after matters more than what's selling now.

  • P/E with growth context

    Steady-eddie names like J&J or P&G trade 18-25x with single-digit growth — fair if the growth is reliable. Fast-growing biotech can justify higher.

  • Free cash flow

    Pharma reports are noisy with one-off charges (litigation, mergers, R&D write-downs). FCF cuts through and tells you what cash the business actually generates.

  • R&D as % of revenue

    Healthy pharma spends 15-25% of revenue on R&D. Cutting it boosts short-term earnings but starves the future pipeline.

Watch out

Single-drug dependence is a real risk. Always check what percent of revenue comes from the top one or two products.

Industrials

Examples: Caterpillar, Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, Deere

  • P/E (with cycle awareness)

    Industrials are cyclical — earnings boom in expansions, drop in recessions. A P/E of 10 at a cyclical peak can be more expensive than 25 at a trough.

  • EV/EBITDA

    Strips out debt and depreciation differences across companies in the same sector. 8-12x is normal; under 6x usually means the market expects a downturn.

  • Free cash flow conversion

    Capital-heavy businesses must turn earnings into actual cash. Low conversion means earnings are accounting fiction or capex is eating everything.

  • Backlog / order book

    Forward visibility. A growing backlog signals strong demand 6-18 months out; a shrinking one is an early warning.

Watch out

Don't anchor on the most recent peak earnings. Look at average earnings across a full cycle (7-10 years) to avoid paying top-of-cycle prices.

Consumer staples

Examples: P&G, Coca-Cola, Walmart, Costco

  • P/E

    Staples are predictable, so P/E is actually quite useful. 18-25x is normal for the leaders; under 15x is rare and usually means real problems.

  • Dividend yield + payout ratio

    Staples are often dividend stocks. A 3-4% yield is common; under 1% is unusual for the sector; payout ratio over 80% means little buffer.

  • Gross & operating margin trends

    Staples compete on shelf space and brand. Margin pressure (commodity inflation, store-brand competition) is the most reliable warning sign.

  • Volume vs price growth

    Revenue can grow because volumes rise OR because they raised prices. Price-led growth without volume is finite — eventually customers push back.

Watch out

The slowest growth in the universe. Don't pay a 'growth multiple' for a 2% grower, no matter how predictable.

Consumer discretionary

Examples: Amazon, Home Depot, Nike, McDonald's

  • Same-store sales growth

    Retailers can grow revenue by opening new stores; the honest measure is whether existing stores are growing. Negative comps for several quarters is a real problem.

  • Operating margin

    Margins reveal pricing power. A premium brand should hold 15-25%; a commodity retailer is happy with 4-8%.

  • P/E vs recent average

    Discretionary stocks are cyclical — consumers cut back when wallets are tight. Look at P/E relative to the 5-year average and the macro regime.

  • Inventory days

    Bloated inventory = demand is weaker than expected and discounts are coming. A clean operator manages inventory tightly.

Watch out

Brands fade. The hot name of 10 years ago is often the also-ran of today. Ask whether the brand still has pricing power, not just whether it had it once.

Energy & commodities

Examples: ExxonMobil, Chevron, Occidental, Schlumberger

  • Reserves + production

    For oil & gas, the value lies underground. A company depleting reserves faster than it replaces them is shrinking, no matter how profitable today.

  • Cost per barrel (breakeven)

    Tells you which producers stay profitable in a downturn. A $40 breakeven is much sturdier than a $60 one when oil drops to $50.

  • EV/EBITDA across the cycle

    Like industrials, never anchor on peak earnings. Use mid-cycle averages.

  • Free cash flow / capex discipline

    Old habit: drill until prices crash. New habit (since 2020): return cash to shareholders. Watch for which mode the company is in.

Watch out

Commodity prices set the ceiling. Even the best operator gets crushed if oil/copper/gas prices halve. This sector requires a macro view.

Utilities

Examples: NextEra, Duke Energy, Southern Company

  • Dividend yield

    Utilities are owned mostly for income. 3-5% is normal; under 2% is unusual; over 6% can mean the dividend is at risk.

  • Regulated rate base growth

    Profits are essentially set by regulators. The growth lever is the capital base they're allowed to earn on. Mid-single-digits is good.

  • P/E (steady, low growth)

    Usually trades 15-22x. Above 25x is rich for the growth on offer; under 12x means the market sees rate risk or regulatory pressure.

  • Net debt / EBITDA

    Utilities carry a lot of debt. Over 6x is concerning; rising rates make existing debt more painful to refinance.

Watch out

Utilities are bond-like: their prices move down when interest rates move up. Don't be surprised when 'safe' utility stocks fall 20% in a rising-rate year.

The single biggest mistake beginners make is using the same ruler for every sector. A tech stock at 40x earnings is not "more expensive" than a bank at 10x — they're different businesses with different economics. Pick the right metrics first, then the comparison starts making sense.

Educational information only. Not investment advice. We don't know your financial situation.