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Value destruction at cement producer PPC: Figures that ll make your eyes water - Ted Black

PPC is a JSE-listed company that supplies cement and related products across Africa. It’s the type of business you’d expect to do really well as countries develop. The company performed poorly when Covid-19 containment measures brought business activity to a standstill, but the pandemic seems to have exposed hidden vulnerabilities. This is underscored by in-depth number crunching by independent analyst Ted Black. He sets out his data to highlight that PPC has been a poor performer when assessing its returns on assets managed, helping to explain why the company’s share price has plunged by not far off 700% over the past year. Black notes that value destruction has been massive, with the company worth about R5bn compared to R30bn in 2007. The PPC stock has shown signs of recovering in recent months, which Black sees as a sign that it might be draining its swamp.  – Jackie Cameron

P/E ratio, my foot! Celebrity money managers figure out a way around it

Is Lockheed (LMT) A Worthy Stock for Value Investors Now?

Is Lockheed (LMT) A Worthy Stock for Value Investors Now?
yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Is Ribbon (RBBN) a Profitable Stock for Value Investors Now?

Is Ribbon (RBBN) a Profitable Stock for Value Investors Now?
yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

PE ratio: What to do when high PEs give you jitters? Here s the answer

Explore Now Price-to-earnings or P/E ratio, the most used and abused valuation metric in the stock market, is a simple one. And perhaps that is why it has such widespread use. Investors use it as a shortcut for valuing stocks. So, a company with a P/E of 10 becomes cheap while the one with a P/E of 50 becomes expensive. P/E is the ratio of profit after tax to the total number of shares outstanding. Another way of calculating it is to divide the share price by the EPS. Finding the share price is simple. Complexity starts with calculating earnings. It could be TTM (trailing 12-month earnings) of current/previous year or projected earnings for the forthcoming year.

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