Price-to-Underlying-Earnings (PUE)
The Price-to-Underlying-Earnings (PUE) ratio is a valuation metric that refines the classic Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio. Think of it as a P/E ratio with a special pair of glasses that filters out the temporary noise of economic booms and busts. Its main goal is to measure a company's current price against its “normalized” or “mid-cycle” earnings power, rather than the earnings it happened to generate in the most recent (and potentially unusual) year. For a value investing practitioner, this is an invaluable tool. It helps answer a crucial question: “Am I buying this business at a good price relative to what it can sustainably earn over the long term?” By smoothing out the peaks and troughs of the business cycle, the PUE ratio provides a more stable and often more insightful picture of a company's valuation, especially for businesses in cyclical industries like automotive, airlines, or construction.
Why PUE Matters
The standard P/E ratio, while useful, can be a terrible liar. It's notoriously fickle, especially when dealing with companies whose fortunes swing with the broader economy.
The Trouble with Traditional P/E
Imagine a steel company at the peak of an economic boom. Construction is soaring, demand is high, and profits are through the roof. Its reported earnings are massive, which can make its P/E ratio look incredibly low (e.g., a P/E of 5). An unsuspecting investor might see this and think they've found the bargain of the century. This is a classic Value Trap. Conversely, during a deep recession, that same steel company might be barely breaking even or even losing money. Its P/E ratio would be astronomically high or mathematically meaningless (you can't divide by zero or negative earnings). Many investors would run for the hills, potentially missing the best time to buy a great company at a fire-sale price.
The PUE Solution
The PUE ratio cuts through this short-term noise. By focusing on an estimate of a company's average earnings power over a full cycle, it helps you:
- Avoid peak-cycle traps: It will show that the steel company's “underlying” earnings are much lower than its current blockbuster results, revealing the stock to be fairly priced or even expensive.
- Spot bottom-cycle opportunities: It will highlight that even with current losses, the company's long-term normalized earnings are healthy, making its current low Share Price a genuine bargain.
Calculating PUE
The formula is straightforward, but the magic is in the main ingredient. PUE = Share Price / Underlying Earnings Per Share (EPS) or PUE = Market Capitalization / Total Underlying Earnings
What Are Underlying Earnings?
Here's the catch: “Underlying Earnings” is not a number you'll find in a company's official financial statements. It's not a GAAP or IFRS metric. It is an estimate that you, the thoughtful investor, must calculate. This requires a bit of detective work, but it's where the real analytical edge is found. Here are a few common methods for estimating underlying earnings:
- Average over the cycle: The most common method is to take the average of a company's inflation-adjusted earnings over a full economic cycle, typically the last 7 to 10 years. This approach is similar in spirit to the one used in the Shiller P/E Ratio.
- Normalized profit margins: Look at the company's average Profit Margin over the last decade. Then, multiply that average margin by the company's current revenues. This gives you an estimate of what the company would earn today under normal profitability conditions.
- Owner earnings: Use Warren Buffett's concept of Owner Earnings, which adjusts reported earnings for capital expenditures to get a better sense of true cash-generating power. Averaging this figure over a cycle can also provide a solid basis for PUE.
PUE in Practice: A Value Investor's Tool
The PUE ratio forces you to think like a long-term business owner, not a short-term market speculator.
The Cyclical Sweet Spot
Let's say you're analyzing an automaker in a recession.
- Standard P/E: The company just reported a tiny profit, giving it a P/E of 80. It looks terrifyingly expensive.
- PUE Analysis: You look back and find its average inflation-adjusted EPS over the last 10 years was $5.00. The current share price is $40.
- Calculation: PUE = $40 / $5.00 = 8.
A PUE of 8 looks far more attractive than a P/E of 80. You've uncovered a potential opportunity that the market, fixated on the latest terrible quarterly report, is missing.
The Pitfalls
While powerful, the PUE is not foolproof. Its greatest strength—that it relies on judgment—is also its biggest weakness.
- The past is not the future: The core assumption is that the company's past earning power is representative of its future. If the company is in a structurally declining industry (e.g., a newspaper publisher in the digital age), its past averages are meaningless. Using PUE here could lead you straight into a value trap.
- Estimation is hard: Accurately defining the length of a “cycle” and calculating a true “normalized” earnings figure is more art than science. Different assumptions can lead to very different PUE ratios.
The Bottom Line
The PUE ratio is a thinking investor's metric. It asks you to look beyond the headlines and assess the fundamental, long-term earning power of a business. For anyone investing in cyclical industries, it is an essential tool for avoiding euphoria at the peak and despair at the bottom. By doing the extra homework to estimate underlying earnings, you can gain a significant analytical edge and a clearer view of true value.