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scottiebarnes | 7 months ago

NVDA's current forward P/E ratio (price to earnings) is about 37.

That means if we hold constant the profit earnings, if you bought the whole company at its current valuation ($4tr), it would take you 37 years to break even.

Is this reasonable? Depends on sector and growth potential. To me, this is a "fair" valuation and not overly inflated based solely on existing earnings.

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yibg|7 months ago

37x only makes sense if the growing continues, otherwise better to put the money is a high yield savings account. The big question mark of course is how long that growth can continue for. At the current rate their revenue and earnings are both growing I don't see how that's sustainable long term. But maybe sustainable enough to a point where the current investment can get to a break even in say 15 years.

arcanemachiner|7 months ago

Compared to Palantir's P/E ratio of ~750, that seems very reasonable.

nativeit|7 months ago

I can understand that, at least in theory. I feel like this is one of the only contexts where markets accommodate long-term thinking, which frustrates my own sensibilities. Thanks for the add’l perspective.

rdsubhas|7 months ago

Or 23 years if the currency depreciates 2% each year.

Or 16 years at 5% inflation.

ElevenLathe|7 months ago

Seems pretty unlikely to me that they can sustain their current earnings until 2062, but I'm no Wall St analyst.

scottiebarnes|7 months ago

Yes, that is a limit of the model (PE ratio) that we're using. It requires the holding of all variables to be constant, which is not practical.

We use it as a snapshot in time to check our sanity and to allow us to compare apples to oranges.

That said, you could have made the same statement about AAPL or MSFT 20-30 years ago, and you would have been dead wrong.

yibg|7 months ago

Doesn't need to be sustainable until 2062 though. It'll take until 2062 to break even if they keep with projected numbers for next year. They can be flat forever after that and it'll still be 37 years to break even. If they maintain the same growth for even 5 years, the break even time shrinks down dramatically.