Question:

Where can I Find the PEG ratio of most indian company shares?

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If the PEG ratio isn't available, where can i find the Annual growth rate of the indian companies in order to calculate the peg ratio?

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  1. There are several brokerage sites that provide fundamental information on stocks for free. Consider http://www.geojit.com/profiles/Geojitfin...

    You can enter any stock name to get its financials. Now for the growth rate. In PEG the Growth rate referred to is the Net Profit growth rate, which you can calculate for the 5yr Net Profits shown here. Glenmark's net profit growth rate for Mar 2007 over Mar 2006  is (134.8-67.3)/67.3 = 1.002972 or 100.3 %. Glenmarks's P/E = 41.3 http://content.icicidirect.com/market/ma... and Enter GLEPHA in stock code, click snapshot for PE and other data

    (Dont use Geogit's PE data - thats not current, it shows as on Dec 2007 data, you need always to use current PE data)

    So PEG= 41.3/100.3 =0.411

    But if you had looked a little closely at the 5yr Net Profit data, you would have seen (calculated) that the Net Profit growth has been  100.3, 6.0, 51.1 and 26.5 % respectively for the last 4 years. So which figure do you go by? It's better to use a 5yr average Net Profit growth data for PEG calculation. That is because you are essentially trying to see if the stock is priced cheap today w.r.t to the growth the company more or less consistently achieves, and obviously you don't want to get misled by just 1 yr data. So Glenmark's 5 yr average Net profit growth rate (you can average out) is (100.3+6.0+51.1+26.5)/4 =46%

    So a more correct picture for PEG would be 41.3/46 = 0.897

    Now if you have read Peter Lynch's One up on Wall Street or any other discussions on PEG you will conclude that Glenmark isn't really as cheap as it looked at first glance. You will probably track it as a good company to watch and buy when it falls to more like 0.5 PEG, if all other financials and ratios (like margins, returns, debt to equity) look good too. Remember PEG is just one indicator among several you need to watch for judging/analysing a stocks performance.

    Cheers & Happy learning & Investing!You might like to educate yourself more from http://www.fool.com/School/TheFoolRatio....


  2. I have not seen PEG directly with anyone.

    But many sites do give P/E ratios along with the financials giving the %annual growth.  One can easily find the PEG from this.

    You can look at this website for getting this info :

  3. hey i dont think you will get peg ratios directly but yea you try this site called www.utvi.com....i hope it helps you

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