The price-to-earnings ratio is the most quoted valuation metric in investing, and it is built from just two numbers — one of which comes directly from a company’s filings.
The answer first
P/E ratio = share price ÷ earnings per share (EPS). The share price you read off any quote; the EPS you take from the income statement in the 10-K. Use the diluted EPS line for consistency. The result tells you how many dollars the market pays for each dollar of annual earnings. Try the P/E ratio calculator to do it instantly.
Step 1: find EPS in the filing
Every 10-K income statement reports two EPS lines near the bottom: basic and diluted. Diluted EPS divides net income (less preferred dividends) by a share count that assumes options and convertibles are exercised — it is the more conservative number, so analysts default to it. Here are diluted EPS figures from recent filings:
| Company (latest FY) | Diluted EPS | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Microsoft (MSFT) | $13.64 | MSFT page |
| Apple (AAPL) | $7.46 | AAPL page |
| Alphabet (GOOGL) | $10.81 | GOOGL page |
To understand how that figure is built, read the EPS calculator and the explainer it links to.
Step 2: divide the price by EPS
Suppose Apple trades at $230 and reported $7.46 diluted EPS:
P/E = 230 ÷ 7.46 ≈ 30.8
A P/E of about 31 means the market is paying roughly $31 for each $1 of Apple’s annual earnings. Do the same for any stock with the P/E calculator.
Step 3: put the number in context
A P/E in isolation tells you little. What matters is the comparison:
- Versus the company’s own history — is it cheaper or dearer than usual?
- Versus industry peers — a 30× P/E is normal for fast-growing tech and expensive for a utility.
- Versus growth — a higher P/E can be justified by faster expected earnings growth.
P/E also breaks down when EPS is zero or negative: a loss-making company has no meaningful P/E. Intel, for example, reported negative EPS in its latest year, so a trailing P/E would not apply.
Trailing vs forward
Filings give you trailing EPS (what actually happened). Forward P/E uses an estimate of next year’s EPS, which is a forecast, not a fact. This site only publishes reported figures from filings, so any P/E you build here is a trailing one.
Keep reading
For the building block, see the EPS calculator; for the bigger picture of profitability, see gross vs operating vs net margin.
Figures here are factual data compiled from SEC filings — not investment advice; figures may contain errors or lag the original filing; verify on SEC EDGAR before relying on them.