Pro Login
Home » Deep Briefs »  » PEG Ratio: The Growth Investor's Secret Weapon Explained

PEG Ratio: The Growth Investor's Secret Weapon Explained

Published: Jan 7, 2026 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:

The PEG ratio (Price/Earnings-to-Growth) adjusts a stock's P/E ratio for projected earnings growth.

This helps investors determine if they're overpaying for growth.

Popularized by legendary investor Peter Lynch, this metric is one of the easiest and msot popular ways investors can evaluate growth stocks.

Picture this: You’re looking at two stocks to potentially buy.

One is $20 - the other is $10.

The one that is $20 is more expensive, but the price doesn’t tell you if it’s better.

You could use traditional valuation metrics like the P/E ratio to help you value both stocks.

But that only takes into account current or past earnings, not future projections of the company's growth.

And as an investor, you want to know: Is the $20 growing faster enough to justify its high price point?

Enter: PEG ratio, which is a valuation metric that helps investors decide if the stock’s price makes sense based on how fast it’s growing.

A stock trading at 50 times earnings might look insanely expensive. But what if that company is growing earnings at 50% per year? Suddenly, that premium price might actually be reasonable.

Let’s break down what PEG ratio is, how to calculate it, when to use it, and more.

But first - do you want to learn about potential investing opportunities that the rest of Wall Street may be missing?

Check out Market Briefs Pro - our weekly investment report that breaks down specific investment opportunities, and shows you all of the research and data you need to make a smart decision.

Learn more and subscribe here.

What Is the PEG Ratio?

PEG stands for Price/Earnings-to-Growth. It's a valuation metric that adjusts a company's P/E ratio for its projected earnings growth rate.

The formula is simple:

PEG Ratio = P/E Ratio ÷ Earnings Growth Rate

This metric was popularized by Peter Lynch, the legendary investor who ran Fidelity's Magellan Fund

Lynch recognized that a high P/E ratio isn't necessarily bad if it's accompanied by high growth. 

We’ll show you how to calculate it later on.

Why Growth Investors Love the PEG Ratio

Traditional P/E ratios can be misleading when evaluating growth companies.

If a company is growing earnings at 50% per year, paying 50 times current earnings might be reasonable. 

But in two years, those earnings will be 2.25 times higher, making your effective P/E ratio much lower.

This is why growth investors focus on forward-looking metrics. They're not buying the company as it is today. They're buying what it will become in three, five, or ten years.

The PEG ratio attempts to normalize valuation across different growth rates. It provides a level playing field for comparing growth stocks.

How to Calculate the PEG Ratio (Step-by-Step)

Let’s walk through a real example so you can see exactly how the PEG ratio works in action:

Step 1: Find the P/E Ratio

This is straightforward. Most financial websites display P/E ratios for public companies. 

You can also calculate it yourself by dividing the stock price by earnings per share (EPS).

Step 2: Find the Expected Annual EPS Growth Rate

There isn’t a universal method for determining a company's future growth rate.

Investors use different strategies, but here are some of the most common:

  • Compound annual growth projections - looking at historical EPS growth and projecting forward growth.
  • Revenue and margins method - projecting future revenue growth and estimating profit margins.
  • Bottom-up EPS models - building detailed financial models that project every line item.

But as a starting point, it's better to rely on analyst consensus.

You can find analyst estimates on most stock tracking websites. 

Look for sections labeled "Research Analysis" on Yahoo Finance, "Valuation" on Morningstar, or "Analyst Estimates" on MarketWatch.

You'll typically see several numbers: current year estimate, next year estimate, and sometimes a five-year average growth rate.

For PEG ratios, use the forward-looking growth rate - either next year's projected growth or the five-year average, depending on your investment timeframe.

Step 3: Calculate the PEG Ratio

Let's use DataDog as an example (Q2 2025):

  • P/E Ratio: 455
  • Estimated EPS Growth: 18.5%

PEG = 455 ÷ 18.5 = 24.6

What does this tell you? This means that investors are willing to pay a high price relative to the company’s expected earnings growth.

In short - the stock could be overvalued. But keep in mind, this is just one way to value a stock, not the only way.

What Is a Good PEG Ratio?

Here's the rule of thumb:

  • PEG less than 1.0 = potentially undervalued for its projected growth.
  • PEG equal to 1.0 = potentially fairly valued for its projected growth.
  • PEG greater than 1.0 = potentially overvalued for its projected growth.

So what does DataDog's PEG of 24.6 tell us?

By traditional standards, it’s very high, suggesting significant overvaluation relative to projected growth.

However, there are scenarios where investors might still be bullish:

  • Analyst estimates may be too conservative, and actual growth could be much higher than 18.5%.
  • DataDog might have competitive advantages not fully reflected in the numbers.
  • The market may be willing to pay a premium for quality and reliability in the volatile tech sector

Or the stock could simply be overvalued and due for a correction.

The PEG ratio can't tell you which interpretation is correct. 

It just shows what the market is currently paying relative to projected growth. Your job as an investor is to decide whether that price makes sense.

Comparing Growth Stocks with the PEG Ratio

The real power of the PEG ratio is in comparisons.

Let's look at two hypothetical companies:

CompanyP/E RatioGrowth RatePEG Ratio
Company A2010%2.0
Company B4030%1.33

Company B appears more expensive on a P/E basis (40 vs. 20). But it's actually cheaper relative to its growth rate.

The PEG ratio helps you compare growth stocks across different industries and growth rates. It provides a normalized way to evaluate whether you're overpaying for growth.

Important Limitations of the PEG Ratio

No single metric tells the complete story.

Professional investors don't rely solely on the PEG ratio. They use it alongside:

  • Other valuation metrics (EV/EBITDA, P/S ratio)
  • Qualitative analysis of the business
  • Assessment of management quality
  • Evaluation of competitive position
  • Understanding of industry trends

Also, pay attention to the range of analyst estimates. If 20 analysts all project 25-30% growth, that's strong consensus. If they range from -10% to +60%, that indicates high uncertainty.

The PEG ratio won't work for every company. If a company is pre-revenue or pre-profit, you can't calculate it. If analyst estimates are all over the place, the PEG ratio might not be reliable.

Our analysts use PEG ratio and other valuation methods to analyze potential market beating opportunities every day.

Subscribe to Market Briefs Pro to discover these opportunities before the rest of Wall Street catches on.

Why Growth Stocks Need Different Metrics

Remember: growth stocks are pricing in future potential.

When a growth company's trajectory changes - even slightly - the stock price must adjust to reflect new expectations. 

This is why you saw companies like Zoom and Roku crash when growth merely slowed, not stopped in the early 2020s.

Growth investors need to be more active than value investors. You can't just buy and forget. 

You need to continually monitor whether the growth thesis remains intact, whether the company is executing on strategy, and whether competitive dynamics are shifting.

The PEG ratio gives you a framework for that ongoing evaluation.

How to Use the PEG Ratio in Your Research

Here's a practical approach:

  1. Identify potential growth companies by looking for strong revenue growth or market disruptors
  2. Calculate the PEG ratio using current P/E and analyst consensus growth estimates
  3. Compare PEG ratios across similar companies in the same sector
  4. Consider the limitations for each specific company
  5. Tie it back to market shifts – identify the underlying trend driving growth

Every growth stock is built on some underlying market shift. 

Maybe it's the shift to cloud computing, the aging population driving healthcare needs, the energy transition creating demand for batteries, or the rise of remote work changing software needs.

The PEG ratio helps you determine if the market has already priced in that shift - or if there's still opportunity.

PEG Ratio: The Bottom Line

The PEG ratio is a powerful tool for growth investors, but it's just one piece of the puzzle.

Investors can use it to find out if a company’s current stock price makes sense based on its projected growth.

But always combine it with other valuation metrics, qualitative business analysis, and a clear understanding of the market shifts driving growth.

That's how professional investors separate real opportunities from overpriced hype.

Market Briefs Pro shows you the in-depth data and research on unique opportunities every week in an easy-to-read investment report.

Subscribe to Market Briefs Pro and get an edge on Wall Street today.


Blogs

March 10, 2026
What Is a Stock Market Correction? Here's What It Actually Means

The first time your portfolio turns red, it feels like the sky is falling. Your first instinct? Make an emotional decision. But before you do anything, it helps to understand what you're actually looking at. Markets go up and down over time - it is all part of a market cycle. Sometimes markets fall and […]

Read More
March 9, 2026
CB Stock: Why Chubb Could Be This Year’s Quiet Winner

In mid-2025, Congress passed the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act." The law changed how companies deduct the cost of physical assets on their taxes - letting them write off the full cost of a factory, data center, or facility in year one, instead of spreading it over decades. That one change is pushing corporations to […]

Read More
March 8, 2026
Do You Have To Pay Taxes on Stocks: What Every Investor Needs to Know

Do You Have to Pay Taxes on Stocks? Short answer: yes. You do have to pay taxes on stocks. The question becomes - when do you have to pay taxes on stocks? Well, the real answer depends on a variety of different factors along with how much you actually pay. But paying taxes on stocks […]

Read More
March 7, 2026
When to Buy a Stock: What Smart Investors Actually Look For

Everybody wants to know the secret to buying a stock. When do I buy?  Do I wait for a dip?  Do I wait for good news?  Do I just... go for it? Here's the truth: There is no secret. The best time to buy a stock is usually when you've done your homework - not […]

Read More
March 6, 2026
GDXJ Stock And Two Other Gold ETFs Investors Need To Pay Attention To

Gold and silver hit new record highs in 2026 - rising on AI fears, market volatility, and geopolitical issues in Ukraine, Iran, and Venezuela. Meanwhile, over the last year, the U.S. dollar has dropped in value - it had its worst six month performance in the first half of 2025 in 50 years. Why does […]

Read More
March 6, 2026
What Are Assets? A Simple Guide for Investors

The term asset gets thrown around in finance quite a bit. And the truth is: Most of us were never taught what a real asset actually is. However, there's one question that separates people who build wealth from people who just earn a living. It's not "how much do you make?" It's "what do you […]

Read More
March 5, 2026
What Is an Income Statement? What It Is & How To Read It

Every public company has to share three financial statements with investors:  Each one tells a different part of the story.  The income statement? It answers the most basic question in business: Is this company actually making money? But as an investor, digging deeper into a company’s income statement can tell you a lot more than […]

Read More
March 4, 2026
Top Dividend Stocks Are Having a Moment - And There's a Very Good Reason Why

The Quiet Rotation Nobody Is Talking About Over the last few years, the stock market has been glued to one thing: Tech stocks  However, smart money has started to quietly move away from potential high-growth tech stocks and into value stocks with dividends. Where are we seeing the move? Institutional investors - and when these […]

Read More
March 4, 2026
How to Invest in the S&P 500: A Beginner's Guide

When you hear investors talking about “the market” they’re most likely referring to the S&P 500. That’s because the S&P 500 is a benchmark for the stock market as a whole - and many active investors use it as a measuring stick for their portfolio. If you can choose stocks that outpace the S&P 500, […]

Read More
March 3, 2026
Market Disruptors: What They Are and How Smart Investors Spot Them Early

What Is a Market Disruptor? A market disruptor is a company that doesn't just compete - it breaks the rules of an industry in the name of innovation. These are the businesses that make entire industries look at themselves and say, "We need to rethink everything." Here are a few classic examples: Each of these […]

Read More
1 2 3 13
Share via
Copy link