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Abdulbasit
AbdulbasitBeginner
Asked: April 10, 20262026-04-10T16:31:48+00:00 2026-04-10T16:31:48+00:00In: FINANCIAL LITERACY

If Fundamentals Are Strong, Why Do Stocks Still Look Overvalued?

We all know that before buying any stock in the market, we need to carry out proper fundamental analysis.
However, I’ve noticed that some stocks still appear overvalued even when their fundamentals look strong.
There are three common ways to check whether a stock is overvalued or undervalued:
P/E Ratio – What is the appropriate P/E ratio for different sectors in the stock market?
52-Week High and Low
PEG Ratio – This helps measure a company’s growth relative to its valuation. As a rule:
PEG 1 → Overvalued
PEG = 1 → Fairly valued (or worth watching)
My main question is:
Out of these three methods, which one gives the most confidence in determining whether a stock is overpriced or underpriced in the market?

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  1. Ochoyoda
    Ochoyoda Intermediate
    2026-04-10T19:24:11+00:00Added an answer on April 10, 2026 at 7:24 pm

    None of the three alone is enough. The most reliable approach is using them together, but if forced to choose, PEG Ratio generally gives the most confidence. Let’s break it down clearly. Why Strong Fundamentals Can Still Look Overvalued Even when fundamentals are strong, stocks may look expensive beRead more

    None of the three alone is enough.
    The most reliable approach is using them together, but if forced to choose, PEG Ratio generally gives the most confidence.
    Let’s break it down clearly.
    Why Strong Fundamentals Can Still Look Overvalued
    Even when fundamentals are strong, stocks may look expensive because:
    Investors expect future growth
    Market sentiment is bullish
    Institutional investors are accumulating
    Industry growth is strong
    This is why companies like those favored by Warren Buffett sometimes trade at high valuations for long periods.
    Example:
    A fast-growing bank may have high P/E
    But investors expect earnings to double soon
    So it looks expensive — but actually isn’t
    Comparing the 3 Methods
    1. P/E Ratio (Good but Limited)
    What it tells you:
    How much investors are paying for ₦1 of earnings.
    Example:
    P/E = 10 → Cheap
    P/E = 30 → Expensive (usually)
    But here’s the problem:
    Different sectors have different normal P/E
    Typical P/E by Sector (General Guide)
    Banks → 5–12
    Consumer goods → 10–25
    Telecom → 12–20
    Oil & Gas → 5–15
    Tech → 20–50+
    So P/E alone can mislead.
    2. 52-Week High & Low (Weakest Method)
    This only tells you price movement, not value.
    Example:
    A stock at 52-week high may still be cheap
    A stock at 52-week low may still be expensive
    This method is more for timing, not valuation.
    So this is least reliable.
    3. PEG Ratio (Most Reliable of the Three)
    PEG includes:
    P/E ratio
    Growth rate
    That makes it more intelligent.
    PEG Interpretation
    PEG 1 → Overvalued ⚠️
    Example:
    Company A P/E = 20
    Growth = 25%
    PEG = 0.8 → Actually cheap
    This is why PEG gives more confidence.
    Final Ranking (Most Reliable → Least Reliable)
    🥇 PEG Ratio (Best)
    🥈 P/E Ratio (Good but incomplete)
    🥉 52-Week High/Low (Weak for valuation)
    What Smart Investors Actually Do
    The best investors combine:
    P/E ratio
    PEG ratio
    Revenue growth
    Earnings growth
    Debt level
    Dividend history
    This gives real confidence.

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