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At a regional security analysts conference, Sandeep Singh made the following comment: "A PEG ratio is a very useful valuation metric because it generates meaningful results for all equities, regardless of the rate of dividend growth." Is Singh correct? A)
| Yes, because the expected dividend growth rate is cancelled out in the computation of the PEG ratio. |
| B)
| Yes, because the computation of the PEG ratio does include the rate of expected dividend growth. |
| C)
| No, because the PEG ratio generates highly questionable results for low-growth companies. |
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The PEG ratio measures the tradeoff between P/E and expected earnings growth (g). The formula for the PEG ratio is: PEG = (P/E) / g. PEG ratios generate questionable results for low-growth companies. Also, the PEG ratio is undefined for companies with zero expected growth (division by zero) or meaningless for companies with negative expected earnings growth. |
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