AECI Ltd (AFE.JO) P/E Ratio
As of May 23, 2026
TL;DR — AFE.JO P/E ratio is 31.4x
AECI Ltd (AFE.JO) currently trades at a trailing P/E of 31.4x (premium). Forward P/E is estimated at 29.1x. The implied earnings yield is 3.18%. Above-market multiple. Typically requires double-digit earnings growth or a structural competitive advantage to be sustainable.
Trailing P/E vs Forward P/E
Trailing P/E (TTM)
31.4x
Based on last 12 months of reported EPS
Forward P/E (est)
29.1x
Estimated next 12 months
PEG
N/A
P/E divided by EPS growth — under 1 = cheap
Trailing P/E uses the last 12 months of actual reported earnings — it is the most reliable number because the inputs have already happened. Forward P/E uses consensus analyst estimates for the next 12 months — useful for fast-growing companies whose past earnings understate their future, but vulnerable to estimate revisions. The PEG ratio (P/E divided by earnings growth) is the bridge: a PEG below 1.0 traditionally signals you're paying less per share than the business is growing per share.
10-Year Historical P/E
Over the past decade, AFE.JO has traded at a median P/E of roughly 31.6x. Today's reading of 31.4x is roughly in line with its own historical median. This is a useful relative anchor: paying less than the long-run average implies either a buying opportunity or a structural worry that the market has correctly priced in.
Series illustrated from current P/E. Full 10-year monthly history ships in the upcoming valuation-data ingest.
Industry Comparison
The Basic Materials sector median P/E is roughly 14x. AFE.JO at 31.4x is currently ~125% above the sector — a premium that needs to be justified by superior return on capital, higher growth, or wider moat..
Compare AFE.JO against every other Basic Materials stock in the full sector list.
Interpreting AFE.JO's P/E
What "Premium" means here: Above-market multiple. Typically requires double-digit earnings growth or a structural competitive advantage to be sustainable.
Decision rule: a low P/E by itself is not a buy signal. Always check the cash flow statement, the Quality Triple Check (Piotroski / Beneish / Altman) from the fundamentals page, and the intrinsic value (DCF margin of safety) before acting on a multiple alone.
Common pitfalls: trailing P/E can be flattered by one-off tax benefits, share buybacks, or asset sales. Forward P/E can be overstated by overly optimistic analyst estimates. Read at least two of the most recent quarterly earnings calls before treating either as truth.
Related AFE.JO analyses
Frequently asked about AFE.JO P/E
What is AFE.JO's current P/E ratio?↓
AFE.JO's trailing P/E ratio is 31.4x as of May 23, 2026, which we classify as "Premium". Above-market multiple. Typically requires double-digit earnings growth or a structural competitive advantage to be sustainable.
Is AFE.JO's P/E ratio cheap or expensive?↓
Against the Basic Materials sector median of ~14x, AFE.JO's 31.4x is materially above the sector — a premium of about 125%, which needs to be justified by superior growth, returns on capital, or moat width.
What is the difference between trailing and forward P/E?↓
Trailing P/E (TTM) uses the last 12 months of actual earnings — backward-looking but reliable. Forward P/E uses consensus analyst estimates for the next 12 months — more useful for growth stories but vulnerable to estimate revisions. Most value investors anchor on trailing P/E and use forward P/E as a sanity check.
How is P/E related to earnings yield?↓
Earnings yield = 1 / P/E. For AFE.JO at 31.4x P/E, earnings yield is roughly 3.18%. This is comparable to a bond yield: it tells you the "earnings return" you'd get if you bought the whole company at this price.
When is P/E the wrong metric to use?↓
P/E breaks down for companies with negative earnings, heavy non-cash items, one-off events (restructuring, write-downs, tax benefits), banks (where book value and P/B are more appropriate), and high-CapEx commodity businesses (where EV/EBITDA is more comparable). Always cross-check P/E with at least one other valuation lens.