I've heard "PEG" (P/E to growth) used as a metric. Tesla has an annual 50% earnings growth, so P/E 200 / 50 = PEG of 4 Toyota P/E of 13 w 2% growth = PEG of 6 so... not wildly disparate !https://twitter.com/StephenFleming/status/1300799942995320832 …
Given this, and given that NPV strongly discounts things way out in the future, I contend that PEG need not care at all about things 100, 50, or even 20 years out.
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Yes, it doesn’t take much more than 30 years at equity discount rates for an additional year to stop adding material value.
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This is exactly why I disagreed w your initial claim. > This implies those growth rates continue into perpetuity,
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