1. MARKETS
  2. SECTOR : BANKING AND FINANCE
  3. INDUSTRY : FINANCE (INCLUDING NBFCS)
  4. MEGHNA INFRACON INFRASTRUCTURE LTD.
Meghna Infracon Infrastructure Ltd. BSE: 538668
578.10 -7.60 (-1.30%)
19,835
BSE Volume

BSE 23 Jul, 2025 1:49 PM (IST)

Choose Stock, Parameter and Date Range
Furthest date for non subscribers is 23-07-2023
generated report

Analyze undervaluation/ overvaluation of Meghna Infracon Infrastructure Ltd. with historical PE and PBV ratios

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from 23 Jul, 2023 to 22 Jul, 2025

Standalone P/E

Buy Zone

24.6% into P/E buy sell zone

% time spent below current P/E
0 20 40 60 80 100
Strong upside potential
Gains already realized

Out of 426 days, Meghna Infracon Infrastructure Ltd. traded 105 (24.6%) days below the current P/E of on Standalone basis.

Consolidated P/E

Neutral zone

41.9% into P/E buy sell zone

% time spent below current P/E
0 20 40 60 80 100
Strong upside potential
Gains already realized

Out of 105 days, Meghna Infracon Infrastructure Ltd. traded 44 (41.9%) days below the current P/E of on Consolidated basis.

Note: This is a reverse percentile score. Values close to 100% are bad while values close to 0% are good. Days when PE is negative are not considered in the analysis
P/E range Days traded in range % Days traded in range Days traded within & below range % Days traded within & below range
78-86
5 4.8% 5 4.8%
86-89
5 4.8% 10 9.5%
89-155
11 10.5% 21 20.0%
155-167
19 18.1% 40 38.1%
167-221
Current P/E is 172.7
12 11.4% 52 49.5%
221-227
18 17.1% 70 66.7%
227-235
14 13.3% 84 80.0%
235-258
10 9.5% 94 89.5%
258-282
11 10.5% 105 100.0%
Total 105 105
P/E range Days traded in range % Days traded in range Days traded within & below range % Days traded within & below range
61-111
21 4.9% 21 4.9%
111-122
22 5.2% 43 10.1%
122-133
51 12.0% 94 22.1%
133-152
Current P/E is 136.0
59 13.8% 153 35.9%
152-173
60 14.1% 213 50.0%
173-278
64 15.0% 277 65.0%
278-979
65 15.3% 342 80.3%
979-1010
44 10.3% 386 90.6%
1010-1216
40 9.4% 426 100.0%
Total 426 426

FAQ

  • What is the PE ratio?

    In its simplest definition, the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E ratio) represents the price an investor pays per rupee of a company's earnings.
    For example, if a company has a P/E ratio of 25, investors are willing to pay INR 25 for each rupee of the company's current earnings. This indicates that investors value the stock at 25 times its current earnings, with an expectation of future earnings growth.
    The P/E ratio fluctuates based on investor sentiment towards a company. Positive sentiment drives the stock price higher, resulting in a higher P/E ratio (investors pay more for each rupee of earnings). Conversely, negative sentiment lowers the P/E ratio (investors pay less for each rupee of earnings).
  • What is the PE buy/sell zone?

    The PE buy/sell zone is calculated based on how many days a stock has traded at its current PE level.
    To do this, we compare the current PE to the stock’s historical PE performance, to find out how often (for how many days in the past) the stock has traded at its current PE value.
    If the stock has usually traded above its current PE level (it’s at a higher PE for the majority of trading days), then the stock is cheaper than usual and in the PE buy zone.
    If the stock has usually traded below its current PE level (it’s at a lower PE for the majority of trading days), then the stock is more expensive than usual and in the PE sell zone.
  • How is the PE buy sell zone useful?

    The PE buy sell zone tells you if a stock’s current PE level is unusually high or low, and if a stock doesn’t typically trade at that level. It helps investors identify stocks that are undervalued or overvalued in terms of their typical PE trading behavior.
    Investors should keep in mind that the buy zone/sell zone is not a foolproof buy or sell signal. For example, the PE of a stock may have fallen substantially due to adverse events or negative news. Or the PE may have risen sharply after the company has won new orders, made an acquisition, announced a buyback, or some other positive event. PE Buy/Sell Zone signals should be looked at in conjunction with other information.
  • Why are the number of days different for Standalone and Consolidated data?

    This can be because of any of the 2 following reasons:
    1. Days when PE is negative are not considered in the analysis. So if only 1 of the Standalone or Consolidated PE is negative and the other is not, then the days will be different
    2. Companies have reported Consolidated data for limited period.