Stock Analysis

CLR Investment Fund Public Ltd.'s (CSE:CLL) 40% Price Boost Is Out Of Tune With Earnings

Published
CSE:CLL

CLR Investment Fund Public Ltd. (CSE:CLL) shareholders would be excited to see that the share price has had a great month, posting a 40% gain and recovering from prior weakness. The last 30 days bring the annual gain to a very sharp 40%.

After such a large jump in price, given close to half the companies in Cyprus have price-to-earnings ratios (or "P/E's") below 7x, you may consider CLR Investment Fund as a stock to avoid entirely with its 16.7x P/E ratio. Nonetheless, we'd need to dig a little deeper to determine if there is a rational basis for the highly elevated P/E.

As an illustration, earnings have deteriorated at CLR Investment Fund over the last year, which is not ideal at all. One possibility is that the P/E is high because investors think the company will still do enough to outperform the broader market in the near future. You'd really hope so, otherwise you're paying a pretty hefty price for no particular reason.

See our latest analysis for CLR Investment Fund

CSE:CLL Price to Earnings Ratio vs Industry January 2nd 2025
Although there are no analyst estimates available for CLR Investment Fund, take a look at this free data-rich visualisation to see how the company stacks up on earnings, revenue and cash flow.

Does Growth Match The High P/E?

There's an inherent assumption that a company should far outperform the market for P/E ratios like CLR Investment Fund's to be considered reasonable.

Retrospectively, the last year delivered a frustrating 60% decrease to the company's bottom line. This has erased any of its gains during the last three years, with practically no change in EPS being achieved in total. Accordingly, shareholders probably wouldn't have been overly satisfied with the unstable medium-term growth rates.

Weighing that recent medium-term earnings trajectory against the broader market's one-year forecast for expansion of 24% shows it's noticeably less attractive on an annualised basis.

In light of this, it's alarming that CLR Investment Fund's P/E sits above the majority of other companies. Apparently many investors in the company are way more bullish than recent times would indicate and aren't willing to let go of their stock at any price. Only the boldest would assume these prices are sustainable as a continuation of recent earnings trends is likely to weigh heavily on the share price eventually.

The Final Word

Shares in CLR Investment Fund have built up some good momentum lately, which has really inflated its P/E. It's argued the price-to-earnings ratio is an inferior measure of value within certain industries, but it can be a powerful business sentiment indicator.

Our examination of CLR Investment Fund revealed its three-year earnings trends aren't impacting its high P/E anywhere near as much as we would have predicted, given they look worse than current market expectations. When we see weak earnings with slower than market growth, we suspect the share price is at risk of declining, sending the high P/E lower. Unless the recent medium-term conditions improve markedly, it's very challenging to accept these prices as being reasonable.

You should always think about risks. Case in point, we've spotted 5 warning signs for CLR Investment Fund you should be aware of, and 4 of them make us uncomfortable.

If you're unsure about the strength of CLR Investment Fund's business, why not explore our interactive list of stocks with solid business fundamentals for some other companies you may have missed.

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This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.