What is Forward P/E?
Forward P/E = price ÷ estimated future EPS — anticipates earnings growth.
Formula
Forward P/E = Current Share Price ÷ Estimated EPS (Next 12 Months)
Indian market context (NSE)
Reference levels: Nifty 50 at 24,300, Reliance Industries at ₹1,300, Bank Nifty futures at 55,000 (lot size 30). Examples below show how Forward P/E shows up on Indian index, equity, and futures books — update to live quotes in your journal.
Nifty 50 perspective
Nifty at 24,300: index-level forward p/e ratio aggregates 50 names — useful macro filter for allocation, less useful for Bank Nifty scalps the same afternoon.
Reliance Industries perspective
Forward P/E Ratio for Reliance at ₹1,300: pull from latest exchange filings and investor presentation — compare to Nifty 50 median for context, not as a timing signal for intraday futures.
How to validate
- Validate Forward P/E trades against the published event calendar.
- Separate earnings trades from non-event technical tags in analytics.
- Re-read news source in journal note to avoid hindsight bias in review.
- Compare results only within the same market regime (bull/bear/sideways).
How to track in TradeLyser
- Link trade to catalyst note (event, date, source) in comments.
- Tag “event trade” vs “technical only” before entry.
- Calendar review after results season for tag-level P&L.
- Export event-tagged trades for annual tax and process reconciliation.
Best practices
- Trade smaller into unknown event risk around Forward P/E.
- Verify source quality before tagging fundamental triggers.
- Do not retrofit fundamental narratives onto technical entries.
- Keep investment and trading books separate in analytics.
Common pitfalls
- Trading headlines without time-stamped journal proof.
- Holding losers because the “story” behind Forward P/E must recover.
- Mixing tax-loss harvesting with active trading tags.
- Using stale data after earnings revisions.
How to use this in TradeLyser
Record forward PE and estimate date at entry; update after guidance changes.
Related terms
Earnings per share is net profit attributable to common shareholders divided by shares outstanding.
Earnings surprise measures how reported EPS differs from consensus estimate.
P/E ratio divides share price by earnings per share, showing how many years of earnings the market pays for. High P/E can mean growth expectations or overvaluation depending on sector.
PEG = PE ÷ earnings growth rate — lower may suggest growth relative to price.
FAQ
Forward vs trailing PE?
Forward looks ahead; trailing uses past — tag which you cite.
Forward PE for cyclicals?
Estimates lag cycles — caution at peaks.
Start journaling with
TradeLyser
Connect your broker, tag strategies, and review performance with AI-assisted insights.