Business Supplies Companies By Pe Ratio

Price To Earning
Price To EarningEfficiencyMarket RiskExp Return
1PACK Ranpak Holdings Corp
298.48
 0.01 
 2.26 
 0.02 
2VIRC Virco Manufacturing
43.12
(0.01)
 3.56 
(0.03)
3SCS Steelcase
38.64
(0.04)
 1.92 
(0.07)
4REYN Reynolds Consumer Products
20.33
(0.11)
 1.31 
(0.14)
5KMB Kimberly Clark
20.1
(0.06)
 0.98 
(0.06)
6MLKN MillerKnoll
19.32
(0.12)
 2.57 
(0.32)
7AVY Avery Dennison Corp
19.02
(0.10)
 1.19 
(0.12)
8HNI HNI Corp
15.76
 0.05 
 1.54 
 0.08 
9EBF Ennis Inc
15.6
 0.01 
 1.66 
 0.01 
10IP International Paper
14.98
 0.16 
 2.14 
 0.34 
11MATV Mativ Holdings
14.45
(0.15)
 3.55 
(0.53)
12PTVE Pactiv Evergreen
9.06
 0.09 
 2.35 
 0.20 
13CLW Clearwater Paper
8.36
(0.12)
 2.69 
(0.32)
14SLVM Sylvamo Corp
6.94
 0.09 
 2.48 
 0.22 
15SUZ Suzano Papel e
4.21
 0.05 
 1.49 
 0.08 
16ITP IT Tech Packaging
3.64
 0.01 
 5.06 
 0.06 
17MERC Mercer International
3.05
 0.04 
 3.09 
 0.12 
18DSY Big Tree Cloud
0.0
 0.01 
 14.88 
 0.14 
19DSYWW Big Tree Cloud
0.0
 0.03 
 12.71 
 0.39 
20ILAG Intelligent Living Application
0.0
 0.06 
 4.89 
 0.31 
The analysis above is based on a 90-day investment horizon and a default level of risk. Use the Portfolio Analyzer to fine-tune all your assumptions. Check your current assumptions here.
Price to Earnings ratio is typically used for current valuation of a company and is one of the most popular ratios that investors monitor daily. Holding a low PE stock is less risky because when a company's profitability falls, it is likely that earnings will also go down as well. In other words, if you start from a lower position, your downside risk is limited. There are also some investors who believe that low Price to Earnings ratio reflects the low pricing because a given company is in trouble. On the other hand, a higher PE ratio means that investors are paying more for each unit of profit. Generally speaking, the Price to Earnings ratio gives investors an idea of what the market is willing to pay for the company's current earnings.