Is It Too Late To Consider ePlus (PLUS) After Its 30% One-Year Rally?
ePlus inc. PLUS | 0.00 |
- If you are wondering whether ePlus at around US$85 a share is still offering value, or if the easy money has already been made, the starting point is understanding how the current price lines up against its fundamentals.
- Over the past year the stock has returned 30.3%, with a smaller gain of 2.8% over the last month, even as it has slipped 1.6% over the last week and is down 1.5% year to date. This combination can leave the risk reward balance feeling less obvious.
- Recent attention on technology and infrastructure providers that support corporate IT and networking has kept ePlus on many investors' radars, especially as businesses reassess their spending priorities. This context helps explain why some investors are rechecking whether the stock's current valuation still lines up with their expectations.
- Right now, ePlus scores a 4 out of 6 valuation check score. The next step is a closer look at how metrics such as P/E, cash flows and asset value stack up, followed by an even more holistic way to think about what the stock might be worth.
Approach 1: ePlus Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis
A Discounted Cash Flow model estimates what a stock could be worth by projecting its future cash flows and discounting them back to today using a required rate of return. It is essentially a way of translating expected future cash in and out of the business into a single present value figure.
For ePlus, the 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity model uses recent free cash flow, which is currently a loss of about $68.2 million over the last twelve months, then applies analyst and extrapolated projections. The projections move to free cash flow of $140.1 million in 2028, with further estimates out to 2035 that are supplied by analysts for the early years and extrapolated thereafter by Simply Wall St.
When all of those projected cash flows are discounted back to today, the model arrives at an estimated intrinsic value of about $91.05 per share. Compared with the current share price around $85, this implies the stock is about 6.2% undervalued. This is a relatively small gap.
Result: ABOUT RIGHT
ePlus is fairly valued according to our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), but this can change at a moment's notice. Track the value in your watchlist or portfolio and be alerted on when to act.
Approach 2: ePlus Price vs Earnings
For a profitable company, the P/E ratio is a common way to think about what you are paying for each dollar of current earnings. It links directly to the earnings that support the share price, which many investors use as a starting point when comparing stocks.
A higher P/E often reflects stronger growth expectations or lower perceived risk, while a lower P/E can indicate more modest growth assumptions or higher uncertainty. There is no single correct P/E, so context matters.
ePlus currently trades on a P/E of 15.1x, compared with an Electronic industry average of about 28.1x and a peer group average of 15.5x. Simply Wall St also calculates a proprietary “Fair Ratio” for the stock of 17.7x. This Fair Ratio is designed to capture what might be a more tailored P/E for ePlus by factoring in elements such as its earnings growth profile, industry, profit margins, market capitalization and key risks.
Because the Fair Ratio is built around company specific fundamentals, it can be more informative than a simple comparison against broad industry or peer averages. Setting this 17.7x Fair Ratio against the current 15.1x P/E suggests the stock is trading at a discount to that company specific reference point.
Result: UNDERVALUED
P/E ratios tell one story, but what if the real opportunity lies elsewhere? Start investing in legacies, not executives. Discover our 19 top founder-led companies.
Upgrade Your Decision Making: Choose your ePlus Narrative
Earlier it was mentioned that there is an even better way to understand valuation. Narratives on Simply Wall St’s Community page let you turn your view of ePlus into a clear story that links business drivers like AI, security and cloud focus, margin and cost pressures, or deal lumpiness to a set of revenue, earnings and margin forecasts. It then converts those forecasts into a Fair Value, continuously refreshes that Fair Value when new news or earnings are added, and helps you compare it to the current price. For example, one investor might build a Narrative that supports a Fair Value near US$115 based on assumptions like 5.4% annual revenue growth, a 5.1% profit margin, a 26.1x future P/E and an 8.9% discount rate. Another might take a more cautious view on large deal repeatability or customer concentration and land on a much lower Fair Value, with both stories sitting side by side for you to review and challenge against your own expectations.
Do you think there's more to the story for ePlus? Head over to our Community to see what others are saying!
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.
