Low P/E Stocks — Analysis & Key Financial Data
Low P/E Stocks group companies based on shared financial characteristics — for example by market-cap bucket, dividend yield, valuation, or composite Investment Score. Many investors use these attribute filters to quickly narrow a universe of stocks down to names that fit their own mandate or risk profile before doing deeper research. On this page you can review stocks that currently qualify for the low p/e stocks bucket using transparent, rules-based criteria. The goal is to surface a starting universe for further analysis rather than to provide buy or sell recommendations, so you can combine these tags with your own process and the Valuation Tool.
- Stocks matching
- 806
- Latest data
- 2026-06-28
Highest Investment Scores in Low P/E Stocks
Top-rated stocks by Investment Score
- Price
- $91.19
- Fair Value
- $355.29
- Market Cap
- $21.2B
- Margin
- +289.6%
- Price
- $175.25
- Fair Value
- $263.72
- Market Cap
- $2.3B
- Margin
- +50.5%
- Price
- $15.21
- Fair Value
- $325.28
- Market Cap
- $9.8B
- Margin
- +2038.6%
- Price
- $33.94
- Fair Value
- $131.78
- Market Cap
- $3.3B
- Margin
- +288.3%
Low P/E Stock List
| Company | Price | Fair Value | Score | Market Cap | P/E | EPS | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. BRK-B | $500.39 | $378.75 | 65 | $1.08T | 14.8 | $33.60 | 0.00% |
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. BRK-A | $748850.00 | $567927.84 | 58 | $1.07T | 14.8 | $33.60 | 0.00% |
Bank of America Corporation BAC | $56.98 | $111.73 | 58 | $410.8B | 14.2 | $4.37 | 1.94% |
American Funds American Balanced A ABALX | $41.04 | $0.06 | 61 | $288.5B | 11.7 | $0.01 | 7.16% |
Wells Fargo & Company WFC | $82.64 | $148.57 | 45 | $256.7B | 12.7 | $6.84 | 2.15% |
Verizon Communications Inc. VZ | $42.34 | $62.89 | 58 | $194.3B | 11.3 | $4.12 | 5.94% |
TotalEnergies SE TTE | $77.76 | $146.43 | 61 | $171.0B | 11.4 | $7.07 | 4.97% |
AT&T Inc. T | $20.70 | $21.55 | 71 | $157.9B | 7.6 | $3.05 | 4.89% |
AT&T Inc. 5.35% GLB NTS 66 TBB | $20.48 | $23.69 | 71 | $157.9B | 7.6 | $3.05 | 4.89% |
British American Tobacco p.l.c. BTI | $61.76 | $29.22 | 55 | $136.0B | 13.5 | $3.56 | 5.08% |
Chubb Limited CB | $340.74 | $632.89 | 81 | $132.4B | 12.0 | $28.63 | 1.15% |
The Progressive Corporation PGR | $218.45 | $249.54 | 94 | $131.1B | 11.4 | $19.74 | 6.20% |
PDD Holdings Inc. PDD | $76.28 | $1321.80 | 87 | $109.0B | 7.5 | $68.07 | 0.00% |
Newmont Corporation NEM | $93.40 | $41.49 | 94 | $102.6B | 12.4 | $7.79 | 1.06% |
The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. PNC | $246.22 | $435.93 | 65 | $98.4B | 14.2 | $17.55 | 2.78% |
Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. - Petrobras PBR-A | $14.64 | $92.52 | 71 | $94.6B | 4.6 | $1.59 | 6.09% |
U.S. Bancorp USB | $60.40 | $118.60 | 65 | $94.6B | 12.8 | $5.03 | 3.38% |
Barclays PLC BCS | $26.86 | $52.94 | 45 | $90.2B | 11.5 | $0.53 | 1.68% |
HCA Healthcare, Inc. HCA | $389.89 | $985.88 | 68 | $86.9B | 13.4 | $29.98 | 0.77% |
Comcast Corporation CMCSA | $24.55 | $81.35 | 84 | $82.8B | 4.6 | $5.20 | 5.70% |
Canadian Natural Resources Limited CNQ | $39.50 | $121.37 | 94 | $82.4B | 12.0 | $4.66 | 4.33% |
Adobe Inc. ADBE | $205.02 | $380.54 | 84 | $80.6B | 11.6 | $17.98 | 0.00% |
Enterprise Products Partners L.P. EPD | $36.76 | $77.03 | 61 | $79.1B | 13.5 | $2.69 | 5.99% |
Accenture plc ACN | $124.44 | $293.55 | 90 | $78.9B | 10.2 | $12.78 | 4.94% |
Equinor ASA EQNR | $31.40 | $96.06 | 61 | $78.7B | 14.3 | $2.22 | 4.73% |
About low-P/E stocks
The price-to-earnings ratio is one of the oldest and most widely used valuation shortcuts in markets, and screening for low P/E is one of the oldest expressions of value-style investing. The 15× ceiling on this page is deliberately broad — it surfaces names where market price is low relative to recent earnings without filtering further on quality, growth, or balance-sheet metrics. The result is a heterogeneous list that captures both genuine value candidates and cyclical names near earnings peaks.
The screen is intentionally simple. P/E itself doesn't tell the whole story: a stable cash-generative business at 15× is a different situation than a cyclical business at 15× near the top of its earnings cycle. The page surfaces the supporting data — Investment Score, base valuation, the three margin-of-safety variants, growth metrics — so the investor can sort the genuine candidates from the optically-cheap-but-deteriorating ones.
What this page is for
This page is a screener and reference surface, not editorial coverage. The list above refreshes with each data update; the methodology, FAQ, and related categories below stay in place so the page is useful both for somebody arriving from a specific search and for somebody scanning the segment for the first time.
If you want to value a single low-P/E stock end-to-end rather than scan the segment, the Invest Viable Valuator walks through the same models we use to compute the base valuations on this page.
How we screen Low P/E Stocks
A stock is included on this page when its trailing price-to-earnings ratio is positive and at most 15. Negative-earnings stocks are excluded, since a P/E ratio is undefined for loss-making companies.
0 < P/E <= 15
- The 15× ceiling is a common rough cut-off used to surface "cheap on earnings" names; it is intentionally not adjusted for sector, growth, or balance-sheet quality.
- Trailing P/E uses the most recent four quarters of earnings; forward and normalised P/E ratios can differ. The screener also exposes margin-of-safety variants based on cash flow and EBITDA so the picture isn't reduced to one ratio.
Frequently asked questions
What counts as a low-P/E stock on Invest Viable?
Any covered US-listed company with a positive trailing price-to-earnings ratio of 15 or below. Stocks with negative earnings (loss-making companies) are excluded because the ratio isn't meaningful for them.
Why is a low P/E sometimes a value trap rather than a value opportunity?
A low P/E can reflect cheap-relative-to-earnings or earnings-about-to-fall. Cyclical companies near a peak, banks before a credit cycle, and energy producers at commodity peaks often look optically cheap right before earnings drop. The screener surfaces growth, balance-sheet quality, and the three margin-of-safety variants alongside P/E so the value-versus-trap distinction can be examined.
How is this different from a value-style screen?
P/E is one input. Our Value Style page applies a multi-factor screen — Investment Score above 50 plus a positive margin of safety on at least one valuation method. Some names appear on both pages; many low-P/E names don't pass the value-style screen.
Does the screen adjust for sector or growth profile?
No. The 15× ceiling is uniform across the universe. A 15× P/E means very different things in software (cheap relative to typical sector multiples) versus banking (closer to sector norm), and the screener leaves that contextualisation to the user. Sector and theme pages provide a more sector-aware view.
Does Invest Viable recommend specific low-P/E stocks?
No. This page is a screener and analysis surface, not a recommendation list. Each stock is shown with its underlying financial data, base valuation, and Investment Score so you can do your own research. Invest Viable does not publish buy or sell calls on individual securities.