According to Turkcell's latest financial reports and stock price the company's current price-to-earnings ratio (TTM) is 15.1469. At the end of 2022 the company had a P/E ratio of 16.9.
Year | P/E ratio | Change |
---|---|---|
2022 | 16.9 | 156.04% |
2021 | 6.60 | -10.76% |
2020 | 7.40 | -16.78% |
2019 | 8.89 | -23.41% |
2018 | 11.6 | -28.75% |
2017 | 16.3 | 31.85% |
2016 | 12.4 | 19.84% |
2015 | 10.3 | -36.52% |
2014 | 16.2 | 57.35% |
2013 | 10.3 | -15.3% |
2012 | 12.2 | -10.76% |
2011 | 13.7 | 13.76% |
2010 | 12.0 | -13.63% |
2009 | 13.9 | 129.25% |
2008 | 6.06 | -66.73% |
2007 | 18.2 | 29.82% |
2006 | 14.0 | -4.52% |
2005 | 14.7 | -46.27% |
2004 | 27.4 | -94.84% |
2003 | 530 | -63.75% |
2002 | > 1000 | -591.23% |
2001 | -298 |
Company | P/E ratio | P/E ratio differencediff. | Country |
---|---|---|---|
![]() | N/A | N/A | ๐ฌ๐ง UK |
![]() | -40.6 | -368.29% | ๐ฎ๐ฑ Israel |
![]() | 6.78 | -55.27% | ๐ท๐บ Russia |
![]() | 15.4 | 1.66% | ๐ช๐ธ Spain |
![]() | -0.0518 | -100.34% | ๐จ๐ณ China |
The Price/Earnings ratio measures the relationship between a company's stock price and its earnings per share. A low but positive P/E ratio stands for a company that is generating high earnings compared to its current valuation and might be undervalued. A company with a high negative (near 0) P/E ratio stands for a company that is generating heavy losses compared to its current valuation.
Companies with a P/E ratio over 30 or a negative one are generaly seen as "growth stocks" meaning that investors typically expect the company to grow or to become profitable in the future.
Companies with a positive P/E ratio bellow 10 are generally seen as "value stocks" meaning that the company is already very profitable and unlikely to strong growth in the future.