Atlassian's price surge on Friday seems to be confirming the bullish analyst outlook on the stock. Ending the day at $177.53, TEAM has posted 6.88% gains, pushing the valuation of the stock even higher. Might the stock be overvalued, despite its buy rating?
Traditionally, value investors would look for companies with a ratio of less than 1 (meaning that the market value was smaller than the company's book value), but such opportunities are very rare these days. So we tend to look for company's whose valuations are less than their sector and market average. The P/B ratio for Atlassian is 79.67, compared to its sector average of 6.23 and the S&P 500's average P/B of 2.95.
Modernly, the most common metric for valuing a company is its Price to Earnings (P/E) ratio. It's simply today's stock price of 177.53 divided by either its trailing or forward earnings, which for Atlassian are $-1.58 and $2.06 respectively. Based on these values, the company's trailing P/E ratio is -112.36 and its forward P/E ratio is 86.18. By way of comparison, the average P/E ratio of the Technology sector is 27.16 and the average P/E ratio of the S&P 500 is 15.97.
The problem with P/E ratios is that they don't take into account the growth of earnings. This means that a company with a higher than average P/E ratio may still be undervalued if it has extremely high projected earnings growth. Conversely, a company with a low P/E ratio may not present a good value proposition if its projected earnings are stagnant.
When we divide Atlassian's P/E ratio by its projected 5 year earnings growth rate, we obtain its Price to Earnings Growth (PEG) ratio of 4.358. Since a PEG ratio between 0 and 1 may indicate that the company's valuation is proportionate to its growth potential, we see here that TEAM is overvalued when we factor growth into the price to earnings calculus. One important caveat here is that PEG ratios are calculated on the basis of future earnings growth estimates, which may turn out to be wrong.
One last metric to check out is Atlassian's free cash flow of $808,895,000.00. This represents the total sum of all the company's inflows and outflows of capital, including the costs of servicing its debt. It's the final bottom line of the company, which it can use to re-invest or to pay its investors a dividend. With such healthy cash flows, investors can expect Atlassian to keep paying its 0.0% dividend.
Analysts are bullish on Atlassian, but we are concerned they may be missing the clouded growth picture, as expressed by the stock's elevated PEG ratio. In addition, many of its valuation metrics point to a stock with an inflated value. We will keep following TEAM to see whether the analyst community was right.