Access comprehensive financial analyses and make smarter investments - get the Manual of Investments on Amazon!

EXAS Price Drop -- What Our Analysts Think.

Medical Specialities company Exact Sciences is taking Wall Street by surprise today, falling to $47.57 and marking a -5.8% change compared to the S&P 500, which moved -1.0%. EXAS is -32.6% below its average analyst target price of $70.58, which implies there is more upside for the stock.

As such, the average analyst rates it at buy. Over the last year, Exact Sciences has underperfomed the S&P 500 by -35.9%, moving -15.1%.

Exact Sciences Corporation provides cancer screening and diagnostic test products in the United States and internationally. The company is categorized within the healthcare sector. The catalysts that drive valuations in this sector are complex. From demographics, regulations, scientific breakthroughs, to the emergence of new diseases, healthcare companies see their prices swing on the basis of a variety of factors.

Exact Sciences does not publish either its forward or trailing P/E ratios because their values are negative -- meaning that each share of stock represents a net earnings loss. But we can calculate these P/E ratios anyways using the stocks forward and trailing (EPS) values of $-0.34 and $-5.59. We can see that EXAS has a forward P/E ratio of -139.9 and a trailing P/E ratio of -8.5. The P/E ratio is the company's share price divided by its earnings per share. In other words, it represents how much investors are willing to spend for each dollar of the company's earnings (revenues minus the cost of goods sold, taxes, and overhead). As of the third quarter of 2024, the health care sector has an average P/E ratio of 26.07, and the average for the S&P 500 is 29.3.

To deepen our understanding of the company's finances, we should study the effect of its depreciation and capital expenditures on the company's bottom line. We can see the effect of these additional factors in Exact Sciences's free cash flow, which was $31.93 Million as of its most recent annual report. Free cash flow represents the amount of money available for reinvestment in the business or for payments to equity investors in the form of a dividend. In EXAS's case the cash flow outlook is weak. It's average cash flow over the last 4 years has been $-179338666.7 and they've been growing at an average rate of 2.8%.

Value investors often analyze stocks through the lens of its Price to Book (P/B) Ratio (its share price divided by its book value). The book value refers to the present value of the company if the company were to sell off all of its assets and pay all of its debts today - a number whose value may differ significantly depending on the accounting method. Exact sciences's P/B ratio is 3.67 -- in other words, the market value of the company exceeds its book value by a factor of more than 3, so the company's assets may be overvalued compared to the average P/B ratio of the Health Care sector, which stands at 3.53 as of the third quarter of 2024.

Since it has a negative P/E ratio., an average P/B ratio, and negative cash flows with a flat trend, Exact Sciences is likely overvalued at today's prices. The company has poor growth indicators because of no PEG ratio and weak operating margins with a positive growth rate. We hope you enjoyed this overview of EXAS's fundamentals. Be sure to check the numbers for yourself, especially focusing on their trends over the last few years.

The above analysis is intended for educational purposes only and was performed on the basis of publicly available data. It is not to be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Any buy, sell, or other recommendations mentioned in the article are direct quotations of consensus recommendations from the analysts covering the stock, and do not represent the opinions of Market Inference or its writers. Past performance, accounting data, and inferences about market position and corporate valuation are not reliable indicators of future price movements. Market Inference does not provide financial advice. Investors should conduct their own review and analysis of any company of interest before making an investment decision.

IN FOCUS