If you are wondering whether PNC Financial Services Group is attractively priced after a strong run, the key is understanding what the current share price is actually baking in.
The stock last closed at US$208.09, with returns of 0.8% over 7 days, a 2.0% decline over 30 days, a 1.6% decline year to date, and 23.5% over 1 year, 91.0% over 3 years and 40.6% over 5 years, which hints that investor expectations and risk perceptions have shifted over different timeframes.
Recent headlines around PNC Financial Services Group have kept attention on the broader U.S. banking sector, including discussions of balance sheet strength, capital return plans and how banks are positioned as interest rate expectations evolve. These themes provide useful context when weighing whether past returns still line up with today’s valuation.
Simply Wall St’s valuation model currently gives PNC Financial Services Group a 4/6 valuation score. This suggests some checks point to undervaluation and others do not, so it makes sense to compare the usual metrics like P/E and price to book with a more comprehensive approach to valuation that will be covered at the end of this article.
The Excess Returns model looks at how much profit a company can earn on its equity above the return that investors require, then capitalizes those “excess” profits into an intrinsic value per share.
For PNC Financial Services Group, the model uses a Book Value of US$140.43 per share and a Stable EPS of US$20.69 per share, based on weighted future Return on Equity estimates from 14 analysts. The implied Average Return on Equity is 12.99%, while the Cost of Equity is US$12.77 per share. The difference, labeled as Excess Return, is US$7.92 per share. This is then applied to a Stable Book Value of US$159.33 per share, sourced from 13 analysts’ Book Value estimates.
Putting this together, the Excess Returns framework produces an estimated intrinsic value of about US$331.31 per share. Against the recent share price of roughly US$208.09, this implies a discount of about 37.2%. This indicates that PNC Financial Services Group is trading at a level below this model’s estimate of value.
For profitable companies, the P/E ratio is a useful shorthand because it links what you pay for each share directly to the earnings that support that share. It gives you a quick sense of how many dollars investors are willing to pay for one dollar of current earnings.
What counts as a “normal” P/E depends on what investors expect from a business. Higher expected earnings growth or lower perceived risk can support a higher P/E, while slower growth or higher risk tends to be associated with a lower P/E. Sector norms also matter, since banks are usually compared with other banks.
PNC Financial Services Group currently trades on a P/E of 12.76x. This sits above the Banks industry average of about 11.34x and below the peer group average of 17.12x. Simply Wall St’s Fair Ratio for PNC Financial Services Group is 14.01x. This is a proprietary estimate of what the P/E might be given factors such as earnings growth, profit margins, industry, market cap and specific risks. Because it incorporates these company-level inputs, the Fair Ratio can be a more tailored benchmark than a simple comparison with peers or the broad industry. Since the Fair Ratio is higher than the current 12.76x, this framework points to the shares trading below that tailored reference point.
Earlier it was mentioned that there is an even better way to understand valuation, and that is through Narratives. These are simple stories on Simply Wall St’s Community page that link your view of PNC Financial Services Group’s future revenue, earnings and margins to a financial forecast, a Fair Value and a clear comparison with today’s price. They update automatically when fresh news or earnings arrive, and can differ widely. For example, one investor may build a more optimistic Narrative around a Fair Value closer to the US$284.00 bullish target, while another anchors on the US$209.00 bearish target. This gives you a structured way to decide whether the current share price looks high or low relative to the story you believe.
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.