Passenger Airlines Companies By Peg Ratio

Price To Earnings To Growth
Price To Earnings To GrowthEfficiencyMarket RiskExp Return
1RYAAY Ryanair Holdings PLC
70.75
 0.06 
 1.52 
 0.09 
2DAL Delta Air Lines
39.29
 0.23 
 1.58 
 0.36 
3SAVE Spirit Airlines
20.44
(0.17)
 4.21 
(0.73)
4JBLU JetBlue Airways Corp
6.8
 0.04 
 4.72 
 0.19 
5VLRS Volaris
1.69
 0.04 
 2.78 
 0.11 
6ALK Alaska Air Group
1.3
 0.15 
 1.93 
 0.28 
7SKYW SkyWest
1.02
 0.26 
 1.93 
 0.50 
8SNCY Sun Country Airlines
0.61
(0.02)
 2.41 
(0.05)
9LUV Southwest Airlines
0.56
(0.05)
 2.66 
(0.13)
10UAL United Airlines Holdings
0.54
 0.13 
 3.02 
 0.40 
11AAL American Airlines Group
0.28
(0.03)
 2.22 
(0.06)
12CPA Copa Holdings SA
0.16
 0.01 
 1.58 
 0.02 
13SASBQ SAS AB
0.0
 0.00 
 0.00 
 0.00 
14910047AK5 United Airlines Holdings
0.0
(0.07)
 0.49 
(0.03)
15JTAI JetAI Inc
0.0
 0.02 
 11.97 
 0.25 
16AZUL Azul SA
0.0
(0.15)
 3.62 
(0.56)
17SRFM Surf Air Mobility
0.0
(0.16)
 7.70 
(1.26)
18ULCC Frontier Group Holdings
-0.35
 0.06 
 5.15 
 0.30 
19MESA Mesa Air Group
-1.48
(0.03)
 3.15 
(0.08)
20ALGT Allegiant Travel
-14.47
(0.19)
 2.60 
(0.50)
The analysis above is based on a 90-day investment horizon and a default level of risk. Use the Portfolio Analyzer to fine-tune all your assumptions. Check your current assumptions here.
PEG Ratio indicates the potential value of an equity instrument and is calculated by dividing Price to Earnings (P/E) ratio into earnings growth rate. Most analysts and investors prefer this measure to a Price to Earnings (P/E) ratio because it incorporates the future growth of a firm. The low PEG ratio usually implies that an equity instrument is undervalued; whereas PEG of 1 may indicate that an equity is reasonably priced under given expectations of future growth. Generally speaking, PEG ratio is a 'quick and dirty' way to measure how the current price of a firm's stock relates to its earnings and growth rate. The main benefit of using PEG ratio is that investors can compare the relative valuations of companies within different industries without analyzing their P/E ratios.