JP Morgan Chase Quarterly Valuation – February 2015 $JPM

JPMorgan Chase passes all of the initial requirements of both the Defensive Investor and the Enterprising Investor, which is a rare accomplishment indicative of the company’s strong financial position. As a result, all value investors should feel very comfortable proceeding to the next part of the analysis, which is a determination of the company’s intrinsic value.

When it comes to that valuation, it is critical to consider the company’s earnings history. In this case, the company has grown its EPSmg (normalized earnings) from $3.05 in 2010 to $4.82 for 2014. This is a strong level of demonstrated growth, which is well above the market’s implied estimate for earnings growth of only 2.13% over the next 7-10 years. In fact, the historical growth is around 11.64% per year, so the market is expecting a very significant drop in earnings growth. The ModernGraham valuation model reduces the historical growth to a more conservative figure, assuming that some slowdown will occur, but still returns an estimate of intrinsic value falling above the current price, indicating the company is undervalued at the present time.

Be sure to check out our previous ModernGraham valuations of JPMorgan Chase for a greater perspective!

Read the full valuation on Seeking Alpha!

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Disclaimer: The author did not hold a position in JP Morgan Chase (JPM) at the time of publication and had no intention of changing that position within the next 72 hours. Logo taken from Wikipedia for the sole purpose of identifying the company; this article is not affiliated with the company in any manner.

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