19 Jan 20234 min read

Price-to-Sales (P/S) Ratio in 2026: A Guide for Australian Investors

Ready to sharpen your investing strategy? Start comparing the P/S ratios of your favourite ASX stocks and see which companies are truly delivering value in 2026.

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Cockatoo Editorial Team · In-house editorial team

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe · Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

When it comes to evaluating ASX-listed companies, most investors are familiar with the Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio. But in 2026, with volatile earnings and shifting business models, the Price-to-Sales (P/S) ratio is emerging as a crucial tool for Australians who want to see through the noise and spot genuine value. Let’s break down what the P/S ratio is, why it matters this year, and how you can use it to make sharper investment decisions.

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What is the Price-to-Sales (P/S) Ratio?

The P/S ratio is a simple calculation: take a company’s market capitalisation and divide it by its total sales (revenue) over the past year. Alternatively, on a per-share basis, it’s the share price divided by revenue per share. This metric tells you how much investors are paying for every dollar of a company’s sales, regardless of profitability.

Why use P/S over P/E? In sectors where earnings are patchy or companies are reinvesting heavily for growth—think tech, healthcare, or renewables—the P/S ratio can give a clearer snapshot than P/E, which is easily distorted by accounting quirks or one-off items.

Why the P/S Ratio Matters More in 2026

This year, Australian investors are facing a unique landscape:

  • Continued ASX volatility: Post-pandemic earnings swings and inflationary pressures have made profit figures unpredictable for many firms.

  • Tech and renewables in focus: With a surge in early-stage and high-growth companies, especially in clean energy and AI, many businesses are prioritising top-line growth over immediate profits.

  • Policy changes: The ATO’s 2026 update to tax treatment of R&D and digital asset investments has further impacted company earnings, making sales-based metrics more reliable for cross-sector comparisons.

For example, consider two ASX-listed battery technology firms. One posted a net loss due to heavy R&D, while the other scraped a small profit. The P/E ratio would punish the first, but the P/S ratio reveals both are valued similarly on their revenues—critical for long-term investors seeking growth stories rather than mature cash cows.

How to Use the P/S Ratio Wisely

The P/S ratio is best used as a comparative tool. Here’s how to get the most out of it in 2026:

  • Compare within sectors: A software company and a mining giant will naturally have different P/S baselines. Always line up companies operating in similar markets.

  • Look for outliers: An unusually high P/S can signal overvaluation or high growth expectations, while a low P/S might indicate a bargain—or trouble ahead. For instance, after the recent government push on AI investment grants, some small-cap ASX tech stocks now trade at P/S ratios above 15, far above the historical sector median of 6–8.

  • Don’t ignore profit trends: The P/S ratio ignores margins. A company with shrinking profits despite rising sales may not be as healthy as its P/S suggests. Cross-check with trends in operating margins and cash flow.

  • Factor in economic cycles: In a high-inflation or slow-growth environment, sales can be artificially inflated or deflated. 2026’s steady cash rate and moderate GDP growth (forecasted at 2.2% per the RBA’s May update) mean P/S ratios are less likely to be skewed by macro shocks than they were during the pandemic.

Real-world example: After the 2024–2026 federal budget, several ASX-listed healthcare firms benefitted from increased government spending, boosting their top-line revenues but not necessarily their profits. Investors using P/S ratios were able to spot which companies were growing their customer base versus those simply enjoying a temporary policy windfall.

Limitations and Pitfalls

No metric is perfect. The P/S ratio can overstate value for companies with razor-thin margins or those in declining industries. A low P/S might reflect fundamental problems, such as shrinking market share or poor management. It’s crucial to pair P/S analysis with other indicators—like return on equity, debt levels, and sector outlooks.

Watch for:

  • High sales, low profits: Retailers with aggressive discounting may have strong sales but razor-thin profits, leading to misleadingly attractive P/S ratios.

  • One-off revenue spikes: A big contract or asset sale can inflate annual sales figures, temporarily lowering the P/S ratio.

  • Sector disruption: Rapid regulatory or technological change (e.g., the 2026 AEMC energy market reforms) can upend sales forecasts and historical benchmarks.

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The Bottom Line: Add P/S to Your 2026 Toolkit

The Price-to-Sales ratio isn’t a crystal ball, but in the current Australian investing climate, it’s an invaluable tool for cutting through earnings volatility and identifying real growth opportunities. Whether you’re eyeing the next big ASX tech star or hunting for value in established sectors, make sure you’re considering how much you’re paying for each dollar of sales—not just profits. Combine P/S with other financial health checks, and you’ll be far better positioned to ride Australia’s market trends through 2026 and beyond.

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Cockatoo Editorial Team

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Reviewed by

Louis Blythe

Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

Reviews Cockatoo’s public explainers for accuracy, topical alignment, and consistency before they are surfaced as public educational content.

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