Printing and Publishing Companies By Ps Ratio

Price To Sales
Price To SalesEfficiencyMarket RiskExp Return
1TRI Thomson Reuters
10.68
 0.09 
 1.26 
 0.11 
2RELX Relx PLC ADR
9.82
 0.13 
 1.23 
 0.16 
3DJCO Daily Journal Corp
7.83
(0.20)
 2.58 
(0.53)
4NYT New York Times
3.14
(0.05)
 1.91 
(0.10)
5PSO Pearson PLC ADR
2.98
 0.00 
 1.53 
 0.00 
6SOBR Sobr Safe
2.96
(0.08)
 10.08 
(0.85)
7AXR AMREP
1.82
(0.19)
 3.44 
(0.66)
8NWSA News Corp A
1.58
 0.00 
 1.25 
(0.01)
9NWS News Corp B
1.58
 0.01 
 1.33 
 0.01 
10WLY John Wiley Sons
1.41
 0.01 
 2.68 
 0.04 
11WLYB John Wiley Sons
1.4
 0.02 
 3.74 
 0.09 
12WBTN WEBTOON Entertainment Common
1.24
(0.18)
 3.67 
(0.68)
13VSME VS Media Holdings
0.54
 0.02 
 7.39 
 0.15 
14DLX Deluxe
0.34
(0.22)
 2.31 
(0.51)
15SCHL Scholastic
0.32
(0.04)
 3.46 
(0.13)
16ACCO Acco Brands
0.25
(0.07)
 2.99 
(0.22)
17DALN Dallasnews Corp
0.23
(0.14)
 3.63 
(0.50)
18GCI Gannett Co
0.18
(0.25)
 2.94 
(0.75)
19LEE Lee Enterprises Incorporated
0.11
(0.13)
 4.16 
(0.54)
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.
Price to Sales ratio is typically used for valuing equity relative to its own past performance as well as to performance of other companies or market indexes. In most cases, the lower the ratio, the better it is for investors. However, it is advisable for investors to exercise caution when looking at price-to-sales ratios across different industries. The most critical factor to remember is that the price of equity takes a firm's debt into account, whereas the sales indicators do not consider financial leverage. Generally speaking, Price to Sales ratio shows how much market values every dollar of the company's sales.