Drug Manufacturers - General · NYSE
Current Price
$258.51
PE Ratio (TTM)
29.8x
Intrinsic Value
$302.92
+14.7% margin of safety
As of 2026-06-29, applying a 30.0x earnings multiple to Johnson & Johnson's (JNJ) earnings per share of $8.6 yields a fair value estimate of $302.92 per share, versus a market price of $258.51.
Fair value from earnings multiples is sensitive to the multiple you choose. Across the sensitivity grid the estimate spans $254.18 to $358.21. This is a relative estimate anchored to earnings, not a statement of fact. For a cash flow based view, see the intrinsic value estimate on the DCF page.
How our PE model works · Recalculate in PE mode · JNJ intrinsic value (DCF view)
At $258.51, JNJ trades about 14.7% below its PE-based fair value estimate, a modest discount to its earnings power, though not enough for us to call it cheap outright.
COMPETITIVE MOAT
↑Global Pharmaceutical Scale
J&J's vast global reach and extensive R&D pipeline allow for significant market penetration and the development of blockbuster drugs. This scale creates high barriers to entry for competitors.
↑Diversified Healthcare Portfolio
Beyond pharmaceuticals, J&J's presence in MedTech and consumer health provides revenue stability and cross-selling opportunities. This diversification mitigates risks associated with any single segment.
↑Brand Trust and Reputation
Decades of delivering trusted healthcare products have built immense brand equity. This consumer and physician loyalty translates into sustained demand and pricing power.
INVESTMENT RISKS
↓Patent Expirations
Loss of exclusivity on key drugs like Stelara will lead to significant revenue erosion from generic competition. J&J must continuously innovate to replace these lost sales.
↓Ongoing Litigation
While recent talc lawsuit wins are positive, the persistent threat of large legal settlements and reputational damage remains. Future adverse rulings could impact financial stability.
↓Geopolitical and Regulatory Pressures
Increased scrutiny and pricing pressures in markets like China, coupled with evolving global regulations, can impact J&J's growth trajectory and profitability.
Base case
Intrinsic Value
$302.92
Margin of safety
+14.7%
Expected annual return
+3.2%
Base case assumptions: 10.1% annual earnings growth, 30x target PE, 10% discount rate, 5 year projection. Data as of 2026-06-29.
This base case uses default assumptions and is not financial advice. The fair value changes significantly when the target PE or earnings growth rate changes. Open the calculator to set your own assumptions and see the full sensitivity range.
Adjust the target PE, earnings growth, and discount rate to see how the fair value and margin of safety for Johnson & Johnson respond.
Open PE Calculator for JNJJohnson & Johnson is a holding company, which engages in the research, development, manufacture, and sale of products in the healthcare field. It operates through the Innovative Medicine and MedTech segments. The Innovative Medicine segment focuses on immunology, infectious diseases, neuroscience, oncology, cardiovascular and metabolism, and pulmonary hypertension. The MedTech segment includes a portfolio of products used in interventional solutions, orthopaedics, surgery, and vision categories. The company was founded by Robert Wood Johnson I, James Wood Johnson, and Edward Mead Johnson Sr. in 1887 and is headquartered in New Brunswick, NJ.
PE Ratio (TTM)
29.8x
PEG Ratio
n/m
Earnings Yield
3.33%
ROE (TTM)
26.3%
Revenue/Share (TTM)
$39.41
Dividend Yield
2.03%
Debt/Equity
0.68x
The trailing twelve-month PE ratio of JNJ reflects how much investors pay per dollar of Johnson & Johnson's earnings. This metric is most useful when compared to Drug Manufacturers - General peers and the company's own historical range.
JNJ's PE of 29.8x combined with a PEG ratio of -6.76 provides a growth-adjusted perspective. JNJ has negative earnings, so its PE and PEG ratios are not meaningful here and cannot tell you whether the stock is over or undervalued. Keep in mind that PE-based valuation works best for profitable, mature companies — for high-growth or cyclical Drug Manufacturers - General, a DCF analysis may be more appropriate.
To value Johnson & Johnson using PE: (1) Compare the current PE (29.8x) against the Drug Manufacturers - General median to assess relative pricing, (2) check the PEG ratio (-6.76) to adjust for growth expectations, (3) review the 5-year PE range to identify where the stock sits historically, and (4) estimate fair value by multiplying a target PE by forward EPS estimates. This relative approach complements DCF's absolute valuation.
JNJ's PEG ratio is -6.76, calculated by dividing the PE ratio (29.8x) by the expected earnings growth rate. Because JNJ has negative earnings, its PEG ratio is not meaningful and should not be read as a sign of under or overvaluation. Note that PEG accuracy depends on the reliability of growth estimates.
PE ratio gives a quick relative read — how JNJ is priced versus Drug Manufacturers - General peers. DCF provides an absolute value based on projected free cash flows. For JNJ, with a strong ROE of 26.3%, both methods are worth using — PE for a market-relative check, DCF to stress-test whether fundamentals justify the price. Each method has blind spots: PE ignores capital structure and cash flow quality, while DCF is sensitive to growth and discount rate assumptions.
P/E and DCF value JNJ with different methods and assumptions, so the two conclusions can differ. Compare the DCF intrinsic value.
Price as of 2026-06-29. Financial data from Financial Modeling Prep (trailing twelve months) · Valuation methodology by Charlie Wang.
This is an estimate, not investment advice.