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Can ASOS plc Regain Its Past Highs?

ASOS plc (LON: ASC) shares have crashed from more than £70 to under £20. Can they claw their way back?

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ASOSShares in online fashion darling ASOS (LSE: ASC) soared as high as £71.95 at the end of February, but a series of profit warnings has seen the price crash all the way down to £19.56 today — that’s a 73% loss in less than seven months!

I’ve opined previously that the slump was inevitable — but the question now is whether ASOS shares can regain the heady heights of early 2014.

Should you buy Asos Plc shares today?

Before you decide, please take a moment to review this report first. Despite ongoing uncertainties from US tariffs to global conflicts, Mark Rogers and his team believe many UK shares still trade at substantial discounts, offering savvy investors plenty of potential opportunities to learn about.

That’s why this could be an ideal time to secure this valuable research – Mark’s analysts have scoured the markets to reveal 5 of his favourite long-term ‘Buys’. Please, don’t make any big decisions before seeing them.

I reckon it’s a big No — at least not any time soon.

Growth paused

ASOS has been valued as a big growth stock, but has had to seriously downgrade its expectations for the current year. It now looks like we’re on for a fall in earnings per share (EPS) this year of around 19%, followed by a flat 2015. If you’re looking for a textbook example of the kind of thing that bursts a growth bubble, you’ve got it right there.

Even after the share price crunch, ASOS shares are still on a forward P/E of 49!

Will ASOS get back to growth after a period of price-wars and technology investment? It surely will. But the 30% to 40% per year and more that the company has been enjoying is surely at an end.

What would it take to get ASOS’s forward P/E of 49 down to something more realistic?

Seven years?

While it remains a growth share, ASOS should be on a higher P/E than the market average of around 14 — and even if it’s worth a P/E of around, say, 30 or so over the next couple of years, that must come down as markets become more mature and growth slows. So in the medium term, let’s put a rational P/E on ASOS of 25, purely for the sake of my “What if?” guesswork.

Should ASOS manage annual growth of 20% starting in 2016, which I think would be optimistic over the long term, it would take until 2019 to get its P/E down under 25 — and a five-year-out P/E of 25 sounds a bit stretching to me.

And if ASOS only managed to average 10% EPS growth per year, the P/E would not drop below 25 until 2022 — with no share price growth for seven years!

Back to £72?

But this is all based on the current share price, so what would be needed to get it back up to February’s peak of £71.95? Well, even if ASOS can manage a steady 20% growth per year over the longer term, on the same P/E basis we won’t see £70 per share being justified until 2026!

And how long at 10% per year before we’d see a £70 share price on the same criteria? Wait for it… not until 2036!

And don’t forget, at the end of it all, the shares would still be priced on a growth-rated P/E of 25.

Alan Oscroft has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK owns shares in ASOS. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

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