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Midland States Bancorp . Depositary Shares Each Representing 1/ (MSBIP) P/E Chart

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Backtesting MSBIP

See how accurate our pivot points for MSBIP are by applying simple T/A rules (buy near support – target resistance) to past published articles. We update data in real time for members; public articles are published every ~10 days.

How (MSBIP) Movements Inform Risk Allocation Models

March 31, 2026

Trading Systems Reacting to (MSBIP) Volatility

March 20, 2026

How Midland States Bancorp Inc. Depositary Shares Each Representing A 1/40th Interest In A Share Of 7.750% Fixed-rate Reset Non-cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock (MSBIP) Affects Rotational Strategy Timing

March 09, 2026

(MSBIP) and the Role of Price-Sensitive Allocations

February 26, 2026

Responsive Playbooks and the MSBIP Inflection

February 15, 2026

Understanding the Setup: (MSBIP) and Scalable Risk

February 04, 2026

The Technical Signals Behind (MSBIP) That Institutions Follow

January 24, 2026

Precision Trading with Midland States Bancorp Inc. Depositary Shares Each Representing A 1/40th Interest In A Share Of 7.750% Fixed-rate Reset Non-cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock (MSBIP) Risk Zones

January 13, 2026

Technical Reactions to MSBIP Trends in Macro Strategies

January 02, 2026

Discipline and Rules-Based Execution in MSBIP Response

December 21, 2025

Behavioral Patterns of MSBIP and Institutional Flows

December 10, 2025

(MSBIP) Movement Within Algorithmic Entry Frameworks

November 29, 2025

How (MSBIP) Movements Inform Risk Allocation Models

November 18, 2025

Trading Systems Reacting to (MSBIP) Volatility

November 07, 2025

How Midland States Bancorp Inc. Depositary Shares Each Representing A 1/40th Interest In A Share Of 7.750% Fixed-rate Reset Non-cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock (MSBIP) Affects Rotational Strategy Timing

October 19, 2025

What is a PE Ratio?

The PE Ratio chart for Midland States Bancorp . Depositary Shares Each Representing 1/ (MSBIP) is a valuation observation.

A PE Ratio is a price to earnings ratio that has historically helped investors define fair value. This is often referred to as the multiple of a stock, and when groups, markets, or sectors are defined the multiples of all the stocks in those groups can be averaged to define average PE multiples as well.

Average PE multiples have been popularized in recent years because historical comparisons make current valuations look stretched. Instead of comparing historical averages, investors today use peer groups to compare PE multiples for individual companies because those stocks often trade in the higher PE spectrum that exists in today's environment.

However, the fact remains that a PE ratio reveals how much an investor is willing to pay for the earnings of a company at any given time. The higher the PE multiple the more expensive a company may be, but that is not always true. The PE ratio simply reveals how many times earnings an investor is willing to pay, or that a shareholder is willing to maintain. The PE Ratio alone does not reveal fair value.

Fair value is what someone is willing to pay, they say, and that is true, but in a time of free money and stimulus the willingness to pay more may also be skewed. Multiples can increase based on fabricated demand even if earnings growth does not warrant the higher valuation levels.

PE ratios still provide comps to peer groups, but they do not represent free market fair value anymore.

How is the Price to Earnings (PE) Ratio Calculated?

The PE Ratio = (Per Share Stock Price/EPS)

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