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If you are wondering whether Sphere Entertainment is still worth a closer look after its recent run, or if the price has moved ahead of the story, this article will walk you through what the current share price might be saying about value.
The stock last closed at US$115.70, with reported returns of 21.9% over 7 days, 20.1% over 30 days, 22.7% year to date, 140.0% over 1 year and 307.7% over 3 years. This naturally raises questions about how much of the company’s potential is already reflected in the price.
Recent headlines have focused on Sphere Entertainment’s development of its immersive venue concept and the broader attention that the company’s flagship project has attracted among investors and media. At the same time, coverage has highlighted how this high profile exposure has sharpened the market’s focus on what a reasonable long term valuation might look like for the business.
Simply Wall St’s valuation model currently gives Sphere Entertainment a score of 2 out of 6, which means it screens as undervalued on 2 of the 6 checks that are applied. Next, we will look at how different valuation approaches line up, before finishing with a way of assessing value that many investors find even more useful than the usual ratios.
Sphere Entertainment scores just 2/6 on our valuation checks. See what other red flags we found in the full valuation breakdown.
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A Discounted Cash Flow, or DCF, model estimates what a company might be worth today by projecting its future cash flows and then discounting those back to the present.
For Sphere Entertainment, the model used is a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach, based on cash flow projections in $. The latest twelve month free cash flow is a loss of $136.4 million, so the valuation leans heavily on future expectations rather than recent cash generation.
Analyst and model projections suggest free cash flow of $229.95 million in 2026 and $432 million by 2030. Values between these years and beyond 2030 are extrapolated by Simply Wall St rather than directly provided by analysts. These projected cash flows are then discounted back to today using the DCF framework to arrive at an estimated intrinsic value of about $201.12 per share.
Compared with the recent share price of $115.70, this output indicates that, under this model, the stock appears to be about 42.5% undervalued.
For profitable companies, the P/E ratio is a useful way to think about what you are paying for each dollar of current earnings. It connects directly to what the business is already generating today, rather than only what forecasts might suggest.
What counts as a “normal” P/E depends on how quickly earnings are expected to grow and how risky those earnings appear. Higher expected growth or lower perceived risk usually support a higher P/E, while slower growth or higher risk tend to point to a lower one.
Sphere Entertainment currently trades on a P/E of 122.96x. That sits well above the Entertainment industry average of 32.74x and the peer group average of 68.76x, which may raise questions about how much optimism is already embedded in the price.
Simply Wall St’s Fair Ratio is a proprietary estimate of what the P/E “should” be, given factors such as earnings growth, industry, profit margins, market cap and company specific risks. Because it blends these fundamentals, it can be more informative than a simple comparison against peers or the industry alone.
Sphere Entertainment’s Fair Ratio is 5.59x, which is far below the current P/E of 122.96x, indicating that the shares look expensive on this metric.
Earlier we mentioned that there is an even better way to think about valuation, and that is where Narratives come in. Narratives let you tell a clear story about Sphere Entertainment by linking your assumptions for future revenue, earnings and margins to a forecast and a fair value. You can then compare that to today’s price using Simply Wall St’s Community page, where millions of investors share Narratives that update as new news or earnings arrive. For Sphere Entertainment, one investor might build a cautious Narrative that lines up with the lowest analyst fair value around US$57.75, while another might lean into a more optimistic Narrative closer to the higher fair value near US$103.90. Both can immediately see whether their own fair value suggests the stock looks expensive or cheap relative to the current price.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.