Net Lease Office Properties (NLOP) P/E Ratio History
Insufficient DataInsufficient historical P/E data to classify valuation. · Data 2026–2026
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P/E Ratio Analysis
As of June 28, 2026, Net Lease Office Properties (NLOP) trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of -1.2x, with a stock price of $11.36 and trailing twelve-month earnings per share of $-8.15.
Compared to the Real Estate sector median P/E of 25.2x, NLOP trades at a 105% discount to its sector peers. The sector includes 173 companies with P/E ratios ranging from 0.8x to 164.9x.
Relative to the broader market, NLOP trades at a notable discount to the S&P 500 median P/E of 25.3x. Investors should consider the company's growth prospects, competitive position, and earnings quality when evaluating whether the current valuation is justified.
For a comprehensive intrinsic value estimate using discounted cash flow analysis, see our NLOP DCF Valuation Calculator →
Note: P/E ratio is just one valuation metric. It does not account for balance sheet strength, cash flow quality, or growth sustainability. Always conduct comprehensive due diligence before making investment decisions.
NLOP Cross-Benchmark Valuation
How does the current P/E compare to sector peers and the broader market?
NLOP P/E vs Peers
Single-Tenant and Government Office REITs peers sorted by market cap
| Company | Market Cap | P/E Ratio | PEG Ratio | EPS Growth (1Y) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $16B | 35.0 | - | +1% | |
| $9B | 22.9 | 2.06 | -4% | |
| $7B | 23.9 | 1.00Best | +11% | |
| $9B | 43.5 | - | -1% | |
| $2B | 258.5 | 4.36 | +151% | |
| $3B | 23.5 | - | +2% | |
| $11B | 38.7 | - | +1833%Best | |
| $3B | 20.6Lowest | - | +54% | |
| $1B | 85.9 | - | -37% |
Lower P/E can signal a discount or weaker growth expectations; PEG adds growth context.
Intrinsic Valuation
DCF models, multiple analysis, and analyst estimates.
Historical Returns
10-year return with dividends reinvested.
DCA Calculator
See how regular investing compounds over time.
Peer Comparison
Compare growth, multiples, and margins vs sector.
NLOP — Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers to the most common questions about buying NLOP stock.
What is NLOP's P/E ratio?
Net Lease Office Properties (NLOP) trailing twelve-month P/E ratio is -1.2x, based on TTM diluted EPS of $-8.15. The 5-year average P/E is N/A and the historical range spans N/A to N/A.
Is NLOP stock overvalued or undervalued?
NLOP current P/E: -1.2x. 5-year average P/E: N/A. Percentile: N/A.
Is NLOP stock expensive?
NLOP is fairly valued relative to its own history. The current P/E of -1.2x is near the 5-year average of N/A (N/A percentile of historical range).
What is NLOP's historical P/E range?
Over the past 5 years, NLOP's P/E ratio has ranged from N/A to N/A, with a median of N/A and an average of N/A. The current P/E of -1.2x places the stock at the N/A percentile of this range. Full historical data spans 2026–2026.
How does NLOP's P/E compare to the S&P 500?
NLOP trades at -1.2x P/E versus the S&P 500 median of 25.3x. The 105% discount to the market suggests lower growth expectations or perceived higher risk.
How does NLOP's valuation compare to Real Estate peers?
Net Lease Office Properties P/E of -1.2x compares to the Real Estate sector median of 25.2x. The discount suggests lower growth expectations, weaker margins, or higher perceived risk relative to peers. See the peer comparison table on this page for ticker-by-ticker P/E and PEG.
What is NLOP's PEG ratio?
NLOP PEG ratio is N/A, based on a P/E of -1.2x and EPS growth of -58.7%. PEG normalises P/E by growth and helps compare stocks with different earnings trajectories.
What is NLOP's earnings yield?
NLOP earnings yield is N/A, the inverse of its -1.2x P/E ratio. Earnings yield represents the percentage of each dollar invested that the company earns. It can be compared directly to bond yields to assess relative attractiveness of stocks versus fixed income.