Using the PEG framework with analyst consensus forward EPS growth of 25.0% plus 3.5% dividend yield, Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. has a fair value of $156.67 based on NTM EPS (FY2026) of $6.27. The current PEG ratio is 0.09.
PEG < 1 = bargain, 1–1.5 = fair, > 2 = expensive.
Growth above 25% is capped — hypergrowth may not be sustainable long-term.
| EPS Growth RateForward | 78.6% |
| Dividend Yield | +3.5% |
| Adjusted Growth (clamped 8–25%)Clamped | 25.0% |
| Fair P/E | 25.0x |
| NTM EPS (FY2026) | $6.27 |
| Fair Value | $156.67 |
| Period | EPS Est. | Growth | Analysts |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY2025 (actual) | $0.75 | — | — |
| FY2026E | $6.27 | +735.6% | 16 |
| FY2027E | $6.88 | +9.8% | 16 |
| FY2028E | $7.58 | +10.2% | 8 |
| FY2029E | $7.63 | +0.6% | 7 |
4Y Forward EPS CAGR: 78.6%
| Year | Net Income | EPS | YoY |
|---|
The PEG Fair Value uses the Price/Earnings-to-Growth framework. A stock is fairly valued when its P/E ratio equals its earnings growth rate (PEG = 1.0). This model adds dividend yield to the growth rate per the original PEGY formula.
Growth rate priority: analyst consensus forward EPS CAGR (when ≥ 3 analysts cover the stock), falling back to historical EPS CAGR. Using EPS rather than net income avoids distortion from share buybacks. The growth rate is clamped between 8% and 25% — below 8% would undervalue stable earners, while above 25% would overvalue unsustainable spikes.
| FY2021 | $417.0M | $0.67 | — |
| FY2022 | $-16.7B | $-27.68 | -4222.4% |
| FY2023 | $-6.7B | $-11.26 | — |
| FY2024 | $1.4B | $1.42 | — |
| FY2025 | $382.0M | $0.75 | -47.2% |
4Y Historical EPS CAGR: 2.8%