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Reading: After an 18% fall, is Rolls-Royce’s share price now just too cheap for me to ignore?
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Viral Trending content > Blog > Business > After an 18% fall, is Rolls-Royce’s share price now just too cheap for me to ignore?
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After an 18% fall, is Rolls-Royce’s share price now just too cheap for me to ignore?

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<p>Image source: Getty Images</p>

Rolls-Royce’s (LSE: RR) share price has tumbled 18% from its 19 March one-year traded high of £8.18. Much of this fall followed US President Donald Trump’s 2 April rollout of 10% tariffs on UK imports into the country.

Contents
How will the tariffs affect the firm?Was the business in good shape before?So how does the share valuation look?

Higher tariffs will be applied on goods from around 60 countries and/or trading blocs claimed to show a high trade deficit with the US. These include China (now 104%) and the European Union (20%).

My key question when a stock has fallen in such circumstances is whether it is worth me buying on the dip. So I took a deep dive into the business and ran the key numbers to find out if it is.

How will the tariffs affect the firm?

I think it critical here to clarify that the Rolls-Royce shares quoted in the FTSE 100 relate to the firm’s aerospace, defence, and power systems businesses. So these are subject to the standard 10% tariff applied to the UK.

Since the licensing of the name rights in 1998, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars is unconnected to the UK-listed firm. It is a subsidiary of BMW (and in this context, all automobiles are now subject to 25% tariffs when imported into the US).

That said, the US tariffs on the listed Rolls-Royce business are a risk for its share value over time. This is broadly derived from the earnings a company is expected to generate in the future.

The company has significant operations in 27 US states, which provides it with additional supply and production capacity in-country. Rolls-Royce stated recently that it will use this: “To ensure our global internal supply chain is optimised for delivery to customers in the US”.

Was the business in good shape before?

I think broadly that the stronger a business was at the onset of the tariffs, the better positioned it is to handle them effectively.

In Rolls-Royce’s case, it looked very strong to me, with revenue rising 16% year on year to £17.848bn. Operating profit leapt 55% to £2.464bn over the same period, and free cash flow soared 89% to £2.425bn.

At that point, the firm forecast a 2025 underlying operating profit of £2.7bn-£2.9bn. It also projected free cash flow of the same £2.7bn-£2.9bn in the year.

These strong numbers enabled it to announce a £1bn share buyback this year, with buybacks tending to support stock prices.

As of now – with the tariffs news included – analysts forecast its earnings will grow 3.2% annually to end-2027.

So how does the share valuation look?

Rolls-Royce looks cheap on the key price-to-earnings ratio at 22.6 against a competitor average of 29.2. These comprise Northrup Grumman at 17, BAE Systems at 24, RTX at 33.7, and TransDigm at 42.

The same is true of its price-to-sales ratio of 3 compared to its peer group average of 3.5.

I ran a discounted cash flow analysis to nail down what this means in share price terms. The results show that Rolls-Royce stock is 49% undervalued at its current £6.72 price.

Therefore, the fair value for it is technically £13.18, although share prices can go down as well as up.

I think there is just too much value in the stock for me to ignore now, so I will buy it very shortly.

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