At 61x earnings with 10% growth, Airbnb's PEG of 6 would make Lynch look elsewhere — especially with 20 quarters of insider selling.
Applying this framework reveals a business with a crystal-clear story trading at prices that make no mathematical sense.
Can you explain to an eleven-year-old why this company grows?
The story is beautifully simple: Airbnb turns empty rooms into hotels without owning a single property. Every new host creates more choices for guests, every new guest creates more demand for hosts — a self-reinforcing cycle that prints 38% free cash flow margins.
Does the P/E ratio equal the growth rate?
With a P/E of 61 against 10% growth, the PEG ratio approaches 6 — paying six times what Lynch considers fair value. This framework sees a wonderful business priced for a different planet where treasury yields don't exist.
Are insiders buying with their own money?
Twenty straight quarters of selling is not noise — it's a parade. While the company spent $3.8B on buybacks in 2025, insiders took $2.8B off the table, creating the ultimate signal that those who know most see better opportunities elsewhere.
Are we in the beginning, middle, or end of the growth story?
This framework sees late innings — the explosive recovery phase is over, growth has normalized to stalwart levels, and the market has learned to expect and price in perfection. The easy money was made two years ago.
Applying this framework reveals the classic Lynch dilemma: a business so good it becomes a bad investment at any price. Airbnb's story is perfect — turn empty space into cash with no capital required. But at 61 times earnings with insiders sprinting for the exits, this framework suggests waiting for reality to reassert itself. Would you rather own treasury bills at 4.33% or Airbnb at 0.41% earnings yield?
This analysis applies Peter Lynch's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Peter Lynch. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.