Trading at 558% above intrinsic value with 0.66% earnings yield, this exemplifies speculation Graham spent his career warning against.
This framework sees a business trading at 3,805x earnings while burning cash for growth — the antithesis of Graham's margin of safety principle.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
This framework finds no margin of safety whatsoever. At 558% above intrinsic value, the price demands heroic assumptions about future growth that history suggests few companies achieve. Even a return to median valuations would require a catastrophic price adjustment.
Does the earnings yield justify equity risk over bonds?
Applying this lens reveals an extreme misalignment — investors accept 0.66% earnings yield while treasuries offer 4.33% risk-free. Even assuming growth closes this gap, the dilution from stock compensation erodes the benefit. This framework sees no rational justification for accepting such inferior yield.
Has the company demonstrated consistent earnings over 7-10 years?
This framework finds a troubling pattern — revenue grows explosively while profitability evaporates. The consistent beat rate suggests management skill at expectations management, but the decade-long margin compression violates Graham's preference for demonstrated earning power.
What do you receive per dollar of price paid?
Through this lens, investors receive almost nothing tangible for their investment dollar. The arithmetic is stark — at 3,805x earnings, it would take millennia to recoup the investment through earnings alone. This framework sees speculation, not investment.
This framework sees everything Graham warned against — extreme valuation multiples, negative earnings yield spread, deteriorating margins, and increasing leverage. The 33.5% revenue growth cannot overcome the mathematical reality that at 3,805x earnings, the margin of safety is not merely absent but inverted. Mr. Market's euphoria has created prices that assume perfection in perpetuity. Would Graham touch a security yielding 0.66% when treasuries offer 4.33% with no risk?
This analysis applies Benjamin Graham's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Benjamin Graham. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.