At 46.4% above intrinsic value with 0.82% earnings yield, even exceptional execution cannot overcome arithmetic this unfavorable.
A magnificent business trading at 37 times its intrinsic value demands heroic growth assumptions that no prudent investor should make.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
The price offers negative margin of safety — you pay $1.46 for each dollar of intrinsic value. This framework requires buying below intrinsic value, not at a 46% premium. Even exceptional businesses become poor investments at excessive prices.
Does this equity compensate for the additional risk over bonds?
An investor accepts 81% less yield than risk-free treasuries while taking equity risk. The market's implied 2.73% growth rate suggests even optimistic buyers expect deceleration. This violates Graham's requirement for equity premium over bonds.
Has the company demonstrated consistent profitability over many years?
The earnings record demonstrates exceptional consistency with nearly 90% beat rate over a decade. Recovery from COVID's 81.1% revenue decline to new highs proves earning power. This framework values such demonstrated resilience.
Can the balance sheet survive prolonged adversity?
The balance sheet appears insolvent with negative equity from aggressive buybacks, yet generates $9.1B annual free cash flow. This framework prefers traditional balance sheet strength — negative equity violates conservative principles regardless of cash generation.
What do I receive in earnings and assets per dollar of price?
The valuation metrics uniformly indicate premium pricing — you receive minimal earnings per dollar invested. At 30x earnings and 123x free cash flow, the price demands perfection. Graham sought bargains; this is the opposite.
Applying this framework reveals a superb business — 32% margins, $9.1B free cash flow, proven resilience — trading at a price that eliminates any margin of safety. At 30x earnings yielding 0.82% versus 4.33% treasuries, the arithmetic offers no protection. Graham would admire the business but abhor the price. What catastrophe must occur for this price to offer value?
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.