Charter's 73% discount to DCF fair value reflects -8.76% perpetual decline expectations for a business generating $17.6B annual FCF.
This framework suggests Charter exemplifies how market extremes create opportunity — when everyone agrees a business is dying, the price often compensates for risks that may never materialize.
Is the price above or below what the business is worth?
The framework sees a classic Marks setup — the market has priced in disaster (-8.76% perpetual decline) for a business generating $4.4B quarterly FCF. When DCF suggests 73% upside and earnings yield exceeds treasuries by 69bp, price has likely overshot to the downside.
Where are we in the cycle?
Multiple metrics at extremes simultaneously — margins at historic highs while valuation at historic lows. This framework recognizes the divergence: operational metrics suggest late cycle, but valuation metrics scream early cycle, creating the asymmetry Marks seeks.
Where is sentiment — at euphoria or despair?
The pendulum has swung far toward despair — insiders exodus, institutional retreat, analyst downgrades all suggest maximum pessimism. When analyst targets span a 3x range, confusion reigns, and confusion at low prices often precedes opportunity.
Is there dangerous consensus or healthy disagreement?
This framework values disagreement, and Charter has it in spades. The $340 spread in analyst targets and mixed institutional flows suggest the market hasn't decided Charter's fate — exactly when prices often undershoot.
Applying this framework reveals Charter as a textbook Marks opportunity — extreme pessimism (-8.76% implied decline) meeting stable reality ($4.4B quarterly FCF). The 69bp earnings yield premium to treasuries compensates for genuine risks while the pendulum at maximum despair creates asymmetry. When insiders sell $1.8B while investing 88.7% of cash flow in the network, which action speaks louder about the future?
This analysis applies Howard Marks's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Howard Marks. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.