Operating margins at 10.8% hit decade lows while free cash flow yield reached 5.0% decade highs—the pendulum overshot.
Zero revenue growth with margins plunging 480bp to 10.8% - Lynch would classify this slow grower and move on.
What does this company do and how does it make money?
Comcast operates as a connectivity-first company despite its media diversification narrative, with residential broadband and cable driving over half of revenue. The 3472 Herfindahl index reveals concentration risk that NBCUniversal's content and theme parks haven't meaningfully offset.
Five legendary investment frameworks analyzed this company.
Marks sees Comcast's 5.0% FCF yield as a 'classic pendulum overshoot' while Lynch calls it a 'slow grower in decline'—the same $5.1B quarterly cash flow means opposite things to different legends. Tap any framework below to explore their complete analysis and discover where they see opportunity or risk.
How much cash does it generate and where does it go?
Comcast generates substantial cash ($8.8B quarterly OCF) but allocates it poorly, with buybacks destroying $16.8B in shareholder value. The consistent 42% infrastructure spend reveals the capital-intensive reality beneath the content narrative.
Is the business getting stronger or weaker?
The business is deteriorating rapidly with margins compressing 480 basis points in a single year while revenue grows modestly. The -8.6x operating leverage reveals severe competitive pressure where growth comes at the direct expense of profitability.
What could go wrong and has it survived trouble before?
Management's net selling while institutions accumulate reveals internal concern about competitive pressures. The 3.1x interest coverage at historical lows combines with high revenue concentration to create vulnerability to any disruption in the core cable business.
Operating leverage of -8.6x in Q4'25 means every dollar of revenue growth destroys $8.60 of operating income.
Is the stock priced for perfection, fair value, or pessimism?
The market prices in structural decline with a -13.4% implied growth rate, creating the widest gap between fundamentals and valuation in a decade. Even consistent earnings beats trigger selloffs, indicating the market expects deterioration regardless of reported results.
Analysis applies published investment frameworks to publicly available financial data. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.