At 720 times earnings with insiders selling for 11 straight quarters, even a fortress can be overpriced.
This framework sees a business with fortress-like gross margins trading at 720 times earnings, where insiders have been net sellers for 11 consecutive quarters.
Does this business have an enduring competitive advantage?
This framework suggests CrowdStrike possesses a strong moat evidenced by stable 76%+ gross margins and high switching costs from 97% retention. The consistent margin profile through multiple quarters indicates pricing power remains intact.
If you bought this entire business today, would what it earns justify what you paid?
Applying this lens reveals extreme overvaluation — a 0.035% earnings yield offers no margin of safety for a permanent owner. Even assuming continued strong growth, the math suggests paying 720 times earnings provides virtually no return relative to risk-free alternatives.
Are managers treating shareholders as partners?
This framework finds concerning stewardship signals — management generates record cash flows while consistently reducing personal exposure. The 11-quarter selling streak suggests insiders see better opportunities for their capital elsewhere.
How much cash does this business generate for its owners?
Through this lens, CrowdStrike generates substantial owner earnings with FCF nearly 10x reported income. However, the 21% SBC burden means significant dilution accompanies the cash generation, reducing per-share value creation.
Applying this framework reveals a paradox: CrowdStrike operates a high-quality business with fortress-like margins and strong cash generation in an industry with exceptional economics, yet trades at a valuation that offers virtually no return to a permanent owner. The 720x earnings multiple and 0.035% yield against 4.33% treasuries, combined with 11 quarters of insider selling, suggests even excellent businesses can become poor investments at extreme prices. Would you buy a savings account yielding 0.035% when treasuries offer 4.33%?
This analysis applies Warren Buffett's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Warren Buffett. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.