8.7% revenue growth commanding a 4.6 PEG ratio while insiders sell $440 million—stalwart excellence at fast-grower prices.
A perfect stalwart executing flawlessly at the worst possible price—when boring becomes expensive, even Lynch would look elsewhere.
Is this a fast grower, stalwart, slow grower, cyclical, turnaround, or asset play?
This framework sees a textbook stalwart—large, profitable, growing steadily at 8-9% with exceptional execution. The uniform rental business provides the predictable, recurring revenue Lynch appreciates in stalwarts, while inflation correlation adds a defensive edge.
Is the P/E ratio reasonable relative to the growth rate?
Applying this lens reveals a stalwart priced like a fast grower. A PEG of 4.6 violates Lynch's fundamental rule—you're paying over four times what the growth justifies. Even with operational excellence, this valuation assumes perfection forever.
Are insiders buying with their own money?
This framework reads the insider selling as a clear signal—those who know the business best are cashing out at these valuations. Lynch teaches that insiders sell for many reasons but buy for only one, and here they're emphatically not buying.
Can you explain in one sentence why this company grows?
This framework appreciates the simplicity—everyone understands dirty uniforms need cleaning. The defensive characteristics (thriving when consumer sentiment falls) and inflation protection make this a Lynch-style "buy during recession" story, though current pricing negates that appeal.
This framework sees a wonderfully boring business—uniform rental with pricing power—executed to near perfection but priced for excitement it can't deliver. Lynch would admire the simplicity and consistency but balk at paying 40 times earnings for 8.7% growth. The insider selling confirms what the numbers suggest: even excellent stalwarts have price limits. At what price does boring become beautiful again?
This analysis applies Peter Lynch's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Peter Lynch. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.