At 31.6x P/E with 1.7% growth, Linde proves Lynch's warning about slow growers at fast grower prices.
Applying this lens, Linde is a classic slow grower trading at fast grower prices despite negative operating leverage destroying value.
What type of company is this and what should we expect?
This framework classifies Linde as a textbook slow grower — mature industrial business with single-digit growth and deteriorating operational efficiency. Lynch would expect dividend income and stability from this classification, not the 31.6x P/E multiple the market assigns.
Are we paying a fair price for the growth we're getting?
This framework sees a catastrophic mismatch — paying fast grower prices for slow grower performance. A PEG above 18 violates every principle Lynch taught about value, especially when operating leverage is negative.
Can you explain why it grows in one simple sentence?
The story is simple — "They make industrial gases that factories need" — but the growth isn't there. Lynch wants both clarity AND growth; Linde offers clarity without the growth numbers to back it up.
Are we early, middle, or late in the growth story?
This framework sees late innings — growth has decelerated, margin expansion opportunities are exhausted at record levels, and operational leverage has turned negative. The easy gains are behind this company.
Through this framework's lens, Linde exemplifies the danger Lynch warned about — a slow grower priced like a fast grower. At 31.6x earnings with 1.7% revenue growth and negative operating leverage, the math simply doesn't work. The industrial gas story is simple to understand, but simplicity without growth at premium prices is a recipe for disappointment. Why would anyone pay 31 times earnings for a company whose operating income falls as revenue rises?
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.