A 1.37% earnings yield loses to 4.33% treasuries by 296 basis points, despite 41.3% operating margins.
This framework sees a company trading at 18.3x earnings with fortress-like fundamentals, but where Mr. Market demands growth perfection while the earnings yield falls 296 basis points below treasuries.
Does the stock offer a meaningful premium over bonds to justify equity risk?
The negative spread reflects market-wide conditions where treasuries above 4% make most growth equities appear expensive. Meta's 22.2% revenue growth suggests the earnings yield will improve as earnings compound, unlike a fixed bond coupon.
Can the balance sheet survive a prolonged downturn?
Despite the unprecedented leverage increase, the balance sheet remains a fortress. The $81.6B cash position and $115.8B operating cash flow provide multiple years of runway even if advertising revenues collapsed.
Has the company demonstrated consistent earnings over many years?
The earnings record shows exceptional consistency with only 5.1% of quarters missing estimates. This stability, combined with sustained high margins and growth, demonstrates the predictable earnings Graham valued.
Does the price protect from permanent loss of capital?
The P/E appears reasonable at historical lows, but the DCF gap suggests limited margin of safety. The market's implied growth rate of 6.28% provides some downside protection if growth merely decelerates rather than collapses.
Applying this framework reveals a paradox: Meta possesses the fortress balance sheet and earnings consistency Graham demanded, yet trades at a valuation offering no margin of safety. The 296 basis point gap to treasuries reflects not weakness but market faith in continued growth. The framework suggests waiting for Mr. Market to offer a price that protects capital. At what earnings yield would growth no longer need to save the investment?
This analysis applies Benjamin Graham's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Benjamin Graham. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.