At 1.07% earnings yield versus 4.33% treasuries, Microsoft costs investors 326 basis points annually to own excellence.
This framework sees a magnificent business trading at a dangerous price — 47.3% margins cannot justify 1.07% earnings yield against 4.33% treasuries.
Does the earnings yield offer adequate compensation for equity risk?
The framework finds the risk-reward deeply unfavorable. A 1.07% earnings yield demands that Microsoft's growth accelerate dramatically just to match treasuries over time. While 16.7% trailing growth suggests this is possible, the 83.6% capex intensity raises questions about sustainable free cash flow yields.
Does the price protect against permanent loss of capital?
This framework finds no margin of safety. The price exceeds intrinsic value by 14.3%, and while the 31.7% decline improves the risk profile, paying above fair value for even the highest quality business violates Graham's first principle.
Has the business demonstrated consistent earnings power over many years?
The framework recognizes exceptional earnings consistency. A 97.4% beat rate over 39 quarters demonstrates remarkable predictability, while margin expansion during heavy investment periods shows true competitive advantage.
Can the balance sheet withstand prolonged adversity?
The framework sees adequate but not fortress-like strength. While metrics appear solid, the 83.6% of operating cash flow consumed by capex leaves less cushion than Graham preferred. The negative cash conversion cycle provides operational flexibility.
Is Mr. Market creating opportunity through irrational pessimism or danger through euphoria?
Mr. Market has priced in perfection — beats are expected and produce no reaction while any stumble is seen as a buying opportunity. This asymmetric response pattern signals dangerous complacency rather than healthy skepticism.
Applying this framework reveals a paradox: Microsoft exhibits Graham's ideal business characteristics — predictable earnings, fortress balance sheet, proven resilience — yet trades at precisely the valuations Graham warned against. The 1.07% earnings yield against 4.33% treasuries means investors pay 326 basis points annually for the privilege of owning this excellence. While the business quality is undeniable, Graham would ask: at what price does even the finest business become a poor 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.