Revenue growing 16.4% with PEG at 0.92 — Lynch finds a stalwart masquerading as a slow grower.
Lynch sees a stalwart growing like a fast grower but priced like a slow grower — the market completely misunderstands what Paychex has become.
Is this a fast grower, stalwart, slow grower, cyclical, turnaround, or asset play?
Lynch would classify this as a stalwart transitioning toward fast grower territory. The 16.4% revenue growth with expanding margins shows a mature business finding new acceleration — exactly what Lynch loved to discover before the market noticed.
Am I paying a fair price for the growth I'm getting?
Lynch is paying less than $1 for every $1 of growth — his favorite setup. The PEG below 1.0 with sustainable revenue growth from recurring payroll services creates what Lynch called "the perfect stalwart opportunity."
Can I explain to an eleven-year-old in two minutes why this company grows?
Lynch loves simple stories and this one writes itself: small businesses outsource payroll headaches to Paychex, who raises prices with inflation. The counter-cyclical pattern where revenue grows during economic stress makes the growth story even clearer — when times get tough, businesses need help more than ever.
Can this company survive trouble?
Lynch sees a shift from fortress balance sheet to leveraged capital structure, but with 43.8% operating margins generating strong cash flow, the debt serves growth rather than survival. Not Lynch's ideal clean balance sheet, but serviceable for a cash-generative stalwart.
Applying Lynch's framework reveals a stalwart growing like a fast grower but priced like a slow grower — exactly the misclassification Lynch exploited throughout his career. The PEG below 1.0 with a simple growth story ("handles payroll for small businesses") and sustainable 16.4% growth checks every Lynch box except insider buying. Lynch would see the 15x P/E on 43.8% margins as the market making a classification error. Is the market wrong about what Paychex has become, or do insiders know something about what it's becoming?
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.