At 39.4x earnings despite gross margins hitting decade lows, this framework finds enthusiasm where arithmetic counsels caution.
This framework sees a business trading at 39.4x earnings with deteriorating margins, where Mr. Market's enthusiasm far exceeds the protection arithmetic provides.
What do you receive in earnings, assets, and dividends per dollar of price paid?
This framework finds the valuation demanding little margin for error. At 39.4x earnings, investors pay premium prices for a business showing negative operating leverage of -0.80. The 0.89% free cash flow yield offers minimal current return.
Does the earnings yield offer adequate premium over risk-free bonds?
The framework identifies extreme valuation risk with earnings yield 6.9x below treasuries. While 6.6% revenue growth exceeds the risk-free rate, the market's implied 2.43% perpetual growth suggests limited confidence in acceleration.
Does the company demonstrate consistent earnings over 7-10 years?
This framework notes concerning earnings volatility beneath the surface consistency. The Q1'23 collapse and recent negative operating leverage signal earnings quality deterioration that 84% beat rates cannot mask.
Does the price protect against permanent loss of capital?
Applying this lens reveals a complex picture. While trading below DCF value suggests potential upside, the framework emphasizes that margin deterioration and premium multiples provide limited downside protection despite the recent decline.
This framework suggests Verisk represents a case where Mr. Market's historical affection lingers despite fundamental deterioration. At 39.4x earnings with gross margins at decade lows and negative operating leverage, the arithmetic offers no protection. The 0.63% earnings yield demands growth the business increasingly struggles to deliver. Does a specialized data utility warrant premium multiples when its pricing power visibly erodes?
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.