Earnings yield of 0.97% versus 4.33% treasuries while margins collapse to 9.1% — the arithmetic of speculation, not investment.
A regulated utility trading at 25.7x earnings with collapsing margins and record leverage violates every principle of conservative investing.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
Applying this lens, the 57% discount to DCF appears attractive until you examine why: the market prices in negative growth for valid reasons. At 25.7x earnings and 64.5x EBITDA, there is no margin of safety — the price demands perfection from a company showing fundamental deterioration.
Can this company survive a prolonged downturn?
This framework sees a balance sheet under extreme stress. Net debt at 29.4x EBITDA represents dangerous leverage for any business, let alone a regulated utility. The company operates with negative free cash flow due to massive capital requirements, creating a precarious financial position.
Has this company demonstrated consistent earnings over many years?
The earnings record shows severe deterioration. While the company remains profitable, the collapse in margins from 28.9% to 9.1% represents a fundamental breakdown in earnings quality. This framework demands demonstrated stability — AEP shows the opposite.
Does this stock offer adequate compensation versus risk-free alternatives?
Applying this framework's lens, AEP fails catastrophically. An earnings yield of 0.97% versus 4.33% treasuries means accepting 3.36% less return with equity risk. The collapsing margins suggest earnings yield will worsen, not improve, making bonds vastly superior.
This framework finds AEP emblematic of modern market excess — a utility with monopoly assets trading at growth multiples while margins collapse and leverage explodes. The 57% discount to DCF means nothing when the DCF itself assumes unsustainable conditions. Graham survived 1929 by avoiding precisely such situations where reasonable assets trade at unreasonable prices. Why would conservative investors accept 0.97% earnings yield from a deteriorating utility when treasuries offer 4.33% risk-free?
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.