Applied Materials earns a 0.8% yield on its 31x P/E while treasuries pay 4.33% — wonderful business, speculative price.
At 0.8% earnings yield versus 4.33% treasuries, Applied Materials asks investors to pay 353 basis points for cyclical risk.
What does this company do and how does it make money?
Applied Materials sells the picks and shovels of the semiconductor industry, with three-quarters of revenue from equipment sales and the rest from servicing that equipment. The company's heavy dependence on international markets, particularly China, creates both opportunity and vulnerability as geopolitical tensions escalate.
Five legendary investment frameworks analyzed this company.
Warren Buffett's framework gives Applied Materials its highest score at 0.65 despite a 0.8% earnings yield versus 4.33% treasuries — when even the Oracle of Omaha can't find conviction in a wonderful business, what are the other legends missing? Tap any framework below to explore their complete analysis and discover where they see opportunity or concern.
How much cash does it generate and where does it go?
Applied Materials prioritizes innovation through R&D spending that consumes over half its operating cash flow, while returning the remainder through buybacks and dividends. The company's tactical buyback approach varies dramatically quarter to quarter, suggesting opportunistic rather than programmatic repurchasing.
Is the business getting stronger or weaker?
The business shows remarkable operating leverage that amplifies small revenue changes into large profit swings, both positive and negative. While margins remain healthy and cash generation strong, the tight correlation to inflation cycles and extreme operating leverage make trend extrapolation dangerous.
What could go wrong and has it survived trouble before?
Applied Materials faces a triple threat of geographic concentration in China, extreme sensitivity to interest rates, and heavy reliance on a single cyclical segment. The 2022 rate shock demonstrated how quickly profitability can evaporate, taking over 500 days to recover — yet insiders are buying at today's premium valuations.
Applied Materials trades at a 0.8% earnings yield while treasuries pay 4.33% — a 353 basis point leap of faith for a cyclical equipment maker.
Is the stock priced for perfection, fair value, or pessimism?
At 31x earnings yielding just 0.8%, Applied Materials trades at a 353 basis point discount to risk-free treasuries — requiring the market's implied 8.91% growth rate to justify the premium. With five valuation metrics at decade highs and negative price reactions even to earnings beats, the stock appears priced for a perfection it historically cannot sustain.
Analysis applies published investment frameworks to publicly available financial data. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.