At 31x earnings yielding 0.8% versus 4.33% treasuries, Applied Materials offers no margin of safety despite fortress finances.
Applied Materials trades at 31x earnings with a 0.8% yield while treasuries offer 4.33% — no margin of safety exists at this price.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
This framework sees no margin of safety. The price demands heroic assumptions — a 4x acceleration in growth from a cyclical equipment company. Even if the company executes perfectly, the downside risk vastly exceeds the upside potential at these valuations.
Does this equity justify its premium over risk-free bonds?
Applying this lens reveals a mathematical impossibility. An investor accepts 353 basis points less yield than treasuries while taking equity risk. The growth required to close this gap exceeds the company's demonstrated capacity by multiples.
Has this company demonstrated consistent earnings over many years?
This framework recognizes exceptional execution. The company demonstrates Graham's requirement of consistent earnings with remarkable precision. However, consistency at premium prices offers no protection.
Can this company survive a prolonged downturn?
The balance sheet meets Graham's fortress standard. Low leverage and high coverage ratios ensure survival through adversity. This framework values such conservatism, though it cannot offset the valuation risk.
Applying this framework reveals a classic case of Mr. Market's euphoria. Applied Materials operates a sound business with fortress balance sheet and consistent earnings, yet trades at prices that eliminate any margin of safety. The 0.8% earnings yield cannot compete with 4.33% risk-free treasuries, creating a mathematical headwind that even flawless execution cannot overcome. At 31x earnings for a cyclical equipment company with 7.2x operating leverage, where is the protection Graham demanded?
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.