With 99% institutional ownership yet insiders selling four straight quarters, maximum consensus meets minimum conviction.
At 99% institutional ownership and 30.4x earnings, the pendulum has swung to euphoria while second-level thinking reveals the crowd positioned for perfection.
Where is the pendulum of market sentiment?
The pendulum shows conflicting signals — institutional euphoria with 99% ownership meets price pessimism at 16.63% of 52-week range. Yet the negative reaction to positive surprises reveals expectations already stretched taut.
What does everyone believe, and where might they be wrong?
First-level sees a growth company beating estimates. Second-level sees a market so conditioned to beats that success is failure — the consensus of excellence has become the trap.
Is the price above or below intrinsic value?
The framework reveals a paradox — DCF suggests undervaluation while earnings yield screams overvaluation. At 0.82% yield vs 4.33% risk-free, the margin of safety has inverted into a margin of hope.
Is there dangerous consensus?
When 99% of shares rest in institutional hands while insiders exit, everyone agrees — except those who know the business best. This level of consensus historically marks turning points.
Applying this framework reveals a market darling where the pendulum has swung to institutional euphoria — 99% ownership represents maximum consensus while insiders quietly exit. At 30.4x earnings yielding 0.82% against 4.33% treasuries, the price offers no margin of safety, only margin of hope. The framework suggests waiting for the pendulum to swing back toward fear. When will 99% ownership become 90%?
This analysis applies Howard Marks's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Howard Marks. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.