Insiders sold for 20 consecutive quarters while margins peaked at 32.3% — the pendulum rarely signals this clearly.
The market pays 54.5x earnings for a company whose insiders have sold for 20 straight quarters — when the pendulum swings toward euphoria, the first-level thinkers see excellence while second-level thinkers notice who's heading for the exits.
Is the price above or below what the business is worth?
The framework sees a business priced for perfection trading 55.7% above intrinsic value. The market demands 6.53% perpetual growth to justify today's price — a high bar even for a company demonstrating 14.1% current growth.
Where is sentiment positioned between euphoria and despair?
The pendulum sits firmly in optimism territory. Despite a 25% price decline, institutions continue accumulating while the market yawns at perfect execution. This framework recognizes when excellence becomes expected rather than exceptional.
What does everyone believe, and where might they be wrong?
First-level thinking sees record margins and growth. Second-level thinking asks why insiders systematically exit a business at peak performance and why capital efficiency deteriorates as growth accelerates.
Where are we in the cycle based on historical metrics?
This framework sees classic late-cycle characteristics — margins near historical peaks, declining returns on capital, and growth prioritized over efficiency. The cycle appears extended with limited room for further expansion.
Applying this framework reveals a business where the pendulum has swung toward dangerous optimism. While first-level thinkers celebrate 32.3% margins and perfect execution, second-level thinking notices insiders heading for exits after 20 quarters. With price 55.7% above intrinsic value and margins at historical peaks, the asymmetry tilts heavily toward risk. The most important question: when insiders who built the excellence systematically sell while institutions enthusiastically buy, which group understands the future better?
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.