ONE LEVEL DEEPER
CPRT
Warren Buffett frameworkThe Owner-OperatorBenjamin Graham frameworkThe Value ArchitectMichael Mauboussin frameworkThe Expectations EngineerHoward Marks frameworkThe Cycle WhispererPeter Lynch frameworkThe Everyday Edge

Earnings yield of 0.89% versus 4.33% treasuries reveals the market prices stability as growth while management hoards $5.1 billion.

cautiousLeaning Bearishconviction

CPRT demonstrates the danger of consensus thinking — a countercyclical business model trading at growth multiples while management hoards cash at returns below treasury yields.

THE LENSES
PRICE VS VALUEovervalued

Is the price above or below what the business is worth?

Stock trading at $32.85, 31.6% above DCF fair value of $25.37
Earnings yield of 0.89% vs treasury yield of 4.33% — negative 344 basis point spread
Market implies 4.71% perpetual growth vs 2.4% trailing revenue growth
P/E ratio of 27.98x for a business growing revenue at 2.4%

The framework sees price substantially above intrinsic value. A 0.89% earnings yield when treasuries offer 4.33% requires extraordinary growth to justify — growth the business isn't delivering. The market's implied growth rate nearly doubles reality.

Expectations Gap: DCF vs Market
DCF FAIR VALUE
$25
32% premium
MARKET PRICE
$33
Price implies 4.7% growth · Trailing: 2.4%
SECOND-LEVEL THINKINGmisunderstood

Where might the consensus be wrong?

Consensus sees growth stock; revenue correlates 0.987 with inflation — it's an inflation hedge
Revenue inversely correlates -0.866 with consumer confidence — thrives on distress
Institutions accumulating to 81.1% ownership while insiders sold 219,376 shares over 4 quarters
Analyst targets range $33-48 with $40.50 median — reasonable dispersion suggests healthy debate

Second-level thinking reveals the market misclassifies this business. The consensus treats CPRT as a growth stock when it's actually a countercyclical inflation hedge. The institutional accumulation despite insider selling suggests different time horizons, not information asymmetry.

Analyst Consensus
Strong Buy
0
Buy
10
Hold
8
Sell
1
Strong Sell
0
CYCLE TEMPERATUREextreme

Where are we in the cycle?

Current ratio at 10.06 — 98th percentile of 10-year range
ROA at 3.3% and ROE at 3.6% — both at 10-year lows
ROIC at 3.09% vs WACC 9.24% — value destruction for 5 years except one quarter
Operating margins stable at 35.1% in Q1'26 within historical 30-35% range

Multiple metrics at simultaneous extremes signal late-cycle positioning. Record liquidity paired with record-low returns suggests management anticipates opportunities ahead but current deployment options are unattractive. The stability in operating margins amidst return deterioration indicates the business model remains sound.

ROIC vs Cost of Capital
WHEN EVERYONE AGREESdivergent

Is there dangerous consensus?

Institutional ownership increased to 81.1% from 80.6% — steady accumulation
Insiders maintain 16-quarter selling streak — only 4 buying quarters in last 20
Net insider sales of 219,376 shares over 4 quarters worth estimated $8.8 million
267 new institutional positions vs 336 closed — more exiting than entering

This framework sees divergence, not consensus. Institutions and insiders moving opposite directions prevents the dangerous unanimity Marks warns against. The insider selling pattern appears systematic rather than sentiment-driven, possibly estate planning or diversification.

Insider Net Buying/Selling
KEY NUMBERS
VERDICT

Applying this framework reveals a paradox: CPRT operates a resilient, countercyclical business that generates inflation-protected cash flows, yet trades at growth multiples while management destroys value through excessive conservatism. The market prices it for what it isn't (growth) rather than what it is (stability). The pendulum has swung toward optimism for a business whose best days come during pessimism. When will Mr. Market realize that earning 0.89% in a 4.33% world isn't investing — it's speculation on multiple expansion?

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.

OTHER PERSPECTIVES
Benjamin Graham framework
The Value Architect
Neutral
Warren Buffett framework
The Owner-Operator
Leaning Bearish
Peter Lynch framework
The Everyday Edge
Leaning Bearish
Michael Mauboussin framework
The Expectations Engineer
Leaning Bearish
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