Institutions rushed to 78.5% ownership paying 27% above fair value while insiders sold for the 13th straight quarter.
Everyone agrees Cisco is a quality company — the institutional stampede to 78.5% ownership while insiders flee creates precisely the consensus trap this framework warns against.
When everyone believes something is safe, does the resulting price create great risk?
The institutional stampede reveals dangerous consensus — everyone sees the same thing: a safe, cash-generating technology blue chip. When Norway's sovereign fund deploys $4.5 billion alongside 226 other new positions in a single quarter, the pendulum has swung to universal agreement that Cisco equals safety.
Is the price above or below what the business is worth?
By every measure, price exceeds value. The market pays a 27% premium to intrinsic value while simultaneously expecting growth to collapse from 9% to 3.4% — a remarkable contradiction where investors overpay for deterioration.
Where is sentiment — at euphoria, despair, or the rarely-visited center?
The pendulum reveals a fascinating split — external sentiment (institutions, analysts) swings toward euphoria while internal sentiment (insiders, market reactions) signals caution. The 13.57% decline on perfect earnings suggests the pendulum may be starting its swing back from optimism.
Does the upside significantly exceed the downside from here?
The asymmetry is terrible — with treasuries yielding 4x the earnings yield and valuations at extremes, downside vastly exceeds upside. The 3.98x operating leverage means any revenue disappointment gets magnified into earnings collapse.
Applying this framework reveals a classic consensus trap — institutions pile into perceived safety at precisely the wrong price. The 27% premium to intrinsic value, negative earnings yield spread, and universal agreement create asymmetric downside risk. When sovereign wealth funds lead the charge into yesterday's winner trading at tomorrow's growth rate, where is the margin of safety?
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.