Trading at 126.5% above its $18.20 fair value, CSX offers a negative margin of safety in a business contracting 3.1% annually.
CSX trades at 56x EBITDA while revenue declines 3.1%, creating a margin of safety so negative that even Mr. Market's optimism cannot justify the arithmetic.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
The margin of safety is not merely absent — it is inverted. At 126.5% above intrinsic value, the price offers no protection against even modest disappointment. This framework sees a speculation masquerading as an investment.
Does the stock offer a meaningful premium over bonds to justify equity risk?
A railroad yielding 1.07% while treasuries pay 4.33% violates the first principle of intelligent investing. The negative 3.26% spread demands heroic growth assumptions for a business that is demonstrably shrinking.
Can the balance sheet survive a prolonged downturn?
The balance sheet shows alarming deterioration. A current ratio of 0.81 means CSX cannot cover near-term obligations without operational cash flow — a precarious position for any business. This framework sees financial fragility masked by current profitability.
What do you receive in earnings, assets, and dividends per dollar of price paid?
For each dollar invested, you receive 4.3 cents of earnings and minimal asset backing. This framework has seen such valuations before — they end in tears when growth fails to materialize.
Applying this framework to CSX reveals a classic case of price divorced from value. The company generates steady cash flows and maintains adequate operations, but at 56x EBITDA with declining revenue, no margin of safety exists. The balance sheet's deterioration — current ratio at 0.81, leverage at record highs — compounds the risk. Why do sophisticated institutions accumulate shares at prices this framework deems indefensible?
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.