A utility earning 0.89% return on capital while trading at 48.7x EV/EBITDA violates every principle of rational ownership.
This framework sees a regulated utility destroying shareholder value through excessive capital deployment while trading at growth stock valuations.
If you bought this entire business today, would what it earns justify what you paid?
The math fails spectacularly. At 48.7x EV/EBITDA, the market prices Exelon like a high-growth technology company despite its regulated utility constraints. With earnings yielding 2.98% less than risk-free treasuries, a permanent owner would lose money from day one.
How much cash does an owner get to keep after maintaining the business?
Owner earnings are deeply negative. The company spends $8.5B annually on capital projects while generating only $6.2B in operating cash flow, creating a $2.3B cash deficit. This framework values cash generation above all else, and Exelon destroys cash systematically.
Can the company employ incremental capital at high rates of return?
Every dollar reinvested destroys value. With returns below the cost of capital by 420 basis points, this massive infrastructure program enriches bondholders at shareholder expense. The framework demands businesses that create value through reinvestment—Exelon systematically destroys it.
Does this business have a durable competitive advantage?
The regulatory moat provides stability but not excellence. While operating margins remain steady, the gross margin collapse reveals fundamental cost pressures that regulation cannot overcome. This framework seeks businesses with widening moats—Exelon's appears to be narrowing despite its monopoly status.
Applying this framework reveals a regulated utility masquerading as a growth company while systematically destroying shareholder value. With owner earnings of negative $2.3 billion, returns below the cost of capital, and a stock price implying impossible growth, Exelon fails nearly every test a rational owner would apply. The regulatory moat provides stability but cannot overcome the fundamental math: paying 48.7x EV/EBITDA for a business earning 0.89% on invested capital. Would you buy your local electric company at 49 times cash flow?
This analysis applies Warren Buffett's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Warren Buffett. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.