Intel trades at 405% above its $8.74 fair value while generating negative earnings yield.
This framework sees a once-great franchise destroying owner value during a transformation that may never justify its price.
Does the business generate real cash an owner could take home?
Applying this lens, Intel's cash generation exceeds accounting earnings, but massive stock dilution consumes much of that advantage. The company generates cash but dilutes owners faster than it creates value, particularly concerning during a loss-making period.
Does this business have a durable competitive advantage?
This framework suggests Intel's moat is crumbling. The violent margin swings indicate a business losing pricing power during transformation. While x86 creates some lock-in, the foundry pivot signals the core franchise no longer generates adequate returns.
Would buying this entire business today make mathematical sense?
Applying this framework's math, Intel fails spectacularly. An owner paying $44 per share for a business worth $9 in cash flows would lose 80% of their capital. The negative earnings yield means treasuries offer better returns with zero risk.
Are managers acting as owners or agents?
This lens reveals mixed stewardship. Management prudently suspended shareholder returns during crisis and insiders are buying. However, massive executive pay during losses and heavy capital spending on uncertain returns raise concerns about alignment.
This framework sees Intel as a melting ice cube selling at luxury goods prices. The company trades at 5x its fundamental value while burning cash on a transformation that may never earn adequate returns. Even successful execution might not justify today's price. Would you pay $44 for a business worth $9 that's losing money while its competitors gain strength?
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.