440% above DCF value with 2.9% earnings yield versus 4.3% treasuries—Graham's arithmetic rejects cyclical peaks as permanent.
At $338 with earnings yield of 2.9% versus 4.3% treasuries, this framework sees a cyclical business priced for permanence at peak profitability.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
This framework sees no margin of safety. The 440% gap between price and conservative DCF value suggests Mr. Market has abandoned caution for cycle euphoria. While the P/E appears modest at 8.5x, this reflects peak earnings that history shows will not persist.
Has the company demonstrated consistent earnings over 7-10 years?
This framework finds extreme instability where it seeks consistency. The 114 percentage point swing in operating margins over 7 quarters exemplifies a business model that amplifies every cycle. While management executes well against estimates, the underlying earnings volatility defies Graham's requirement for demonstrated stability.
Does the equity risk justify accepting less than treasury yields?
Applying this lens reveals inadequate compensation for equity risk. Even at cyclical peak profitability, the 2.9% earnings yield cannot match the 4.3% available from treasuries. The framework recognizes that today's peak earnings make the yield gap appear narrower than it will be through a full cycle.
Can the balance sheet survive prolonged adversity?
This lens finds genuine strength. The balance sheet stands as a fortress with minimal debt, strong liquidity ratios, and massive cash generation at cycle peak. This framework appreciates that Micron learned from past cycles to maintain financial flexibility.
This framework sees a cyclical business at peak profitability trading without margin of safety. While the balance sheet provides protection and current metrics dazzle, the 440% premium to conservative value and negative spread to treasuries violate Graham's first principles. The framework appreciates the fortress balance sheet but cannot overlook that paying $338 for earnings that swung from -$1.9B to $13.8B quarterly offers no protection from the inevitable cycle turn. At what price would cyclical risk align with cyclical reward?
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.