Stock trades 1396% above intrinsic value while the pendulum swings toward peak euphoria — insiders aren't waiting.
Applying this framework reveals a company where the pendulum has swung to euphoria while insiders systematically exit — classic late-cycle warning signs despite operational excellence.
Is the price above or below what the business is worth?
This framework sees a business priced for impossible perfection. The 1396% premium to intrinsic value and requirement for 11.17% perpetual growth places this squarely in dangerous territory where any disappointment creates asymmetric downside.
Where is sentiment positioned between euphoria and despair?
The pendulum has swung decisively toward euphoria. When everyone agrees and the market barely reacts to positive surprises, this framework recognizes peak optimism where good news is already priced in.
Where are we in this company's cycle?
Multiple metrics simultaneously at historical peaks signal late-cycle dynamics. This framework recognizes that when everything goes right at once, mean reversion becomes the primary risk rather than the exception.
Is there dangerous consensus forming?
The stark divergence between insiders and institutions creates a contrarian signal — but not the kind this framework seeks. When builders exit systematically while buyers rush in, the smart money is leaving.
Applying the Marks framework reveals a textbook late-cycle situation where operational excellence has pushed the pendulum to euphoria. The 1396% premium to intrinsic value, metrics at historical extremes, and systematic insider selling while institutions pile in creates the pattern this framework most fears. Excellence and overvaluation can coexist — and at 174x earnings with insiders heading for exits, is the margin of safety now a margin of faith?
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.