Ross beats earnings 94.7% of the time but offers 1.07% yield versus 4.33% treasuries.
Ross Stores demonstrates the Buffett paradox: a wonderfully predictable business earning record profits, priced as if treasuries didn't exist at 4.33%.
Does this business generate predictable, growing earnings we can count on?
This framework sees exactly what it values: extraordinary earnings predictability with a 94.7% beat rate and consistent margin stability through cycles. The earnings machine runs like clockwork, converting 7.7% revenue growth into 27% EPS growth through operational excellence.
What protects this company's excellent returns from competitors?
The moat lies in Ross's unique ability to turn inventory faster than most companies collect receivables, maintaining stable 27-28% gross margins in a supposedly commoditized retail sector. This operational efficiency creates a cost advantage competitors struggle to match.
If we bought this entire business today, would the earnings justify the price?
The math tells a sobering story: paying $220 for a business worth $127 on a DCF basis, accepting 1.07% earnings yield when treasuries offer 4.33%. This framework would see a margin of faith, not a margin of safety.
Are managers treating shareholder capital with owner-like care?
Management demonstrates excellent capital allocation discipline, with buybacks at $151 now worth $220. The insider selling appears to be diversification given the recent quarter's buying, suggesting managers see value even at current levels.
Applying this framework reveals Ross as a superbly managed, highly predictable earnings machine trading at prices that assume treasury bonds have vanished from the earth. The 94.7% earnings beat rate and operational excellence deserve admiration, but not a 1.07% earnings yield when risk-free alternatives offer 4.33%. Would a rational owner pay $220 for a business worth $127, no matter how well-run?
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.