Gross margins of 85% prove the moat, but 28.5% stock compensation proves management is giving away the castle.
A business with magnificent pricing power and customer stickiness that management is diluting away through extreme stock-based compensation.
Does this business have durable competitive advantages that protect returns?
This framework sees a fortress-like moat built on switching costs and pricing power. The 85% gross margins and near-perfect correlation with inflation demonstrate customers cannot leave easily and will pay higher prices.
How much cash does an owner actually get to keep?
The business generates tremendous cash, but management is giving away nearly a third of revenue in stock compensation. An owner buying today gets diluted tomorrow.
Are managers acting as owners or opportunists?
Management's actions speak louder than compensation structures. Twenty quarters of uninterrupted selling while diluting shareholders through extreme SBC reveals priorities misaligned with permanent owners.
If you bought the whole business today, would the earnings justify the price?
The market has given up on this business, pricing in minimal growth despite strong cash generation. For a permanent owner, the discount to DCF value suggests reasonable entry despite current losses.
Applying this framework reveals a business with one of the widest moats in software being systematically diluted by management. The 85% gross margins and pricing power would make any owner salivate, but the 28.5% stock-based compensation and 20 quarters of insider selling reveal a company being run for employees, not shareholders. At 33% below DCF value, the math might work for a buyer who could change the culture. Would you want partners who sell every quarter while asking you to buy?
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.