Revenue hitting 98th percentile while insiders maintain 20-quarter selling streak reveals cycle peak that institutions haven't recognized.
This framework sees a business at the peak of its cycle, where 20 quarters of insider selling signals what institutions buying at 56.9% ownership have yet to recognize.
Where are we in the cycle?
Multiple metrics simultaneously at historical extremes signal a cycle peak. When revenue, margins, and compensation all hit 90th+ percentiles together, mean reversion becomes mathematical inevitability. The negative operating margin despite peak gross margins reveals the unsustainability.
Is consensus creating opportunity or risk?
The most dangerous agreement isn't among analysts — it's the unbroken 20-quarter selling pattern by insiders. When those who know the business best vote with their feet while Wall Street maintains universal optimism, consensus has become detached from reality.
Is the price above or below intrinsic value?
The DCF shows apparent value, but this framework questions whether peak-cycle metrics produce reliable valuations. When a company burns cash to grow (R&D at 464.8% of OCF) while diluting shareholders massively, traditional value metrics become treacherous.
Does upside significantly exceed downside?
The asymmetry appears favorable on the surface — down 85% with low expectations. But the earnings reaction pattern reveals the trap: the market punishes any stumble severely while ignoring success. This is negative asymmetry disguised as opportunity.
Where is sentiment positioned?
The pendulum hasn't swung to despair despite the 85% decline — it remains stuck at optimism. Zero sells and increasing institutional ownership after such destruction signals the pendulum has farther to swing. True despair hasn't arrived.
This framework sees a company at its cyclical peak, burning cash at unprecedented rates while insiders flee and institutions arrive late. The 20-quarter selling streak by those who know the business best contradicts every bullish narrative. When revenue, margins, and compensation all hit 90th percentiles simultaneously while profitability remains elusive, the cycle has only one direction left. The market's violent punishment of any disappointment reveals how precarious the setup has become. Is this the moment before recognition, or are institutions simply the last to know what insiders discovered 20 quarters ago?
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.