At 0.93% earnings yield vs 4.33% treasuries, T-Mobile charges a 340bp premium for collapsing margins.
A business generating exceptional cash flows while destroying its unit economics presents the classic trap of focusing on reported earnings over sustainable value.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
This framework sees apparent value with price 43.1% below DCF estimate, but the deteriorating gross margins from 65.9% historical peak to 42.5% today question whether historical cash flows can persist. The market's implied negative growth rate suggests Mr. Market has already priced in operational deterioration.
Has the company demonstrated consistent earnings over 7-10 years?
Applying this lens reveals a troubling divergence: while revenue grows steadily and the company beats estimates reliably, operating leverage turned negative at -1.29, meaning growth destroys profitability. This framework distinguishes between revenue consistency and earnings quality — here the latter is deteriorating rapidly.
Can the company survive a prolonged downturn?
This framework sees a balance sheet stretched to historical extremes with debt-equity 2.08 standard deviations above the 5-year mean. While current cash generation covers obligations, the combination of peak leverage with deteriorating margins removes the safety buffer Graham requires.
Does the equity risk premium justify owning stocks over bonds?
Applying this lens reveals why Graham would likely avoid: paying a 340bp penalty versus risk-free treasuries for a business with collapsing margins defies prudent investment. The growth rate needed to justify this premium appears incompatible with the margin deterioration evident in the data.
This framework suggests T-Mobile represents a value trap disguised as a cash flow story — strong free cash generation masks fundamental deterioration in unit economics that threatens long-term value. The combination of peak leverage, collapsing margins, and persistent insider selling while trading at 27x earnings with a negative spread to treasuries violates multiple Graham principles. Is $18 billion in free cash flow worth anything if margins continue their decade-worst trajectory?
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.