Trading 39% above fair value, Zscaler insiders sold for twelve straight quarters despite record cash generation.
Zscaler exemplifies the danger when everyone agrees — a growth story priced for yesterday's world while insiders quietly exit.
Is the price above or below what the business is worth?
This framework sees a business priced well above intrinsic value. The market pays a 39% premium to fair value for a company that loses money, betting on growth that the reverse DCF suggests has already moderated dramatically.
When everyone believes something is risky, their unwillingness to buy reduces its price to the point where it's not risky. When everyone believes something is safe, the resulting price creates great risk.
Everyone agrees this is a quality growth story — 100% execution record, perfect pricing power. But when insiders sell for 12 straight quarters while the crowd celebrates, the framework recognizes maximum consensus risk.
Where is sentiment — at euphoria or despair?
The pendulum shows early signs of swinging away from enthusiasm. Near 52-week lows with institutional distribution suggests sentiment cooling, though analyst targets remain optimistic.
Does the upside significantly exceed the downside?
Asymmetry is unfavorable — significant downside to fair value with upside requiring acceleration beyond what reverse DCF already implies. The best operational metrics in company history arrive at the worst valuation setup.
Applying this framework reveals a late-cycle growth story where operational excellence masks valuation excess. The 39% premium to fair value combined with 12 quarters of insider selling suggests those who know best see limited upside from here. When free cash flow hits decade highs while profitability remains elusive, the framework recognizes a business model under pressure despite surface strength. Is this peak efficiency or have we seen peak Zscaler?
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.