8935.00 - 9125.00
6347.00 - 10045.00
380.0K / 335.9K (Avg.)
23.15 | 391.09
Steady, sustainable growth is a hallmark of high-quality businesses. Value investors watch these metrics to confirm that the company's fundamental performance aligns with—or outpaces—its current market valuation.
-7.45%
Negative revenue growth signals a shrinking top line, alarming for Benjamin Graham. Confirm if it’s cyclical or structural before proceeding.
-3.98%
Negative gross profit growth suggests either falling sales or rising direct costs. Benjamin Graham would consider this a fundamental warning sign.
-17.81%
Negative EBIT growth points to weakening core profitability. Benjamin Graham would question management efficiency.
-20.34%
Negative operating income growth means rising costs or falling revenues are eroding core profitability. Benjamin Graham would raise caution.
-18.30%
Negative net income growth shows profitability erosion. Benjamin Graham would worry about solvency and longer-term viability.
-18.29%
Negative EPS growth underscores deteriorating earnings per share. Benjamin Graham would worry about ongoing dilution or weakened profitability.
-18.29%
Negative diluted EPS growth suggests diluted shares grew or net income fell. Benjamin Graham would see this as a serious setback to shareholder value.
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4.35%
10Y revenue/share CAGR 4-7% – Moderate. Peter Lynch might look for potential catalysts to boost growth beyond mid-single digits.
4.35%
5Y CAGR 3-7% – Modest. Peter Lynch would look for new drivers (products, markets) to boost these results further.
-22.63%
Negative 3Y CAGR signals recent top-line contraction per share. Benjamin Graham would be skeptical unless a turnaround is clear.
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-100.00%
Negative 3Y OCF/share CAGR shows recent erosion in operating cash. Benjamin Graham would see this as a cautionary signal unless explained by strategic investments.
84.25%
10Y net income/share CAGR above 15% – Exceptional long-term profit growth. Benjamin Graham would confirm if these gains hold through economic cycles.
84.25%
5Y net income/share CAGR above 15% – Strong mid-term profit growth. Benjamin Graham would check if leverage artificially boosts earnings.
3.41%
3Y net income/share CAGR 2-5% – Mild. Peter Lynch might look for fresh catalysts like expansions or product launches to push the rate higher.
37.80%
10Y equity/share CAGR above 12% – Excellent long-term book value compounding. Warren Buffett would see if consistent profits plus moderate payouts drive this growth.
37.80%
5Y equity/share CAGR above 12% – Strong mid-term book value expansion. Warren Buffett would see if steady profits and moderate payout ratios sustain this pace.
-6.14%
Negative 3Y equity/share CAGR means a near-term drop in book value. Benjamin Graham would be cautious unless restructured operations promise a future rebound.
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-10.53%
Negative receivables growth can be good if demand remains stable. Benjamin Graham verifies it isn’t from a collapse in sales.
11.89%
Inventory growth 10-15% – Potential overstock. Howard Marks worries if demand lags production, risking margin pressure.
6.36%
Asset growth 5-10% – Reasonable. Peter Lynch compares with revenue growth to ensure utilization remains high.
5.37%
5-8% annual BV/share growth – Decent. Seth Klarman monitors if ROE supports continued expansions.
307.59%
Debt growing over 10% yoy – Potentially high risk. Philip Fisher demands a clear rationale and profitable expansions to offset the debt load.
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2.63%
SG&A growth 0-5% – Generally manageable. Seth Klarman sees if overhead remains controlled and margins intact.