1.75 - 1.81
1.03 - 2.41
122.5K / 297.6K (Avg.)
-1.36 | -1.31
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.
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17.97%
Positive EBIT growth while CRVO is negative. John Neff might see a substantial edge in operational management.
17.97%
Positive operating income growth while CRVO is negative. John Neff might view this as a competitive edge in operations.
18.43%
Positive net income growth while CRVO is negative. John Neff might see a big relative performance advantage.
58.16%
Positive EPS growth while CRVO is negative. John Neff might see a significant comparative advantage in per-share earnings dynamics.
58.16%
Positive diluted EPS growth while CRVO is negative. John Neff might view this as a strong relative advantage in controlling dilution.
96.23%
Share count expansion well above CRVO's 50.63%. Michael Burry would question if management is raising capital unnecessarily or is over-incentivizing employees with stock.
96.23%
Diluted share count expanding well above CRVO's 50.63%. Michael Burry would fear significant dilution to existing owners' stakes.
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22.94%
OCF growth above 1.5x CRVO's 10.29%. David Dodd would confirm a clear edge in underlying cash generation.
22.94%
FCF growth above 1.5x CRVO's 10.29%. David Dodd would verify if the firm’s strategic investments yield superior returns.
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-567.72%
Negative 10Y OCF/share CAGR while CRVO stands at 99.95%. Joel Greenblatt would scrutinize managerial effectiveness and product competitiveness.
90.81%
5Y OCF/share CAGR is similar to CRVO's 99.11%. Walter Schloss might see parallel cost profiles or expansions producing comparable cash flow.
89.23%
3Y OCF/share CAGR similar to CRVO's 98.41%. Walter Schloss might see both benefiting from a rising tide or parallel expansions.
-636.46%
Negative 10Y net income/share CAGR while CRVO is at 99.99%. Joel Greenblatt sees a major red flag in long-term profit erosion.
93.35%
5Y net income/share CAGR similar to CRVO's 99.34%. Walter Schloss might see both on parallel mid-term trajectories.
88.82%
Positive short-term CAGR while CRVO is negative. John Neff would see a clear advantage in near-term profit trajectory.
2271.09%
Positive growth while CRVO is negative. John Neff might see a strong advantage in steadily compounding net worth over a decade.
-76.58%
Both show negative equity/share growth mid-term. Martin Whitman suspects cyclical or structural challenges for each company.
-2.44%
Both show negative short-term equity/share CAGR. Martin Whitman suspects an industry slump or unprofitable expansions for both players.
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569.03%
Asset growth above 1.5x CRVO's 70.93%. David Dodd checks if M&A or new capacity expansions are value-accretive vs. competitor's approach.
756.79%
BV/share growth above 1.5x CRVO's 21.92%. David Dodd confirms if consistent profit retention or fewer write-downs yield faster equity creation.
-16.19%
Both reduce debt yoy. Martin Whitman sees a broader sector shift to safer balance sheets or less growth impetus.
-15.49%
Our R&D shrinks while CRVO invests at 41.62%. Joel Greenblatt checks if we risk falling behind a competitor’s new product pipeline.
-24.67%
We cut SG&A while CRVO invests at 4.62%. Joel Greenblatt sees a short-term margin benefit but wonders if the competitor invests for future gains.