10.50 - 11.12
3.81 - 12.83
1.80M / 1.61M (Avg.)
158.14 | 0.07
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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47.15%
Positive EBIT growth while FURY is negative. John Neff might see a substantial edge in operational management.
56.38%
Positive operating income growth while FURY is negative. John Neff might view this as a competitive edge in operations.
-157.71%
Both companies face declining net income. Martin Whitman would suspect external pressures or flawed business models in the space.
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114.10%
Share count expansion well above FURY's 0.03%. Michael Burry would question if management is raising capital unnecessarily or is over-incentivizing employees with stock.
114.10%
Diluted share count expanding well above FURY's 0.03%. Michael Burry would fear significant dilution to existing owners' stakes.
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56.78%
Positive OCF growth while FURY is negative. John Neff would see this as a clear operational advantage vs. the competitor.
56.78%
Positive FCF growth while FURY is negative. John Neff would see a strong competitive edge in net cash generation.
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96.25%
Positive OCF/share growth while FURY is negative. John Neff might see a comparative advantage in operational cash viability.
71.47%
Positive 3Y OCF/share CAGR while FURY is negative. John Neff might see a big short-term edge in operational efficiency.
93.74%
Positive 10Y CAGR while FURY is negative. John Neff might see a substantial advantage in bottom-line trajectory.
98.92%
Positive 5Y CAGR while FURY is negative. John Neff might view this as a strong mid-term relative advantage.
96.62%
Positive short-term CAGR while FURY is negative. John Neff would see a clear advantage in near-term profit trajectory.
-89.89%
Negative equity/share CAGR over 10 years while FURY stands at 643.94%. Joel Greenblatt sees a fundamental red flag unless the competitor also struggles.
-83.11%
Negative 5Y equity/share growth while FURY is at 252.45%. Joel Greenblatt sees the competitor building net worth while this firm loses ground.
-85.29%
Negative 3Y equity/share growth while FURY is at 136.96%. Joel Greenblatt demands an urgent fix in capital structure or profitability vs. the competitor.
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-62.71%
Both reduce receivables yoy. Martin Whitman suspects a shift in the entire niche’s credit approach or softer demand.
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-1.38%
Both reduce assets yoy. Martin Whitman suspects a broader sector retraction or post-boom asset trimming cycle.
-52.86%
Both erode book value/share. Martin Whitman suspects a difficult environment or poor capital deployment for both players.
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-47.15%
We cut SG&A while FURY invests at 25.27%. Joel Greenblatt sees a short-term margin benefit but wonders if the competitor invests for future gains.