1.14 - 1.17
1.10 - 1.60
14.0K / 2.1K (Avg.)
-9.00 | -0.13
These metrics indicate whether the stock trades cheaply or expensively relative to its fundamentals. Value investors use them to find mispricings—buying stocks that appear undervalued, with solid long-term prospects and limited downside risk.
-10.54
Negative P/E while AAG.DE shows 15.90. Joel Greenblatt would examine path to profitability versus competitor.
5.12
P/S above 1.5x AAG.DE's 3.29. Michael Burry would check for mean reversion risks.
-22.37
Negative equity while AAG.DE shows P/B of 0.85. Joel Greenblatt would examine balance sheet repair potential.
399.40
Positive FCF while AAG.DE shows negative FCF. John Neff would investigate cash generation advantage.
14.82
Positive operating cash flow while AAG.DE shows negative OCF. John Neff would investigate operational advantage.
-22.37
Negative fair value while AAG.DE shows ratio of 0.85. Joel Greenblatt would examine valuation model differences.
-2.37%
Negative earnings while AAG.DE shows yield of 1.57%. Joel Greenblatt would examine path to profitability.
0.25%
Positive FCF while AAG.DE shows negative FCF. John Neff would investigate cash generation advantage.