1.52 - 1.58
1.19 - 3.37
354.5K / 984.1K (Avg.)
-1.64 | -0.94
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.
-1.37%
Negative revenue growth signals a shrinking top line, alarming for Benjamin Graham. Confirm if it’s cyclical or structural before proceeding.
13.53%
Gross profit growth 10-15% – Solid. Seth Klarman would see if consistent improvements are driven by genuine pricing power.
15.18%
EBIT growth 15-20% – Very strong. Benjamin Graham might check if the company is using leverage to boost EBIT artificially.
18.86%
Operating income growth 15-20% – Very strong. Benjamin Graham would verify leverage is not inflating operating results artificially.
-20.79%
Negative net income growth shows profitability erosion. Benjamin Graham would worry about solvency and longer-term viability.
-23.08%
Negative EPS growth underscores deteriorating earnings per share. Benjamin Graham would worry about ongoing dilution or weakened profitability.
-21.62%
Negative diluted EPS growth suggests diluted shares grew or net income fell. Benjamin Graham would see this as a serious setback to shareholder value.
1.33%
Share count up to +3% – Slight dilution. Howard Marks would be cautious but might accept it if used for profitable growth investments.
0.54%
Diluted share count up to +3% – Modest dilution. Howard Marks might tolerate it if used for high-ROI projects or strategic acquisitions.
No Data
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391.18%
OCF growth above 20% – Exceptional cash generation improvement. Warren Buffett might see if the net margin also rises in tandem.
743.93%
FCF growth above 20% – Very attractive to value investors. Warren Buffett would check if capital expenditures remain sensible to maintain this level.
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495.16%
3Y CAGR above 15% – Rapid short-term revenue/share growth. Warren Buffett would see if margins are stable, ensuring profitable expansion.
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205.81%
3Y OCF/share CAGR above 15% – Rapid short-term expansion. Warren Buffett would see if this stems from genuine operational improvements vs. working-capital swings.
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622.87%
3Y net income/share CAGR above 15% – Rapid short-term profit growth. Benjamin Graham would verify if it’s driven by core revenue or temporary cost reductions.
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291.84%
3Y equity/share CAGR above 12% – Excellent recent net worth expansion. Warren Buffett would check consistent earnings retention or beneficial buybacks driving this growth.
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-26.74%
Negative receivables growth can be good if demand remains stable. Benjamin Graham verifies it isn’t from a collapse in sales.
-4.88%
Negative inventory growth can boost near-term margins if sales remain stable. Benjamin Graham still checks that it’s not from falling demand.
5.42%
Asset growth 5-10% – Reasonable. Peter Lynch compares with revenue growth to ensure utilization remains high.
1.64%
0-2% annual BV/share growth – Minimal. Howard Marks worries about near-stagnant net worth accumulation.
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25.68%
R&D growth 20-30% – High. Howard Marks questions ROI unless the pipeline is robust or near commercialization.
6.64%
SG&A growth 5-10% – Some cost increase. Peter Lynch looks for new marketing or admin expansions that justify this outlay.