205.24 - 207.41
139.95 - 221.69
4.54M / 6.59M (Avg.)
37.59 | 5.48
Shows the trajectory of a company's cash-generation capacity. Consistent growth in operating and free cash flow suggests a robust, self-funding business model—crucial for value investors seeking undervalued, cash-rich opportunities.
-65.26%
Both yoy net incomes decline, with AMD at -29.85%. Martin Whitman would view it as a broader sector or cyclical slump hitting profits.
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700.00%
Well above AMD's 12.63%. Michael Burry would worry about large intangible write-downs or revaluation gains overshadowing real performance.
-81.83%
Both yoy CFO lines are negative, with AMD at -41.42%. Martin Whitman would suspect cyclical or cost factors harming the entire niche’s cash generation.
7.50%
Lower CapEx growth vs. AMD's 28.73%, potentially boosting near-term free cash. David Dodd would confirm no missed expansions that competitor might exploit.
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50.22%
Purchases well above AMD's 49.42%. Michael Burry would see major cash outflow into securities vs. competitor’s approach, risking near-term FCF.
-30.35%
Both yoy lines are negative, with AMD at -37.65%. Martin Whitman suspects an environment prompting fewer sales or fewer maturities within the niche.
-100.00%
Both yoy lines negative, with AMD at -54.42%. Martin Whitman suspects a cyclical or strategic rationale for cutting extra invests in the niche.
17.76%
Lower net investing outflow yoy vs. AMD's 93.00%, preserving short-term cash. David Dodd would confirm expansions remain sufficient.
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-17.65%
Negative yoy issuance while AMD is 53.21%. Joel Greenblatt sees a near-term advantage in avoiding dilution unless competitor invests more effectively with the new shares.
68.18%
Buyback growth of 68.18% while AMD is zero at 0.00%. Bruce Berkowitz sees a modest per-share advantage that might accumulate if the stock is below intrinsic value.