205.24 - 207.41
139.95 - 221.69
4.54M / 6.54M (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.
3.80%
Net income growth under 50% of AMD's 25.77%. Michael Burry would suspect deeper structural issues in generating bottom-line growth.
28.38%
Some D&A expansion while AMD is negative at -4.64%. John Neff would see competitor’s short-term profit advantage unless expansions here deliver big returns.
-184.55%
Both lines show negative yoy. Martin Whitman would see an industry or cyclical factor reducing tax deferrals for both players.
No Data
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-128.19%
Both reduce yoy usage, with AMD at -24.15%. Martin Whitman would find an industry or cyclical factor prompting leaner operational approaches.
No Data
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-361.36%
Negative yoy inventory while AMD is 236.67%. Joel Greenblatt would see a near-term cash advantage if top-line doesn't suffer.
No Data
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-80.47%
Both reduce yoy usage, with AMD at -10.32%. Martin Whitman would suspect an industry or cyclical factor pulling back on these items.
-147.45%
Negative yoy while AMD is 260.00%. Joel Greenblatt would see a near-term net income or CFO stability advantage unless competitor invests or writes down more aggressively.
-40.03%
Negative yoy CFO while AMD is 25.21%. Joel Greenblatt would see a disadvantage in operational cash generation vs. competitor.
23.11%
CapEx growth well above AMD's 9.15%. Michael Burry would suspect heavier cash outlays that risk short-term free cash flow vs. competitor.
No Data
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-28.29%
Both yoy lines negative, with AMD at -224.06%. Martin Whitman would suspect an environment with fewer attractive securities or a strategic pivot to internal growth.
60.29%
At 50-75% of AMD's 113.73%. Martin Whitman questions partial disadvantage if competitor monetizes investments more efficiently.
No Data
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16.42%
We have mild expansions while AMD is negative at -112.44%. John Neff sees competitor possibly divesting or pausing expansions more aggressively.
No Data
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-9.38%
Negative yoy issuance while AMD is 0.99%. Joel Greenblatt sees a near-term advantage in avoiding dilution unless competitor invests more effectively with the new shares.
-75.40%
We cut yoy buybacks while AMD is 0.00%. Joel Greenblatt would question if competitor is gaining a per-share edge unless expansions justify holding cash here.