95.23 - 97.14
55.47 - 103.81
1.63M / 1.80M (Avg.)
55.57 | 1.74
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.
-15.06%
Negative revenue growth while AEM stands at 0.50%. Joel Greenblatt would look for strategic missteps or cyclical reasons.
-15.06%
Negative gross profit growth while AEM is at 27.17%. Joel Greenblatt would examine cost competitiveness or demand decline.
-1735.83%
Both companies show negative EBIT growth. Martin Whitman would consider macro or sector-specific headwinds.
-1735.83%
Both companies face negative operating income growth. Martin Whitman would suspect broader market or cost hurdles.
-3021.48%
Negative net income growth while AEM stands at 489.09%. Joel Greenblatt would push for a reevaluation of cost or revenue strategies.
-2983.33%
Negative EPS growth while AEM is at 489.91%. Joel Greenblatt would expect urgent managerial action on costs or revenue drivers.
-2983.33%
Negative diluted EPS growth while AEM is at 489.84%. Joel Greenblatt would require immediate efforts to restrain share issuance or boost net income.
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-1836.26%
Both companies show negative OCF growth. Martin Whitman would analyze broader economic or industry conditions limiting cash flow.
-1836.26%
Both companies show negative FCF growth. Martin Whitman would consider an industry-wide capital spending surge or margin compression.
-10.91%
Negative 10Y revenue/share CAGR while AEM stands at 7.14%. Joel Greenblatt would question if the company is failing to keep pace with industry changes.
-10.91%
Negative 5Y CAGR while AEM stands at 13.35%. Joel Greenblatt would push for a turnaround plan or reevaluation of the company’s product line.
-10.91%
Negative 3Y CAGR while AEM stands at 91.06%. Joel Greenblatt would look for missteps or fading competitiveness that hurt sales.
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8.40%
Our AR growth while AEM is cutting. John Neff questions if the competitor outperforms in collections or if we’re pushing credit to maintain sales.
6.46%
Inventory growth well above AEM's 0.23%. Michael Burry suspects overshooting production or weaker sell-through vs. the competitor.
-26.32%
Negative asset growth while AEM invests at 4.72%. Joel Greenblatt checks if the competitor might capture more market share unless our returns remain higher.
-26.93%
We have a declining book value while AEM shows 65.58%. Joel Greenblatt sees a fundamental disadvantage in net worth creation vs. the competitor.
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-0.28%
Both reduce SG&A yoy. Martin Whitman sees a cost war or cyclical slowdown forcing overhead cuts.