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.
23.92%
Revenue growth at 50-75% of FNV's 43.19%. Martin Whitman would worry about competitiveness or product relevance.
42.28%
Gross profit growth at 50-75% of FNV's 58.56%. Martin Whitman would question if cost structure or brand is lagging.
51.76%
EBIT growth 50-75% of FNV's 70.04%. Martin Whitman would suspect suboptimal resource allocation.
51.76%
Operating income growth at 75-90% of FNV's 68.53%. Bill Ackman would demand a plan to enhance operating leverage.
41.64%
Net income growth at 50-75% of FNV's 63.03%. Martin Whitman would question fundamental disadvantages in expenses or demand.
37.50%
EPS growth at 50-75% of FNV's 62.00%. Martin Whitman would suspect a lag in operational efficiency or a higher share count.
37.50%
Diluted EPS growth at 50-75% of FNV's 62.00%. Martin Whitman would question if share issuance or modest net income gains hamper progress.
0.11%
Share count expansion well above FNV's 0.05%. Michael Burry would question if management is raising capital unnecessarily or is over-incentivizing employees with stock.
0.43%
Diluted share count expanding well above FNV's 0.05%. Michael Burry would fear significant dilution to existing owners' stakes.
-55.10%
Both companies cut dividends. Martin Whitman would look for a common factor, such as cyclical downturn or liquidity constraints.
50.27%
OCF growth 1.25-1.5x FNV's 41.28%. Bruce Berkowitz would see if superior pricing or efficient operations explain the gap.
49.75%
Positive FCF growth while FNV is negative. John Neff would see a strong competitive edge in net cash generation.
153.70%
10Y revenue/share CAGR at 50-75% of FNV's 221.23%. Martin Whitman would question if the firm’s offerings lag behind the competitor.
80.52%
5Y revenue/share CAGR at 50-75% of FNV's 122.46%. Martin Whitman would worry about a lagging mid-term growth trajectory.
48.97%
3Y revenue/share CAGR at 75-90% of FNV's 59.03%. Bill Ackman would expect new product strategies to close the gap.
148.05%
10Y OCF/share CAGR at 50-75% of FNV's 212.72%. Martin Whitman might fear a structural deficiency in operational efficiency.
106.30%
5Y OCF/share CAGR at 50-75% of FNV's 176.39%. Martin Whitman would question if the firm lags in monetizing revenue effectively.
73.89%
3Y OCF/share CAGR similar to FNV's 78.32%. Walter Schloss might see both benefiting from a rising tide or parallel expansions.
65.93%
Below 50% of FNV's 413.96%. Michael Burry would worry about a sizable gap in long-term profitability gains vs. the competitor.
240.67%
Below 50% of FNV's 734.79%. Michael Burry would worry about a substantial lag vs. the competitor’s profit ramp-up.
121.59%
3Y net income/share CAGR 75-90% of FNV's 150.03%. Bill Ackman might push for an operational plan to match or beat the competitor’s short-term growth.
115.16%
10Y equity/share CAGR above 1.5x FNV's 53.95%. David Dodd would confirm if consistent earnings retention or fewer write-downs drive this advantage.
15.09%
Below 50% of FNV's 32.82%. Michael Burry sees a substantially weaker mid-term book value expansion strategy in place.
7.84%
3Y equity/share CAGR at 75-90% of FNV's 9.32%. Bill Ackman pushes for margin or operational changes to match the competitor’s pace.
No Data
No Data available this quarter, please select a different quarter.
102.78%
5Y dividend/share CAGR above 1.5x FNV's 38.95%. David Dodd checks if the firm's mid-term cash flows justify a faster dividend growth rate.
0.17%
Below 50% of FNV's 19.85%. Michael Burry suspects the firm invests elsewhere or can’t match the competitor’s dividend policy.
144.82%
AR growth well above FNV's 19.26%. Michael Burry fears inflated revenue or higher default risk in the near future.
No Data
No Data available this quarter, please select a different quarter.
-0.70%
Negative asset growth while FNV invests at 3.38%. Joel Greenblatt checks if the competitor might capture more market share unless our returns remain higher.
2.37%
75-90% of FNV's 3.10%. Bill Ackman advocates improvements in profitability or buybacks to keep pace in net worth growth.
-23.76%
We’re deleveraging while FNV stands at 0.00%. Joel Greenblatt considers if we gain a balance-sheet advantage for potential downturns.
No Data
No Data available this quarter, please select a different quarter.
-2.17%
Both reduce SG&A yoy. Martin Whitman sees a cost war or cyclical slowdown forcing overhead cuts.