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.
3.09%
Revenue growth of 3.09% vs. zero growth in Gold. Walter Schloss might still want to see if it can translate into profits.
6.25%
Gross profit growth near Gold median of 5.99%. Charlie Munger would expect typical industry cost structures.
4.11%
EBIT growth 75-90% of Gold median of 5.43%. John Neff would demand margin improvements or operating leverage to catch up.
4.11%
Operating income growth below 50% of Gold median of 10.51%. Jim Chanos would suspect structural cost disadvantages.
26.42%
Net income growth exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 7.75%. Joel Greenblatt would check if brand strength or cost advantages fuel this outperformance.
25.93%
EPS growth exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 7.44%. Joel Greenblatt would confirm if consistent earnings expansion underpins these gains.
25.93%
Diluted EPS growth exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 8.11%. Joel Greenblatt would confirm if strong net income growth or buybacks drive outperformance.
0.05%
Share growth above Gold median by more than 2x. Jim Chanos would suspect over-dilution or repeated equity raises.
0.04%
Diluted share growth above 2x Gold median. Jim Chanos would suspect undue issuance or heavy employee stock compensation.
-49.72%
Dividend cuts while Gold median is 0.00%. Seth Klarman would see if others maintain or grow payouts, highlighting a relative weakness.
8.76%
OCF growth 75-90% of Gold median of 10.32%. John Neff would push for improvements in working capital or margins.
20.73%
FCF growth exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 11.32%. Joel Greenblatt would see if high profitability or prudent capex drives outperformance.
46.83%
10Y CAGR of 46.83% while Gold median is zero. Walter Schloss might see a slight advantage that can compound over very long horizons.
35.78%
5Y CAGR of 35.78% while Gold is zero. Walter Schloss might see a slight improvement that could compound if momentum builds.
13.77%
3Y CAGR of 13.77% while Gold median is zero. Walter Schloss might see a modest improvement overshadowing the broader sector’s stagnation.
66.91%
OCF/share CAGR exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 37.39% over 10 years. Joel Greenblatt would verify if a unique competitive moat underlies these cash flows.
76.04%
5Y OCF/share growth exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 25.74%. Joel Greenblatt might see a strong moat or efficient cost structure driving outperformance.
25.43%
3Y OCF/share growth 1.25-1.5x Gold median. Mohnish Pabrai would confirm if cost advantage or brand strength explains near-term outperformance.
2617.04%
Net income/share CAGR exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 75.45% over a decade. Joel Greenblatt might see a standout compounder of earnings.
100.51%
5Y net income/share CAGR > 1.5x Gold median of 21.90%. Joel Greenblatt might see superior mid-term capital allocation or product strength.
13.76%
3Y net income/share CAGR 50-75% of Gold median. Guy Spier might worry about a partial underperformance vs. competitor norms.
59.30%
Equity/share CAGR of 59.30% while Gold median is zero. Walter Schloss might see a modest advantage in net worth accumulation that could matter long term.
37.47%
5Y equity/share CAGR > 1.5x Gold median of 14.35%. Joel Greenblatt sees a possible ROE advantage or fewer share issuances boosting book value.
20.03%
Positive short-term equity/share CAGR while Gold is negative. Peter Lynch finds a relative advantage vs. sector-level slowdown.
208.45%
Dividend/share CAGR of 208.45% while Gold is zero. Walter Schloss sees a minor improvement that could compound if the firm maintains consistent raises.
111.38%
5Y dividend/share CAGR of 111.38% while Gold is zero. Walter Schloss sees at least some improvement that could compound over time.
21.38%
3Y dividend/share CAGR of 21.38% while Gold is zero. Walter Schloss sees a slight advantage if the firm is at least inching up payouts.
35.90%
AR growth of 35.90% while Gold median is zero. Walter Schloss checks if the difference points to new credit strategy or stronger sales push.
100.00%
Inventory growth of 100.00% while Gold median is zero. Walter Schloss checks if we’re preparing for a sales push or risking overstock.
1.90%
Asset growth exceeding 1.5x Gold median of 0.54%. Joel Greenblatt confirms strong expansions matched by adequate returns on those assets.
1.34%
Positive BV/share change while Gold median is negative. Peter Lynch finds a strong advantage vs. peers failing to expand equity.
-1.26%
Debt is shrinking while Gold median is rising. Seth Klarman might see an advantage if growth remains possible.
No Data
No Data available this quarter, please select a different quarter.
15.27%
Our SG&A slightly up while Gold is cutting. Peter Lynch wonders if we overspend or if the median underinvests in marketing.