95.23 - 97.14
55.47 - 103.81
1.63M / 1.80M (Avg.)
55.57 | 1.74
These metrics indicate whether the stock trades cheaply or expensively relative to its fundamentals. Value investors use them to find mispricings—buying stocks that appear undervalued, with solid long-term prospects and limited downside risk.
57.91
Positive P/E while PAAS shows losses. John Neff would investigate competitive advantages.
31.28
P/S 50-75% of PAAS's 42.36. Bruce Berkowitz would examine if sales quality justifies the gap.
12.67
P/B above 1.5x PAAS's 2.74. Michael Burry would check for potential asset overvaluation.
-166.77
Both companies show negative FCF. Martin Whitman would check for industry-wide capital intensity issues.
-166.77
Both companies show negative operating cash flow. Martin Whitman would check for industry-wide operational issues.
12.67
Fair value ratio above 1.5x PAAS's 2.74. Michael Burry would check for mean reversion risks.
0.43%
Positive earnings while PAAS shows losses. John Neff would investigate earnings advantage.
-0.60%
Both companies show negative FCF. Martin Whitman would check for industry-wide capital intensity issues.