1.75 - 1.81
1.03 - 2.41
122.5K / 296.7K (Avg.)
-1.36 | -1.31
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.
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-26.14%
Both companies show negative EBIT growth. Martin Whitman would consider macro or sector-specific headwinds.
-26.14%
Both companies face negative operating income growth. Martin Whitman would suspect broader market or cost hurdles.
-26.43%
Both companies face declining net income. Martin Whitman would suspect external pressures or flawed business models in the space.
-26.52%
Both companies exhibit negative EPS growth. Martin Whitman would consider sector-wide issues or an unsustainable business environment.
-26.52%
Both face negative diluted EPS growth. Martin Whitman would suspect an industry or cyclical slump with heightened share issuance across the board.
0.09%
Share reduction more than 1.5x AGEN's 9.38%. David Dodd would see if the company is taking advantage of undervaluation to retire shares.
0.09%
Diluted share reduction more than 1.5x AGEN's 9.38%. David Dodd would validate if the company is aggressively retiring shares or limiting option exercises.
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-57.07%
Negative OCF growth while AGEN is at 19.74%. Joel Greenblatt would demand a turnaround plan focusing on real cash generation.
-57.72%
Negative FCF growth while AGEN is at 18.86%. Joel Greenblatt would demand improved cost control or more strategic capex discipline.
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-13659.85%
Both show negative 10Y OCF/share CAGR. Martin Whitman would question if the entire market or product set is shrinking or too capital-intensive.
12.78%
Positive OCF/share growth while AGEN is negative. John Neff might see a comparative advantage in operational cash viability.
32.48%
Positive 3Y OCF/share CAGR while AGEN is negative. John Neff might see a big short-term edge in operational efficiency.
-18544.23%
Both face negative decade-long net income/share CAGR. Martin Whitman would suspect a shrinking or highly disrupted sector.
7.55%
Positive 5Y CAGR while AGEN is negative. John Neff might view this as a strong mid-term relative advantage.
44.34%
Positive short-term CAGR while AGEN is negative. John Neff would see a clear advantage in near-term profit trajectory.
1862.49%
Positive growth while AGEN is negative. John Neff might see a strong advantage in steadily compounding net worth over a decade.
309.42%
Positive 5Y equity/share CAGR while AGEN is negative. John Neff might see a clear edge in retaining earnings or managing capital better.
-81.93%
Both show negative short-term equity/share CAGR. Martin Whitman suspects an industry slump or unprofitable expansions for both players.
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-30.47%
Both reduce assets yoy. Martin Whitman suspects a broader sector retraction or post-boom asset trimming cycle.
-33.19%
Both erode book value/share. Martin Whitman suspects a difficult environment or poor capital deployment for both players.
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26.95%
R&D growth drastically higher vs. AGEN's 1.98%. Michael Burry fears near-term margin erosion unless breakthroughs are imminent.
24.63%
We expand SG&A while AGEN cuts. John Neff might see the competitor as more cost-optimized unless we expect big payoffs from the overhead growth.