33.44 - 34.57
31.40 - 61.90
7.61M / 5.95M (Avg.)
-152.73 | -0.22
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.
15.54%
Revenue growth 15-20% – Very strong. Benjamin Graham might confirm that the growth is organic rather than fueled solely by acquisitions.
13.47%
Gross profit growth 10-15% – Solid. Seth Klarman would see if consistent improvements are driven by genuine pricing power.
-9.37%
Negative EBIT growth points to weakening core profitability. Benjamin Graham would question management efficiency.
-9.37%
Negative operating income growth means rising costs or falling revenues are eroding core profitability. Benjamin Graham would raise caution.
-6.24%
Negative net income growth shows profitability erosion. Benjamin Graham would worry about solvency and longer-term viability.
-6.25%
Negative EPS growth underscores deteriorating earnings per share. Benjamin Graham would worry about ongoing dilution or weakened profitability.
-6.25%
Negative diluted EPS growth suggests diluted shares grew or net income fell. Benjamin Graham would see this as a serious setback to shareholder value.
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-10.58%
Negative OCF growth is a critical warning sign. Benjamin Graham would check if receivables are ballooning or if core sales are declining.
-11.88%
Negative FCF growth reveals potential liquidity pressures or large capex overshadowing cash generation. Benjamin Graham would demand deeper scrutiny.
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-100.00%
Negative receivables growth can be good if demand remains stable. Benjamin Graham verifies it isn’t from a collapse in sales.
-100.00%
Negative inventory growth can boost near-term margins if sales remain stable. Benjamin Graham still checks that it’s not from falling demand.
-100.00%
Negative asset growth may reflect divestitures or depreciation outpacing new investments. Benjamin Graham wonders if shedding non-core assets improves focus or signals trouble.
100.00%
Book value/share growth above 12% annually – Strong sign of compounding. Warren Buffett verifies if profits or buybacks mainly drive it.
-100.00%
A negative growth rate in debt means deleveraging, often positive for conservative investors. Benjamin Graham confirms it doesn’t restrict needed investments.
16.60%
R&D growth 10-20% – Noticeable increase. Peter Lynch checks if big breakthroughs might justify near-term profit hits.
10.50%
SG&A growth 10-15% – Potential overhead buildup. Howard Marks questions if margins shrink unless revenue scales accordingly.