176.45 - 178.59
86.62 - 184.48
124.91M / 173.95M (Avg.)
50.81 | 3.50
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.
9.86%
Revenue growth 5-10% – Moderate. Peter Lynch would evaluate product demand drivers to determine if growth can accelerate.
14.93%
Gross profit growth 10-15% – Solid. Seth Klarman would see if consistent improvements are driven by genuine pricing power.
5.56%
EBIT growth 5-10% – Moderate. Peter Lynch might look for ways the firm could optimize costs to boost EBIT further.
5.56%
Operating income growth 5-10% – Moderate. Peter Lynch would evaluate product-level profitability to see if certain segments could accelerate growth.
6.35%
Net income growth 5-10% – Moderate. Philip Fisher would look at whether incremental improvements can accelerate with scale.
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-4.65%
Share count shrinking more than 10% – Aggressive buybacks. Warren Buffett typically welcomes this if undervalued, but watch debt usage for repurchases.
-5.51%
Negative growth in diluted shares typically benefits existing owners. Benjamin Graham would check the sustainability of buybacks or reduction in option overhang.
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-197.06%
Negative OCF growth is a critical warning sign. Benjamin Graham would check if receivables are ballooning or if core sales are declining.
-711.11%
Negative FCF growth reveals potential liquidity pressures or large capex overshadowing cash generation. Benjamin Graham would demand deeper scrutiny.
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46.78%
Receivables growth above 20% – Alarm. Philip Fisher demands investigation into possible revenue recognition issues or poor AR management.
-44.74%
Negative inventory growth can boost near-term margins if sales remain stable. Benjamin Graham still checks that it’s not from falling demand.
6.08%
Asset growth 5-10% – Reasonable. Peter Lynch compares with revenue growth to ensure utilization remains high.
12.80%
Book value/share growth above 12% annually – Strong sign of compounding. Warren Buffett verifies if profits or buybacks mainly drive it.
-34.09%
A negative growth rate in debt means deleveraging, often positive for conservative investors. Benjamin Graham confirms it doesn’t restrict needed investments.
22.73%
R&D growth 20-30% – High. Howard Marks questions ROI unless the pipeline is robust or near commercialization.
10.96%
SG&A growth 10-15% – Potential overhead buildup. Howard Marks questions if margins shrink unless revenue scales accordingly.