10.50 - 11.12
3.81 - 12.83
1.80M / 1.61M (Avg.)
158.14 | 0.07
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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-21.95%
Negative EBIT growth points to weakening core profitability. Benjamin Graham would question management efficiency.
-21.95%
Negative operating income growth means rising costs or falling revenues are eroding core profitability. Benjamin Graham would raise caution.
-22.57%
Negative net income growth shows profitability erosion. Benjamin Graham would worry about solvency and longer-term viability.
-22.89%
Negative EPS growth underscores deteriorating earnings per share. Benjamin Graham would worry about ongoing dilution or weakened profitability.
-22.89%
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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52.43%
OCF growth above 20% – Exceptional cash generation improvement. Warren Buffett might see if the net margin also rises in tandem.
76.02%
FCF growth above 20% – Very attractive to value investors. Warren Buffett would check if capital expenditures remain sensible to maintain this level.
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-23.22%
A negative 10Y OCF/share CAGR signals erosion in long-term cash generation. Benjamin Graham would label this as a major red flag.
-23.22%
A negative 5Y OCF/share CAGR indicates declining cash generation per share mid-term. Benjamin Graham would see this as a red flag unless explained by short-term strategic investments.
-23.22%
Negative 3Y OCF/share CAGR shows recent erosion in operating cash. Benjamin Graham would see this as a cautionary signal unless explained by strategic investments.
88.83%
10Y net income/share CAGR above 15% – Exceptional long-term profit growth. Benjamin Graham would confirm if these gains hold through economic cycles.
88.83%
5Y net income/share CAGR above 15% – Strong mid-term profit growth. Benjamin Graham would check if leverage artificially boosts earnings.
88.83%
3Y net income/share CAGR above 15% – Rapid short-term profit growth. Benjamin Graham would verify if it’s driven by core revenue or temporary cost reductions.
-77.26%
Negative 10Y equity/share CAGR indicates a long-term decline in book value. Benjamin Graham would be extremely cautious about net worth destruction.
-77.26%
Negative 5Y equity/share CAGR suggests net worth destruction. Benjamin Graham would see if failing profitability or large payouts cause it.
-77.26%
Negative 3Y equity/share CAGR means a near-term drop in book value. Benjamin Graham would be cautious unless restructured operations promise a future rebound.
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-75.36%
Negative receivables growth can be good if demand remains stable. Benjamin Graham verifies it isn’t from a collapse in sales.
-619524.61%
Negative inventory growth can boost near-term margins if sales remain stable. Benjamin Graham still checks that it’s not from falling demand.
88.59%
Asset growth above 20% – Rapid expansion. Warren Buffett checks if returns justify this investment and if debt finances it unsafely.
72.07%
Book value/share growth above 12% annually – Strong sign of compounding. Warren Buffett verifies if profits or buybacks mainly drive it.
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22.15%
SG&A growth above 15% – Aggressive expense expansion. Philip Fisher demands a compelling ROI argument for such heavy spending.