95.23 - 97.14
55.47 - 103.81
1.63M / 1.80M (Avg.)
55.57 | 1.74
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.
23.55%
Revenue growth above 1.5x GFI's 10.48%. David Dodd would confirm if the firm has a unique advantage driving sales higher.
29.24%
Gross profit growth under 50% of GFI's 302.83%. Michael Burry would be concerned about a severe competitive disadvantage.
37.10%
EBIT growth 1.25-1.5x GFI's 26.10%. Bruce Berkowitz would verify if strategic initiatives are driving this edge.
37.10%
Operating income growth 1.25-1.5x GFI's 26.10%. Bruce Berkowitz would see if strategic measures (e.g., cost cutting, product mix) are succeeding.
26.98%
Net income growth under 50% of GFI's 143.12%. Michael Burry would suspect the firm is falling well behind a key competitor.
28.00%
EPS growth under 50% of GFI's 142.86%. Michael Burry would suspect deeper structural issues or share dilution limiting per-share gains.
28.00%
Diluted EPS growth under 50% of GFI's 142.86%. Michael Burry would worry about an eroding competitive position or excessive dilution.
0.12%
Share reduction more than 1.5x GFI's 1.31%. David Dodd would see if the company is taking advantage of undervaluation to retire shares.
0.09%
Diluted share reduction more than 1.5x GFI's 0.29%. David Dodd would validate if the company is aggressively retiring shares or limiting option exercises.
No Data
No Data available this quarter, please select a different quarter.
49.79%
Positive OCF growth while GFI is negative. John Neff would see this as a clear operational advantage vs. the competitor.
10.57%
Positive FCF growth while GFI is negative. John Neff would see a strong competitive edge in net cash generation.
24.38%
Similar 10Y revenue/share CAGR to GFI's 26.77%. Walter Schloss might see both firms benefiting from the same long-term demand.
22.08%
5Y revenue/share CAGR under 50% of GFI's 52.47%. Michael Burry would suspect a significant competitive gap or product weakness.
5.86%
3Y revenue/share CAGR under 50% of GFI's 25.00%. Michael Burry might see a serious short-term decline in relevance vs. the competitor.
26.57%
10Y OCF/share CAGR under 50% of GFI's 213.35%. Michael Burry would worry about a persistent underperformance in cash creation.
46.48%
Below 50% of GFI's 151.18%. Michael Burry would be alarmed about sustained underperformance in generating free operational cash.
32.07%
3Y OCF/share CAGR 1.25-1.5x GFI's 28.18%. Bruce Berkowitz might see if strategic cost controls or product mix drove recent gains.
55.82%
Below 50% of GFI's 462.09%. Michael Burry would worry about a sizable gap in long-term profitability gains vs. the competitor.
-56.49%
Negative 5Y net income/share CAGR while GFI is 213.47%. Joel Greenblatt would see fundamental missteps limiting profitability vs. the competitor.
32.42%
Below 50% of GFI's 184.88%. Michael Burry suspects a steep short-term disadvantage in bottom-line expansion.
66.72%
Positive growth while GFI is negative. John Neff might see a strong advantage in steadily compounding net worth over a decade.
27.99%
5Y equity/share CAGR at 50-75% of GFI's 42.40%. Martin Whitman would question a shortfall in capital accumulation vs. the competitor.
25.20%
3Y equity/share CAGR at 50-75% of GFI's 46.03%. Martin Whitman sees a short-term lag in net worth creation vs. the competitor.
13.23%
Below 50% of GFI's 183.95%. Michael Burry might see weaker long-term distribution growth, raising questions about the firm's capital allocation.
101.95%
Below 50% of GFI's 464.06%. Michael Burry worries the firm returns far less capital to shareholders over 5 years.
59.08%
Below 50% of GFI's 293.26%. Michael Burry suspects the firm invests elsewhere or can’t match the competitor’s dividend policy.
-26.61%
Both reduce receivables yoy. Martin Whitman suspects a shift in the entire niche’s credit approach or softer demand.
-24.39%
Both reduce inventory yoy. Martin Whitman suspects a broader move to lean operations or industry slowdown in demand.
-0.37%
Negative asset growth while GFI invests at 6.94%. Joel Greenblatt checks if the competitor might capture more market share unless our returns remain higher.
0.38%
75-90% of GFI's 0.44%. Bill Ackman advocates improvements in profitability or buybacks to keep pace in net worth growth.
269.36%
Debt growth far above GFI's 13.94%. Michael Burry fears the firm is taking on undue leverage vs. the competitor.
No Data
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-18.96%
Both reduce SG&A yoy. Martin Whitman sees a cost war or cyclical slowdown forcing overhead cuts.