VALUE ADD
Screen global equities against a simple set of rules — what's cheap, profitable, and run by people with skin in the game. Everything else is noise.
* For educational and informational purposes only. This is not financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional before making any financial decisions.
What you pay for $1 of earnings. Under 15 is the target. Above 25 and you're betting on future growth, not buying value. Buffett paid 11× for Coca-Cola.
Same idea but uses actual cash generated, not accounting profit. Harder to manipulate than earnings. Under 15 is good. Negative FCF means the business burns cash — avoid.
How much profit the business generates per dollar of shareholder equity. Above 15% is a quality signal. Above 30% and it's either a genuinely great business or a heavily leveraged one. Always read it alongside D/E. Buffett's threshold was simple: find it consistently above 15% for ten years.
Debt relative to equity. Under 0.5 means the business funds itself. Above 1.0 and the bank owns more of it than the shareholders. High debt kills companies in downturns.
How much of the company management and founders actually own. Above 10% means their money is in the same boat as yours. Below 2% means they're employees, not owners.
When enabled, stocks below this yield move to investigate (not filtered). Missing yield data is not penalised.
Hard filter — stocks below go to filtered
Soft filter — stocks below demote to investigate
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