Owner Scorecard


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CCZ, Comcast Holdings ZONES

Media & Broadcasting capital-intensive

We deliver broadband, wireless, video and voice services primarily under the Xfinity, Comcast Business, Sky and NOW brands; produce, distribute and stream leading entertainment, sports and news through brands including NBC, Telemundo, Universal, Peacock and Sky; and own and operate Universal theme parks.

Connectivity & Platforms: Contains our broadband, wireless, video and wireline voice businesses in the United States, United Kingdom and Italy (collectively, the "Connectivity & Platforms markets").

Our Connectivity & Platforms business is reported in two segments, Residential Connectivity & Platforms and Business Services Connectivity.

Latest annual: FY2025 10-K
CCZ · Comcast Holdings ZONES
I

The business

What it sells, where the money comes from, the kind of company it is.

Revenue · FY2025
$123.7B
−0.0% YoY · 4% 5-yr CAGR
Vital signs · TTM, with 5-yr average
Revenue $125.3B 5-yr avg $121.4B
Operating margin 15.3% 5-yr avg 16.8%
ROIC 8% 5-yr avg 9%
Owner-earnings margin 16% 5-yr avg 15%
Free cash flow margin 16% 5-yr avg 15%

The business in brief

read the 10-K →

What this business is and what moves its needle, from its own SEC filings.

What moves the needle
Operating margin has run about 19% through the cycle, a solid margin the cost base and competition set as much as the price does. Capital spending runs about 9.5% of sales, below what it charges for depreciation, so the return earned on what it sinks into that plant weighs as much as the margin. On its own account, the filing leans hardest on customer concentration, set against the numbers in what the filing emphasizes, below.
Is it a good business?
Return on capital has sat near the cost of capital (median 9%). By owner earnings: roughly 14% of revenue reaches owners as cash, consistently. This is price-taker territory, where the balance sheet and the cycle matter more than any multiple; the rest is in the 10-K.

Every line is arithmetic on the company's filings, shown in full in the sections below.

Where the money comes from

read the 10-K →

23% of revenue comes from outside the United States.

Revenue by geography, FY2025
  • United States77%$95.1B
  • United Kingdom12%$15.2B
  • Other11%$13.4B

From the segment footnote of the company's own 10-K. Shares are of total revenue; the profit bar shows each segment's share of segment operating profit, before unallocated corporate costs.

II

The record

Ten years of arithmetic, read across the cycle.

The record, 2016–2025

realized figures from each filing · older years to the left
2016’162017’172018’182019’192020’202021’212022’222023’232024’242025’25TTMTTMMar 2026
Income statement
$80.7B$85.0B$94.5B$108.9B$103.6B$116.4B$121.4B$121.6B$123.7B$123.7B$125.3BRevenueRevenue
$16.8B$18.0B$19.0B$21.1B$17.5B$20.8B$14.0B$23.3B$23.3B$20.7B$19.1BOperating incomeOp. inc.
20.8%21.2%20.1%19.4%16.9%17.9%11.6%19.2%18.8%16.7%15.3%Operating marginOp. mgn
$8.7B$22.7B$11.7B$13.1B$10.5B$14.2B$5.4B$15.4B$16.2B$20.0B$18.8BNet incomeNet inc.
38%22%22%24%27%45%26%15%23%23%Effective tax rateTax rate
Cash flow & returns
$19.7B$21.3B$24.3B$25.7B$24.7B$29.1B$26.4B$28.5B$27.7B$33.6B$32.2BOperating cash flowOp. cash
$9.4B$10.1B$11.0B$13.0B$13.1B$13.8B$13.8B$14.3B$14.8B$16.2B$16.2BDepreciationDeprec.
$947M($12.4B)$723M($1.3B)($90M)($132M)$5.9B($2.5B)($4.6B)($3.9B)($4.1B)Working capital & otherWC & other
$9.1B$9.6B$9.8B$10.0B$9.2B$9.2B$10.6B$12.2B$12.2B$11.8B$11.8BCapexCapex
11.3%11.2%10.3%9.1%8.9%7.9%8.8%10.1%9.8%9.5%9.5%Capex / revenueCapex/rev
$10.6B$11.7B$14.5B$15.7B$15.6B$20.0B$15.8B$16.3B$15.5B$21.9B$20.4BOwner earningsOwner earn.
13.1%13.8%15.4%14.5%15.0%17.2%13.0%13.4%12.5%17.7%16.3%Owner earnings marginOE mgn
$10.6B$11.7B$14.5B$15.7B$15.6B$20.0B$15.8B$16.3B$15.5B$21.9B$20.4BFree cash flowFCF
13.1%13.8%15.4%14.5%15.0%17.2%13.0%13.4%12.5%17.7%16.3%Free cash flow marginFCF mgn
$3.9B$532M$38.2B$370M$233M$1.4B$12M$0$119M$1.3B$1.3BAcquisitionsAcquis.
$2.6B$2.9B$3.4B$3.7B$4.1B$4.5B$4.7B$4.8B$4.8B$4.9B$4.9BDividends paidDiv. paid
$5.4B$5.4B$5.3B$504M$534M$4.7B$13.3B$11.3B$9.1B$7.2BBuybacksBuybacks
9%14%8%9%7%8%5%10%11%8%8%ROICROIC
16%33%16%16%12%15%7%19%19%21%21%Return on equityROE
11%29%12%11%7%10%1%13%13%16%16%Retained to equityRetained/eq
Balance sheet
$3.4B$3.4B$3.9B$7.2B$12.0B$9.1B$5.2B$6.5B$7.3B$9.5B$9.5BCash & investmentsCash+inv
$8.0B$8.8B$11.1B$11.3B$11.5B$12.0B$12.7B$13.8B$13.7B$13.9B$14.1BReceivablesReceiv.
$6.9B$6.9B$8.5B$10.8B$11.4B$12.5B$12.5B$12.4B$11.3B$11.1B$12.0BAccounts payablePayables
$1.0B$1.9B$2.6B$466M$102M($447M)$128M$1.4B$2.3B$2.8B$2.1BOperating working capitalOper. WC
$16.4B$16.3B$21.8B$25.4B$26.7B$24.8B$21.8B$24.0B$26.8B$29.6B$28.8BCurrent assetsCur. assets
$21.5B$22.0B$27.6B$30.3B$28.8B$29.3B$27.9B$40.2B$39.6B$33.5B$33.3BCurrent liabilitiesCur. liab.
0.8×0.7×0.8×0.8×0.9×0.8×0.8×0.6×0.7×0.9×0.9×Current ratioCurr. ratio
$36.0B$36.8B$66.2B$68.7B$70.7B$70.2B$58.5B$59.3B$58.2B$61.5B$53.4BGoodwillGoodwill
$180.5B$187.5B$251.7B$263.4B$273.9B$275.9B$257.3B$264.8B$266.2B$272.6B$260.0BTotal assetsAssets
$61.0B$64.6B$111.7B$102.2B$103.8B$94.8B$94.8B$97.1B$99.1B$98.9B$97.1BTotal debtDebt
$57.6B$61.1B$107.8B$95.0B$91.7B$85.8B$89.6B$90.6B$91.8B$89.4B$87.6BNet debt / (cash)Net debt
5.7×5.8×5.4×4.6×3.8×4.9×3.6×5.7×5.6×4.7×4.3×Interest coverageInt. cov.
$53.9B$68.6B$71.6B$82.7B$90.3B$96.1B$80.9B$82.7B$85.6B$96.9B$88.3BShareholders’ equityEquity
0.8%0.9%0.9%0.9%1.2%1.1%1.1%1.0%1.0%1.0%1.1%Stock comp / revenueSBC/rev
Per share
4.88B4.79B4.64B4.61B4.62B4.65B4.43B4.15B3.91B3.71B3.62BShares out (diluted)Shares
$16.56$17.77$20.37$23.63$22.40$25.01$27.41$29.31$31.66$33.35$34.64Revenue / shareRev/sh
$1.78$4.75$2.53$2.83$2.28$3.04$1.21$3.71$4.14$5.39$5.20EPS (diluted)EPS
$2.17$2.45$3.13$3.42$3.36$4.29$3.56$3.92$3.96$5.90$5.64Owner earnings / shareOE/sh
$2.17$2.45$3.13$3.42$3.36$4.29$3.56$3.92$3.96$5.90$5.64Free cash flow / shareFCF/sh
$0.53$0.60$0.72$0.81$0.90$0.97$1.07$1.15$1.23$1.32$1.36Dividends / shareDiv/sh
$1.87$2.00$2.11$2.16$1.99$1.97$2.40$2.95$3.12$3.17$3.28Cap. spending / shareCapex/sh
$11.07$14.34$15.43$17.94$19.53$20.65$18.27$19.94$21.89$26.13$24.41Book value / shareBVPS
Per-share growththe realized rate an owner's share compounded
9-yr5-yr
Revenue / share+8.1%/yr+8.3%/yr
Owner earnings / share+11.8%/yr+11.9%/yr
EPS+13.1%/yr+18.8%/yr
Dividends / share+10.6%/yr+8.1%/yr
Capital spending / share+6.0%/yr+9.8%/yr
Book value / share+10.0%/yr+6.0%/yr

The record, charted

FY2016–2025

Each measure over its full record; the current point and the worst year marked.

Share count
3.7Bpeak FY2016
ROIC
8%low FY2022
Net debt ÷ owner earnings
4.1×peak FY2018

Owner earnings vs. net income

Owner earningsNet income

The accountant's number, and the cash an owner can take; the gap is the tell.

$21.9Bowner earningsvs.$20.0Bnet incomelow FY2016

Where the cash went

ReinvestBuybacksDividendsAcquisitionsRetainedBeyond op. cash

Each year's outlays against its operating cash: the mix, and how it drifts. The hatched cap is spending beyond that year's operating cash — financed from the balance sheet or borrowing, not operations.

FY2016FY2025

Net income is the accountant's number; owner earnings is the cash an owner could take out. The walk between them, off the cash-flow statement, and whether the gap is widening or holding.

In fiscal 2025 the business turned $20.0B of profit into $21.9B of owner earnings: more cash than the profit line showed, after the non-cash charges and the capital it put back in.

Reported net income$20.0B
Owner earnings$21.9B · 18% of revenue
FY2025FY2024FY2023FY2022FY2021
Reported net income$20.0B$16.2B$15.4B$5.4B$14.2B
Depreciation & amortizationnon-cash charge added back+$16.2B+$14.8B+$14.3B+$13.8B+$13.8B
Stock-based compensationreal costnon-cash, but a real cost+$1.3B+$1.3B+$1.2B+$1.3B+$1.3B
Working capital & othertiming of cash in and out, other non-cash items−$3.9B−$4.6B−$2.5B+$5.9B−$132M
Cash from operations$33.6B$27.7B$28.5B$26.4B$29.1B
Capital expenditurecash put back in to keep running and to grow−$11.8B−$12.2B−$12.2B−$10.6B−$9.2B
Owner earnings$21.9B$15.5B$16.3B$15.8B$20.0B
Owner-earnings marginowner earnings ÷ revenue18%13%13%13%17%

Owner earnings is the cash an owner could pull out without starving the business: operating cash less the capital it must spend to hold its position . The cash-flow statement also adds stock comp back as non-cash, but it is a real cost paid in shares; counted as the expense it is (less $1.3B), owner earnings is nearer $20.6B.

Maintenance capex is estimated as depreciation where a growing business invests above it; free cash flow is the figure the scorecard's free-cash margin reads.

III

Quality & stewardship

Returns, the balance sheet, capital allocation, and pay.

Owner’s Scorecard

FY2025 10-K · source on SEC EDGAR →

Will it survive?

  • Adequate
    Operating income $20.7B ÷ interest expense $4.4B
    What this means

    Comfortable in a normal year, but below the margin of safety Graham looked for. Worth checking how stable the coverage has been across a full cycle.

  • How heavy is the debt, net of cash? $89.4B · 4.3× operating profit
    Heavy net debt
    Cash $9.5B + ST investments $14M − debt $98.9B
    What this means

    Netting $9.5B of cash and short-term investments against $98.9B of debt leaves $89.4B owed, about 4.3× a year's operating profit (4.8× on the gross debt, before the cash). Net debt is the leverage figure that matters: the cash is already set against the debt. Strategic or illiquid investments aren't counted here.

  • Not enough data
    What this means

    The filing data didn't include the inputs for this check.

Is it a good business?

  • Solid through the cycle
    10-yr median, range 5%–14%; 8% latest = NOPAT $15.8B ÷ invested capital $186.3B
    Industry peers: median 7%
    What this means

    The rate the business earns on the money tied up in it, Buffett's north star, because over time a stock tracks the ROIC beneath it. Above ~15% sustained hints at a moat; a return below the cost of capital (~8%) erodes value as a business grows rather than building it — the test Buffett weighs most. The headline is the median of the last 10 years (it ran 8% most recently), so one peak or trough year doesn't set the verdict. Asset-light businesses (R&D expensed, little capital) read artificially high, pair this with Owner Earnings.

  • Solid through the cycle
    10-yr median margin, range 13%–18%; latest $21.9B = operating cash $33.6B − maintenance capex $11.8B
    Industry peers: median 10%
    What this means

    What an owner could take out without starving the business: operating cash less the maintenance capital it must spend to hold its position — Buffett's owner earnings. That's 18% of revenue this year, a 14% median across 10 years. Treating stock comp as the real expense it is (less $1.3B of SBC) leaves $20.6B.

  • Cash-backed
    Cash from ops $33.6B ÷ net income $20.0B

    In the filing’s words The filing leans on adjusted, non-GAAP earnings, but the GAAP profit is itself cash-backed — the adjustments are not papering over a cash shortfall here.

    What this means

    How much of reported profit showed up as operating cash. Above 1× is reassuring; well below suggests earnings lean on accruals. One year is noisy, growth and working-capital swings distort it, and this is operating cash, not free cash. Watch the multi-year trend.

How is the cash used?

  • Returns about half
    Dividends + buybacks $12.0B ÷ Owner Earnings $21.9B
    What this means

    Of $21.9B Owner Earnings, $12.0B (55%) went back to shareholders, $4.9B dividends, $7.2B buybacks. Net of $1.3B stock comp, the real buyback was about $5.9B. Returning most of it is the mark of a mature business with little left to reinvest at a high return; reinvesting most could mean a long runway, or empire-building. The split doesn't say which; the return earned on it (see ROIC) does.

  • Investing or harvesting? 0.72×
    Harvesting
    Capex $11.8B ÷ depreciation $16.2B
    What this means

    Descriptive, not a grade. Above ~1× means investing faster than assets wear out (growth, or, sustained for years, today's earnings carrying less depreciation than tomorrow's will). Below means spending less than it's wearing out (efficiency, or a melting asset base). The ratio won't tell you which; the filings will.

Graham’s defensive tests · 3 of 6 met

Graham’s numerical criteria for the defensive investor (The Intelligent Investor, ch. 14), run on the filings. A floor of safety, not a buy signal; many fine modern businesses fail his strictest liquidity rules by design.

  • Adequate size Pass
    Revenue ≥ $2B · $123.7B
    What this means

    Big enough to weather a storm. Graham's 1972 floor was ~$100M of sales (≈ $700M today); we use a $2B revenue line as a conservative modern stand-in.

  • Strong liquidity Miss
    Current ratio ≥ 2× · 0.88×
    What this means

    Current assets at least twice current liabilities, near-term bills covered without touching the business. Strict by design: many cash-rich modern firms run leaner and miss it, holding their cushion in longer-dated securities.

  • Conservative debt Miss
    Debt ≤ working capital · $98.9B vs ($4.0B) WC
    What this means

    Graham's rule that borrowings not exceed net current assets. Capital-heavy and buyback-heavy firms routinely fail it, read it next to interest coverage, not alone.

  • Earnings stability Pass
    A profit every year (10-yr record) · no losses
    What this means

    Graham wanted earnings in each of the past ten years, the stability a defensive owner leans on.

  • Dividend record Pass
    Uninterrupted dividends · paid every year (10)
    What this means

    An unbroken dividend was Graham's mark of durability. He wanted twenty years; the filings show about ten, and a single suspension breaks the streak. Non-payers, many fine modern compounders, fall outside his defensive net by design.

  • Earnings growth Near
    Earnings +33% over the record · +20%
    What this means

    At least a third more earnings than a decade ago, averaging three years at each end. Net income (not per-share), so stock splits don't distort it, buybacks and dilution show up in the share-count line instead.

  • Moderate price
    P/E ≤ 15 and P/E × P/B ≤ 22.5 · decided by the price
    What this means

    Graham's valuation gate, the wall he kept between a sound business and a sound investment. Three-year average earnings are $4.78/share (latest year $5.56), the averaged base the calculator's gate runs on, and book value is $26.94/share. Enter a price in “What the price implies” just below for the P/E, P/B, and whether it clears. But this is the rule Buffett outgrew: there's no hard P/E law, and a wonderful business can deserve a far richer multiple if the thesis holds, treat it as the bargain-hunter's floor, not a verdict on the price.

Durability & moat, 2016–2025

Whether the record’s returns held, and what the capital reinvested earned.

  • Profitable years 10 of 10
    What this means

    Never lost money over the record, the earnings stability Graham insisted on.

  • Return on capital ≥ 15% 0 of 10 yrs
    What this means

    A moat shows up as a high return on invested capital that holds year after year, not one good vintage.

  • Operating margin 21% → 18% (3-yr avg ends)
    What this means

    Through the cycle the operating margin slipped — about 21% early to 18% lately, median 19% — competition or costs are biting in.

  • Reinvestment, incremental ROIC returns capital
    What this means

    The capital base barely grew: this business returns cash through dividends and buybacks rather than reinvesting. Judge it on the cash returned, not on compounding.

  • Owner earnings growth +6%/yr
    What this means

    Owner earnings grew about 6% a year over the record.

  • Worst year 2022 · 11.6% op. margin
    What this means

    Stayed profitable even in its hardest year, the resilience that survives recessions.

  • Share count −3.0%/yr
    What this means

    The share count is shrinking, buybacks are quietly growing your slice of the business.

  • Dividend record rising
    What this means

    Paid and raised the dividend across the record, the continuity Graham prized.

Does AI threaten the moat?

Low contestability

The moat is physical, regulated or balance-sheet-funded, the kind AI cuts costs within but does not contest.

In its own filing Named as a competitive risk

Its FY2025 10-K names artificial intelligence as a competitive threat.

“Our businesses in Content & Experiences, as well as our video business, face substantial and increasing competition from providers of similar types of entertainment, sports, news and information content, as well as from other forms of entertainment, including from social networking and user-generated content or technol…”

AI is unlikely to contest a moat that is physical, regulated or balance-sheet-funded; here it reads more as a cost tool than a threat, and the company is using it that way.

Read from the filing's own risk factors, paired with the industry's structure under its SIC code; the durability is read above, the price below.

All figures as filed; the source filing is linked above.

Current Position

as of the latest quarter, Mar 31, 2026

Can the business pay what it owes this year, off the freshest balance sheet: the quality of the assets, the debt actually coming due, and what a low ratio means here.

Current assets$28.8B
  • Cash & short-term investments$9.5B
  • Receivables$14.1B
  • Other current assets$5.3B
Current liabilities$33.3B
  • Debt due within a year$5.4B
  • Accounts payable$12.0B
  • Other current liabilities$15.9B
Current ratio0.87×all current assets ÷ what's due · Graham looked for 2×
Quick ratio0.87×stricter: inventory excluded
Cash ratio0.28×strictest: cash alone against what's due
Working capital($4.5B)the cushion left after near-term bills

Its current ratio is below 1, which usually reads as strain; here it is likely structural strength. What it owes in the near term is money to suppliers and customers (payables and deferred revenue), not to lenders, so the balance sheet is funded by operating float, the way Costco's and Amazon's are. The low ratio can be the edge, not the risk; the cash-conversion cycle and the debt due above say which.

Debt due this year vs. cash$5.4B due · $9.5B cash covered by cash on hand, no refinancing forced · both figures from the Mar 31, 2026 balance sheet
Revenue, latest quarter vs. a year ago+5.3%the freshest read on whether the business is still growing
Current ratio, recent quarters0.7× → 0.9×
Deeper floors
Tangible book value$17.2Bequity stripped of goodwill & intangibles
Debt incl. operating leases$11.5B$6.1B of it operating leases
Deferred revenue$4.7Bcustomer cash collected before delivery; operating float

From the company's latest filing.

Not how much it owes, but when it falls due, and against what. The ladder the company files, beside cash on hand and a year's owner earnings.

'26$5.9B
'27$5.0B
'28$5.7B
'29$4.8B
'30$4.8B
later$75.4B

Bars scaled to the largest single year; “later” is everything due after 2030, shown apart since it dwarfs the years.

Due in the next 12 months$5.9Bthe first rung: what must be repaid or rolled over within the year
Within two years$10.9Bthe near wall, the part most exposed to today’s credit conditions
Biggest single year$5.9Bin 2026the lumpiest maturity, where a refinancing, if needed, is largest
Total scheduled principal$101.6Bevery year plus what lies beyond, as the footnote totals it

Against what the business has and earns

Cash & short-term investments, Mar 31, 2026$9.5B
One year of owner earnings (FY2025)$21.9B
Together, against $5.9B due next year5.3×

Cash on hand as of Mar 31, 2026 plus a year’s owner earnings comes to $31.4B against the $5.9B due in the twelve months after the Dec 31, 2025 schedule: 5.3 times it.

Maturity schedule extracted from the company’s Dec 31, 2025 annual report and reconciled to the total the table states.

How the cash was used, 2016–2025

Over the record, the business generated $261.1B of operating cash; how management split it reads as a balanced allocator, splitting cash between the business, owners, and the balance sheet.

  • Reinvested$103.6B · 40%
  • Dividends$40.5B · 15%
  • Buybacks$62.7B · 24%
  • Retained (debt / cash)$54.3B · 21%
  • Returned to owners$103.2B

    65% of the owner earnings the business produced over the span, $40.5B as dividends and $62.7B as buybacks.

  • Average price paid for buybacks

    Buybacks ran $62.7B over the span, but the filings don't tag the share count needed to deduce the average price paid.

  • Net change in share count−25.8%

    The diluted count fell from 4875M to 3617M, so the buybacks outran the stock issued to staff.

  • Dividend record$1.32/sh

    Paid in 10 of the years on record, the per-share dividend growing about 11% a year. It was never cut over the span.

  • Return on what it retained16%

    Of the earnings it kept rather than paid out ($34.7B over the span), annual owner earnings (first three years vs last three) grew $5.6B, so each retained $1 added about 0.16 of yearly owner earnings. Buffett's test, run on owner earnings instead of market value.

Buybacks are gross of stock issued to staff; the share-count line above is the net of that, the figure that decides whether owners gained. The average price paid blends a year of purchases (and any accelerated repurchase), so it is close, not exact. The record of where the cash went and on what terms.

Acquisitions & goodwill

from the balance sheet & the 10-year cash-flow record

Goodwill grows only when a company acquires and falls only when it concedes it overpaid. The size of that bet, the cash put into buying rather than building, and how much has already been written off.

Goodwill & intangibles$65.1B24% of all assets; the premium carried on the balance sheet for businesses acquired
Against book equity63%goodwill is this share of book equity; the rest is the company’s own retained and paid-in capital
Cash spent acquiring$46.1Bover 10 years buying other businesses, against $103.6B of capital spent building

$8.1B written down across 1 year (2022): goodwill the company has already conceded it overpaid for, charged against earnings. That is roughly 18% of the cash it put into acquisitions over the span. A write-down costs no cash (the cash went out when the deal was signed), but it is management marking its own past judgment to market.

Goodwill, acquired intangibles and equity from the latest balance sheet; acquisition spend and write-downs summed across the 10-year record, from the company's own filings.

Management, ownership & pay

read the proxy →

From the proxy: how much of the business the people running it own, and how they are paid, beside what the business earned for its owners in the same years.

Fiscal yearChief executivePay, as filed“Actually paid”Owner earnings
2021Mr. Roberts$34.0M$31.9M$20.0B
2022Mr. Roberts$32.1M−$4.1M$15.8B
2023Mr. Roberts$35.5M$71.2M$16.3B
2024Mr. Roberts$33.9M−$1.6M$15.5B
2025Mr. Roberts$35.1M$13.7M$21.9B

Both pay figures are the company’s own, from the pay-versus-performance table its proxy statement files. “As filed” is the Summary Compensation Table total: salary, bonus, and equity awards at their value on the day of grant. “Actually paid” is the SEC’s prescribed recalculation, which re-marks those equity awards to what they became as they vested; it can swing far above or below the filed figure in either direction, and negative years occur. Owner earnings are the whole business's, from the record above, for the same fiscal years.

  • Insider ownership1.1%

    The stake all directors and executive officers hold together, per the 2026 proxy: skin in the game, the first thing Munger reads.

  • CEO pay ratio381:1

    What the chief earns for every dollar the median employee makes, per the 2026 proxy. A high ratio alone settles nothing; some businesses are genuinely top-heavy in scarce skill. A runaway figure is where Buffett starts asking whether the board is doing its job.

  • Stock-based compensation$1.3B

    The slice of the business handed to employees in shares this year, 1% of revenue, equal to 6% of operating profit. Buffett's oldest accounting fight: this is compensation, compensation is an expense, real whether or not the headline earnings admit it. One trap: the cash-flow statement adds SBC back, so the operating cash, and the owner earnings drawn from it, are flattered by exactly this amount; counted as the cost it is, what an owner keeps is lower.

Inverting the record

Invert: instead of why Comcast Holdings ZONES is a good business, the question is what would make owning it a mistake, and whether those marks are in the record. Disconfirming tests across 2016–2025.

None of the 6 tests turned up a mark; each came back clean. A clean panel says only that these particular ways of being wrong are not written into the record.

Each test came back clean
  • Is it less profitable than it was?
  • Did the share count rise anyway?
  • Did debt outgrow the business?
  • Did reported profit become cash?
  • Did receivables and inventory outpace sales?
  • Are "one-time" charges a yearly habit?

Each test is read from the filings and is noisy alone; a flag can mark a cyclical trough or a year of heavy investment as easily as a problem. The filing says which.

What an owner would ask, FY2025

read the 10-K →
  • Which reported numbers are a judgment call?
    Management names Acquisitions as critical estimates

    each rests partly on management's judgment; the filing's note sets out the assumptionsverify →

The questions the record and the charts do not answer on their own; each carries the figure and the place to look.

Peers, Media & Broadcasting

The same industry, side by side on owner economics. Each figure is a through-cycle median, so a peak or trough year can’t distort it; the group median at the foot is the line to read each against.

CompanyRevenueGross marginOp. marginROICOwner earn. margin
VZVerizon Communications$138.2B84%22.0%11%6%
TAT&T Inc.$125.6B52%15.4%6%15%
CCZComcast Holdings ZONES$123.7B19.0%9%14%
TMUST-Mobile US Inc.$88.3B87%12.1%8%1%
CHTRCharter Communications, Inc.$54.8B18.9%7%10%
WBDWarner Bros. Discovery, Inc.$37.3B63%13.4%5%20%
PARAParamount Global$29.2B17.8%13%6%
OPTUOptimum Communications Inc.$8.6B67%18.6%5%10%
Group median18.2%8%10%
IV

The price

What a price has to assume.

What the price implies

reverse-DCF

Type today's close and see the owner-earnings growth you'd have to believe to justify it, beside what Comcast Holdings ZONES has delivered.

Comcast Holdings ZONES’s latest year runs above its own through-cycle margin — the reported figure may flatter a peak. So the tool opens on the through-cycle base, Graham’s averaging cutting both ways; clear the toggle below to read the latest year exactly as reported.

$

Through the cycle, Comcast Holdings ZONES earns about $17.5B on its 14.1% median owner-earnings margin. This year’s 17.7% margin runs above that; the reported figure may flatter a peak you'd be paying on. Normalize, below, values the price on that through-cycle figure rather than the latest year. It comes pre-checked here for that reason, the same rule that already normalizes a trough; clear it to price the year as filed.

Base

The assumptions

9.0% = the 4.55% 10-year Treasury (Jul 15, 2026) + 4.45 points of equity premium. The rate you require is yours to set.

Enter a price above to run it.

Implied by the price
Owner-earnings growth · ’21→’25+1%/yr
Owner-earnings growth · ’16→’25+6%/yr
Owner-earnings yield
P/E (3-yr earnings ’23–’25)
P/B
Graham’s price gate

Graham capped the multiple at 15×; Buffett and Munger let that rule go: a wonderful business can deserve 50× if the thesis holds. The gate marks the bargain-hunter's floor.

Against a high-grade bond: Graham’s yardstick bond yield%

Prefilled with the 10-year Treasury (4.55%, as of Jul 15, 2026). Edit it for today’s exact figure, or a AAA corporate yield.

Graham measured a stock against the bond you could own instead, the heart of his margin of safety. Enter a price above to weigh the owner-earnings yield against this bond.

Owner earnings $20.4B on 3597M shares outstanding (a weighted basic average, the only count this filer tags); net debt $87.6B. The base opens on the through-cycle figure (the latest year sits above the record’s own median, and Graham’s averaging cuts both ways); clear Normalize to use the year as filed. Net of stock comp treats option pay as the expense it is. The dials set the multiple a growth belief justifies; the price, and every dollar on this page, is yours.

Cite: Owner Scorecard, "Comcast Holdings ZONES (CCZ), the owner's record," https://ownerscorecard.com/c/CCZ, data as of 2026-07-09.

Manual order: ← CCSI its page in the Manual CD →

Industry order: ← CABO the Media & Broadcasting chapter CHTR →