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CPAY, Corpay Inc.
Corpay Inc. is a global corporate payments company that helps businesses and consumers better manage and pay their expenses in a simple, controlled manner.
Our wide range of modern, digitized solutions provide control, reporting and automation benefits superior to many of the payment methods businesses often use such as cash, paper checks, general purpose credit cards, as well as employee payment processes.
We actively market and sell to current and prospective customers using a multi-channel, go-to-market strategy, which includes comprehensive digital channels, direct sales forces and strategic partner relationships.
The business
What it sells, where the money comes from, the kind of company it is.
The business in brief
read the 10-K →What this business is and what moves its needle, from its own SEC filings.
- What it is
- Revenue is led by Vehicle Payments (47%) and Corporate Payments (36%), with 2 more lines behind.
- Situation
- Serial acquirer. Goodwill and acquired intangibles are 41% of assets, with meaningful acquisition spending in 9 of the record's 10 years; much of what this business is was bought, at prices the record carries.
- What moves the needle
- Operating margin has run about 44% through the cycle, a wide margin for the work it does — whether that reflects a durable edge or one that can fade is what the record weighs. That margin has stayed fairly steady relative to where it runs (39%–46% over the years), so unit growth and cost discipline, not a moving line, are the lever. 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 11%). The steadier read is owner earnings: roughly 37% of revenue reaches owners as cash, consistently, and customers and suppliers fund the business through negative working capital. 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 →Revenue spreads across 4 lines, the largest Vehicle Payments at 47%.
- Vehicle Payments47%$2.1B
- Corporate Payments36%$1.6B
- Lodging Payments10%$470M
- Other6%$285M
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.
The record
Ten years of arithmetic, read across the cycle.
The record, 2016–2025
realized figures from each filing · older years to the left| 2016’16 | 2017’17 | 2018’18 | 2019’19 | 2020’20 | 2021’21 | 2022’22 | 2023’23 | 2024’24 | 2025’25 | TTMTTMMar 2026 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Income statement | |||||||||||
| $1.8B | $2.2B | $2.4B | $2.6B | $2.4B | $2.8B | $3.4B | $3.8B | $4.0B | $4.5B | $4.8B | RevenueRevenue |
| 95% | 96% | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 98% | Gross marginGross mgn |
| 15% | 17% | 16% | 15% | 16% | 17% | 17% | 16% | 16% | 16% | 16% | SG&A / revenueSG&A/rev |
| $754M | $884M | $1.1B | $1.2B | $972M | $1.2B | $1.4B | $1.7B | $1.8B | $2.0B | $2.2B | Operating incomeOp. inc. |
| 41.2% | 39.3% | 44.8% | 46.5% | 40.7% | 43.8% | 42.2% | 44.1% | 45.0% | 44.0% | 46.1% | Operating marginOp. mgn |
| $452M | $740M | $811M | $895M | $704M | $839M | $954M | $982M | $1.0B | $1.1B | $1.2B | Net incomeNet inc. |
| 30% | 17% | 26% | 17% | 20% | 24% | 25% | 26% | 28% | 31% | 31% | Effective tax rateTax rate |
| Cash flow & returns | |||||||||||
| $708M | $680M | $903M | $1.2B | $1.5B | $1.2B | $755M | $2.1B | $1.9B | $1.5B | $1.5B | Operating cash flowOp. cash |
| $203M | $265M | $275M | $274M | $255M | $284M | $322M | $337M | $351M | $393M | $416M | DepreciationDeprec. |
| ($11M) | ($418M) | ($253M) | ($68M) | $470M | ($7M) | ($643M) | $667M | $469M | ($66M) | ($187M) | Working capital & otherWC & other |
| $59M | $70M | $81M | $75M | $78M | $112M | $151M | $154M | $175M | $201M | $207M | CapexCapex |
| 3.2% | 3.1% | 3.3% | 2.8% | 3.3% | 3.9% | 4.4% | 4.1% | 4.4% | 4.4% | 4.3% | Capex / revenueCapex/rev |
| $649M | $610M | $822M | $1.1B | $1.4B | $1.1B | $603M | $1.9B | $1.8B | $1.3B | $1.3B | Owner earningsOwner earn. |
| 35.4% | 27.1% | 33.8% | 41.0% | 58.4% | 38.3% | 17.6% | 51.8% | 44.4% | 28.7% | 27.4% | Owner earnings marginOE mgn |
| $649M | $610M | $822M | $1.1B | $1.4B | $1.1B | $603M | $1.9B | $1.8B | $1.3B | $1.3B | Free cash flowFCF |
| 35.4% | 27.1% | 33.8% | 41.0% | 58.4% | 38.3% | 17.6% | 51.8% | 44.4% | 28.7% | 27.4% | Free cash flow marginFCF mgn |
| $1.3B | $705M | $21M | $448M | $81M | $602M | $217M | $428M | $822M | $0 | $0 | AcquisitionsAcquis. |
| $188M | $402M | $959M | $695M | $850M | $1.4B | $1.4B | $687M | $1.3B | $783M | — | BuybacksBuybacks |
| 10% | 13% | 18% | 24% | 21% | 11% | 10% | 11% | 10% | 9% | 10% | ROICROIC |
| 15% | 20% | 24% | 24% | 21% | 29% | 38% | 30% | 32% | 28% | 34% | Return on equityROE |
| 15% | 20% | 24% | 24% | 21% | 29% | 38% | 30% | 32% | 28% | 34% | Retained to equityRetained/eq |
| Balance sheet | |||||||||||
| $475M | $914M | $1.0B | $1.3B | $935M | $1.5B | $1.4B | $1.4B | $1.6B | $2.4B | $2.5B | Cash & investmentsCash+inv |
| $1.2B | $1.4B | $1.4B | $1.6B | $1.4B | $1.8B | $2.1B | $2.2B | $2.1B | $2.1B | $2.6B | ReceivablesReceiv. |
| $1.2B | $1.4B | $1.1B | $1.2B | $1.1B | $1.4B | $1.6B | $1.6B | $1.6B | $1.6B | $2.1B | Accounts payablePayables |
| $51M | ($17M) | $308M | $319M | $312M | $387M | $496M | $537M | $520M | $581M | $530M | Operating working capitalOper. WC |
| $2.5B | $3.5B | $3.9B | $4.6B | $4.0B | $5.5B | $6.1B | $7.1B | $8.7B | $14.0B | $14.6B | Current assetsCur. assets |
| $3.3B | $4.1B | $4.5B | $4.5B | $4.0B | $5.3B | $6.0B | $6.8B | $8.7B | $14.3B | $15.0B | Current liabilitiesCur. liab. |
| 0.8× | 0.9× | 0.9× | 1.0× | 1.0× | 1.0× | 1.0× | 1.0× | 1.0× | 1.0× | 1.0× | Current ratioCurr. ratio |
| $4.2B | $4.7B | $4.5B | $4.8B | $4.7B | $5.1B | $5.2B | $5.6B | $6.0B | $7.6B | $7.3B | GoodwillGoodwill |
| $9.6B | $11.3B | $11.2B | $12.2B | $11.2B | $13.4B | $14.1B | $15.5B | $18.0B | $26.4B | $26.7B | Total assetsAssets |
| $2.6B | $3.0B | $2.1B | $1.7B | $1.2B | $7.5B | $9.4B | $8.8B | $10.8B | $13.3B | $14.1B | Total debtDebt |
| $2.2B | $2.1B | $1.0B | $475M | $271M | $6.0B | $7.9B | $7.5B | $9.2B | $10.9B | $11.6B | Net debt / (cash)Net debt |
| — | — | — | — | — | — | 8.8× | 4.8× | 4.7× | 4.9× | 5.2× | Interest coverageInt. cov. |
| $3.1B | $3.7B | $3.3B | $3.7B | $3.4B | $2.9B | $2.5B | $3.3B | $3.1B | $3.9B | $3.5B | Shareholders’ equityEquity |
| 3.5% | 4.1% | 2.9% | 2.3% | 1.8% | 2.8% | 3.5% | 3.1% | 2.9% | 2.3% | 2.3% | Stock comp / revenueSBC/rev |
| Per share | |||||||||||
| 95.2M | 93.6M | 92.2M | 90.1M | 86.7M | 84.1M | 76.9M | 74.4M | 71.8M | 71.1M | 68.4M | Shares out (diluted)Shares |
| $19.24 | $24.04 | $26.41 | $29.41 | $27.55 | $33.71 | $44.59 | $50.52 | $55.32 | $63.73 | $69.89 | Revenue / shareRev/sh |
| $4.75 | $7.91 | $8.81 | $9.94 | $8.12 | $9.99 | $12.42 | $13.20 | $13.97 | $15.06 | $17.19 | EPS (diluted)EPS |
| $6.82 | $6.52 | $8.92 | $12.07 | $16.08 | $12.91 | $7.85 | $26.18 | $24.57 | $18.28 | $19.15 | Owner earnings / shareOE/sh |
| $6.82 | $6.52 | $8.92 | $12.07 | $16.08 | $12.91 | $7.85 | $26.18 | $24.57 | $18.28 | $19.15 | Free cash flow / shareFCF/sh |
| $0.62 | $0.75 | $0.88 | $0.83 | $0.90 | $1.33 | $1.97 | $2.07 | $2.44 | $2.83 | $3.03 | Cap. spending / shareCapex/sh |
| $32.39 | $39.28 | $36.25 | $41.21 | $38.69 | $34.10 | $33.07 | $44.13 | $43.46 | $54.66 | $51.29 | Book value / shareBVPS |
| 9-yr | 5-yr | |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue / share | +14.2%/yr | +18.3%/yr |
| Owner earnings / share | +11.6%/yr | +2.6%/yr |
| EPS | +13.7%/yr | +13.1%/yr |
| Capital spending / share | +18.4%/yr | +25.6%/yr |
| Book value / share | +6.0%/yr | +7.2%/yr |
The year, in the company's words
the filing →Verbatim from the 10-K's management discussion. Each sentence is shown only because its subject, direction, and stated figures check out against the filed numbers on this page. The words are the company's; the arithmetic is the record's.
- Operating income+11.6%
“Consolidated operating income Operating income was $1,994.1 million in 2025, an increase of 11.6% compared to the prior year. The increase in operating income was primarily due to the reasons discussed above.”
✓ figure matches the filed record - Vehicle Payments+6.5%
“Vehicle Payments revenues increased primarily due to organic growth of 9% driven by 7% growth in transaction volumes, new sales growth and the impact of acquisitions, which contributed approximately $26 million in revenues.”
✓ figure matches the filed record - Lodging Payments-3.9%
“Lodging Payments revenues were $469.5 million in 2025, a decrease of 3.9% compared to the prior year. The decrease in Lodging Payments revenues was primarily due to a decline in workforce room night volume due to lower emergency activity.”
✓ figure matches the filed record
The record, charted
FY2016–2025Each measure over its full record; the current point and the worst year marked.
Owner earnings vs. net income
Owner earningsNet incomeThe accountant's number, and the cash an owner can take; the gap is the tell.
Where the cash went
ReinvestBuybacksDividendsAcquisitionsRetainedBeyond op. cashEach 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.
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 $1.1B of profit into $1.3B of owner earnings: more cash than the profit line showed, after the non-cash charges and the capital it put back in.
| FY2025 | FY2024 | FY2023 | FY2022 | FY2021 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reported net income | $1.1B | $1.0B | $982M | $954M | $839M |
| Depreciation & amortizationnon-cash charge added back | +$393M | +$351M | +$337M | +$322M | +$284M |
| Stock-based compensationreal costnon-cash, but a real cost | +$103M | +$117M | +$116M | +$121M | +$80M |
| Working capital & othertiming of cash in and out, other non-cash items | −$66M | +$469M | +$667M | −$643M | −$7M |
| Cash from operations | $1.5B | $1.9B | $2.1B | $755M | $1.2B |
| Capital expenditurecash put back in to keep running and to grow | −$201M | −$175M | −$154M | −$151M | −$112M |
| Owner earnings | $1.3B | $1.8B | $1.9B | $603M | $1.1B |
| Owner-earnings marginowner earnings ÷ revenue | 29% | 44% | 52% | 18% | 38% |
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 $103M), owner earnings is nearer $1.2B.
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.
Quality & stewardship
Returns, the balance sheet, capital allocation, and pay.
Owner’s Scorecard
Will it survive?
- AdequateOperating income $2.0B ÷ interest expense $404M
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? $10.9B · 5.5× operating profitHeavy net debtCash $2.4B − debt $13.3B
What this means
Netting $2.4B of cash and short-term investments against $13.3B of debt leaves $10.9B owed, about 5.5× a year's operating profit (6.7× 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.
- How long is cash tied up? -5726dNegative, funded by othersDSO 173 + DIO 0 − DPO 5899 days
What this means
Days cash is tied up between paying suppliers and collecting from customers. A negative cycle is a quiet moat: suppliers and customers fund the operation (Buffett's “float”), the company grows on other people's money. (Little or no inventory, a services / asset-light model, so the inventory leg is ~0.)
Is it a good business?
- Solid through the cycle10-yr median, range 9%–24%; 9% latest = NOPAT $1.4B ÷ invested capital $14.8BIndustry peers: median 21%
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 9% 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.
- High through the cycle10-yr median margin, range 18%–58%; latest $1.3B = operating cash $1.5B − maintenance capex $201MIndustry peers: median 18%
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 29% of revenue this year, a 35% median across 10 years. Treating stock comp as the real expense it is (less $103M of SBC) leaves $1.2B.
- Cash-backedCash from ops $1.5B ÷ net income $1.1B
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 halfDividends + buybacks $783M ÷ Owner Earnings $1.3B
What this means
Of $1.3B Owner Earnings, $783M (60%) went back to shareholders, $0 dividends, $783M buybacks. Net of $103M stock comp, the real buyback was about $680M. 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? 0.51×HarvestingCapex $201M ÷ depreciation $393M
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 PassRevenue ≥ $2B · $4.5B
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 MissCurrent ratio ≥ 2× · 0.98×
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 MissDebt ≤ working capital · $13.3B vs ($333M) 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 PassA 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 MissUninterrupted dividends · none paid
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 PassEarnings +33% over the record · +52%
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 $15.58/share (latest year $16.37), the averaged base the calculator's gate runs on, and book value is $59.42/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% 3 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 42% → 44% (3-yr avg ends)
What this means
Through the cycle the operating margin widened — about 42% early to 44% lately, median 44% — pricing power intact or improving.
- Reinvestment, incremental ROIC 8%
What this means
Reinvested capital came back at only a modest incremental return — near the cost of capital, where extra growth adds little per dollar. The record shows whether it is a soft stretch or a thinning moat.
- Owner earnings growth +10%/yr
What this means
Owner earnings grew about 10% a year over the record.
- Worst year 2017 · 39.3% op. margin
What this means
Stayed profitable even in its hardest year, the resilience that survives recessions.
- Share count −3.2%/yr
What this means
The share count is shrinking, buybacks are quietly growing your slice of the business.
Does AI threaten the moat?
Elevated contestabilityThe product is software or information, the very thing capable AI now produces more cheaply, so the moat is more contestable than the record alone implies.
Its FY2025 10-K names artificial intelligence as a competitive threat, in language that was not in the prior year's filing.
“Our competitors, customers and partners may increasingly expect AI-enabled functionality and efficiencies in the solutions they purchase and use.”
AI has collapsed the cost of building a capable substitute for the very thing this business sells. When a credible alternative can be assembled for a fraction of the incumbent's price, it is pricing power that erodes first, not revenue tomorrow. The live question is whether the moat survives that, not whether it held in the past. Whether that question is answerable at all is yours to decide, against your own circle of competence.
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, 2026Can 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.
- Cash & short-term investments$2.5B
- Receivables$2.6B
- Other current assets$9.5B
- Debt due within a year$3.8B
- Accounts payable$2.1B
- Other current liabilities$9.1B
From the company's latest filing.
How the cash was used, 2016–2025
Over the record, the business generated $12.4B of operating cash; how management split it reads as a cash returner, paying most of what it earns straight back to owners.
- Reinvested$1.2B · 9%
- Buybacks$8.6B · 69%
- Retained (debt / cash)$2.7B · 21%
- Returned to owners$8.6B
76% of the owner earnings the business produced over the span, $0 as dividends and $8.6B as buybacks.
- Source of fundingOperating cash
Operating cash covered reinvestment and returns; over the span debt rose $11.5B and cash and short-term investments rose $2.1B.
- Average price paid for buybacks$171.60
Across the years where the filing reports a share count, 9M shares were bought for $1.5B, about $171.60 each. Year to year the price paid ranged from $140.95 (2017) to $195.20 (2018), and 2018, near the top of that range, was also its heaviest buyback year ($959M).
- Net change in share count−28.1%
The diluted count fell from 95M to 68M, so the buybacks outran the stock issued to staff.
- Dividend record—
No dividend line was reported in the filing data over the span; the record here neither confirms nor rules out a payout.
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 recordGoodwill 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.
$90M written down across 1 year (2024): goodwill the company has already conceded it overpaid for, charged against earnings. 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 year | Chief executive | Pay, as filed | “Actually paid” | Owner earnings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | (1)Mr. Clarke | $57.9M | $31.2M | $1.1B |
| 2022 | (1)Mr. Clarke | $4.0M | −$24.3M | $603M |
| 2023 | (1)Mr. Clarke | $2.7M | $21.1M | $1.9B |
| 2024 | (1)Mr. Clarke | $28.1M | $48.4M | $1.8B |
| 2025 | (1)Mr. Clarke | $3.4M | $2.7M | $1.3B |
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 ownership<1%
The stake all directors and executive officers hold together, per the 2026 proxy: skin in the game, the first thing Munger reads.
- Stock-based compensation$103M
The slice of the business handed to employees in shares this year, 2% of revenue, equal to 5% 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 Corpay Inc. 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.
1 of the 6 tests turned up something to look into; the other 5 came back clean.
- Look hereDid debt outgrow the business?$2.6B → $14.1B
Debt rose from $2.6B to $14.1B while owner earnings went from about $694M to $1.7B — about 3.8 years of owner earnings in debt then, about 8.4 now: measured against what the business earns, the balance sheet carries more debt than it did. Debt raised for buybacks or deals rather than growth is the kind that bites in a downturn.
- Is it less profitable than it was?
- Did the share count rise anyway?
- 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 Income taxes, Acquisitions, Stock compensation 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, Commercial Services & Supplies
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.
| Company | Revenue | Gross margin | Op. margin | ROIC | Owner earn. margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPAYCorpay Inc. | $4.5B | 98% | 43.9% | 11% | 37% |
| FOURShift4 Payments | $4.2B | 23% | 1.9% | -1% | 9% |
| CARTMaplebear Inc. | $3.7B | 74% | 2.4% | 21% | 18% |
| MSCIMSCI Inc. | $3.1B | 80% | 52.3% | 38% | 46% |
| ETSYEtsy Inc. | $2.9B | 70% | 10.5% | 24% | 26% |
| ZZillow Group Inc. Class C Capital Stock | $2.6B | 78% | -8.9% | -3% | 10% |
| EXLSExlService | $2.1B | 86% | 12.5% | 14% | 12% |
| FICOFair Isaac | $2.0B | 73% | 30.6% | 35% | 29% |
| Group median | — | 76% | 11.5% | 18% | 22% |
The price
What a price has to assume.
What the price implies
reverse-DCFType today's close and see the owner-earnings growth you'd have to believe to justify it, beside what Corpay Inc. has delivered.
Through the cycle, Corpay Inc. earns about $1.7B on its 36.9% median owner-earnings margin. This year’s 28.7% margin runs below that; the reported figure may understate a lean year. Normalize, below, values the price on that through-cycle figure rather than the latest year.
—
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.
A dated snapshot of the price you typed, the assumptions you set, and what the page showed for them. A snapshot is never edited after it is saved. Your notebook is yours alone — the commitment states what is stored and what we will never do.
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.
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 $1.3B on 65M shares outstanding, per the 10-Q cover, as of 2026-05-01; net debt $11.6B. The if-converted diluted count is 68M, 5% above the shares outstanding: the dilution overhang (convertibles, options) a buyer inherits. The base is the latest year by default; Normalize values it on the through-cycle median owner-earnings margin (to avoid paying on a peak year). 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.
Manual order: ← COUR its page in the Manual CPB →
Industry order: ← CNXC the Commercial Services & Supplies chapter CSGP →