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Domino's Pizza, Inc.

NASDAQ · Consumer Cyclical
Domino's Pizza, Inc.
DPZ · Restaurants
$330.48
▼ -7.29 (-2.16%)
Data cached · refreshes every 10 min
Mr. Market is currently offering Domino's Pizza, Inc. at $330.48.
The business passes 4 of 7 of Graham's defensive criteria — adequate but not exceptional.
Overall Grade
B
Defensive
B
Enterprising
Profitability A
Gross Profit Margin 40.0%
Operating Margin 19.2%
Net Income Margin 12.2%
Fin. Health D
Years to Pay Off Debt 8.4 yrs
Working Capital vs Long-Term Debt -$4.5B
Working Capital $353M
Valuation A
Price-to-Book -2.82x
Cash Flow A
Free Cash Flow $672M
CapEx % of Net Income 20.0%
Owner Earnings $811M
4/7
Graham Score
Enterprising
Defensive — Graham's strict criteria (P/B, P/E, dividends, stability)  ·  Enterprising — Profitability & cash flow focused, accepts higher valuations for quality
Metric Explanations
What each dimension measures and where the thresholds come from.
Gross Profit Margin
Revenue minus cost of goods sold. Graham's ≥40% threshold identifies businesses with durable pricing power. Note: software and financial companies naturally exceed this; retailers and manufacturers rarely reach it due to their cost structures.
Operating Margin
Profit after operating costs before interest and taxes. A consistent ≥15% operating margin signals a business with real competitive advantages. Capital-intensive industries (airlines, auto, commodities) rarely hit this threshold due to their structural cost base — compare within industry for context.
Net Income Margin
Bottom-line profit as a percentage of revenue. The ≥20% target reflects Buffett's preference for highly profitable businesses. Financial engineering (buybacks, tax optimisation) can inflate this temporarily — look for consistency across multiple years rather than a single strong result.
Years to Pay Off Debt
Total Debt ÷ Net Income. Lower = stronger balance sheet. Important caveat: utilities, telecoms, REITs, and infrastructure companies carry large structural debt by design — their bond-like cash flows service it comfortably at ratios that would alarm Graham. Compare within sector.
Working Capital vs Long-Term Debt
Working Capital minus Long-Term Debt. Negative results are common and expected in capital-return-focused businesses like Apple, Domino's, and McDonald's — where aggressive buybacks and dividends intentionally reduce book equity. This does not indicate financial distress in high-FCF businesses.
Working Capital
Current Assets minus Current Liabilities. Negative working capital can be a deliberate efficiency strategy in businesses that collect cash before paying suppliers (retailers, fast food franchises, subscription businesses). Assess alongside free cash flow generation for full context.
Price-to-Book
Market price vs book value per share. Rarely below 1.5x for quality businesses today. Intangible assets (brand, software, patents) don't appear on the balance sheet under accounting rules, making P/B artificially high for asset-light companies. Negative P/B indicates book equity has been reduced by buybacks — common in highly profitable capital-return businesses.
Free Cash Flow
Operating cash flow minus capital expenditures. Buffett's most important metric — cash a business actually generates for its owners after maintaining and growing its asset base. Consistently positive FCF is one of the strongest indicators of a durable, well-run business regardless of accounting profits.
CapEx % of Net Income
Capital expenditure as a share of net income. Low CapEx signals a capital-light business that doesn't need heavy reinvestment to sustain earnings — Buffett's ideal. High CapEx is structurally necessary in manufacturing, airlines, telecoms, and semiconductors. For these industries, a high reading reflects the business model, not poor management.
Owner Earnings
Net Income + Depreciation & Amortisation − Capital Expenditures. Buffett's preferred measure of a company's true annual earning power — what could theoretically be distributed to owners without impairing the business. More reliable than reported EPS because it accounts for the capital cost of maintaining the business.
Market Cap $11.0B
Enterprise Value $16.1B
P/E (TTM) 19.04
Dividend Yield 2.13%
Exchange NASDAQ
Gross Profit 40.0%
Operating Margin 19.2%
Net Margin 12.2%
Sector Consumer Cyclical
Industry Restaurants
Employees 6200
Country United States
📖
Full Graham Analysis

Mr. Market is currently offering Domino's Pizza, Inc. at $330.48.

The business passes 4 of 7 of Graham's defensive criteria — adequate but not exceptional.

Negative NCAV — liabilities exceed current assets. Common in capital-return businesses (buybacks, debt-funded dividends) and capital-intensive industries. Not automatically a warning sign..

Conclusion: This stock is better suited for Graham's Enterprising investor — one willing to devote time and skill to security selection.

About Domino's Pizza, Inc.

Domino's Pizza, Inc. operates as a pizza company worldwide. The company operates through three segments: U.S. Stores, International Franchise, and Supply Chain. It offers pizzas under the Domino's brand name through company-owned and franchised stores. The company also provides bread products, wings, boneless chicken, pastas, oven-baked sandwiches, soft drink products and desserts. In addition, it offers parmesan stuffed crust pizza; spicy chicken bacon ranch specialty pizza; and garlic, and cinnamon bread bites, as well as croissant, chocolate volcano, and chicken burst pizzas. Domino's Pizza, Inc. was founded in 1960 and is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Showing Key Metrics
Income Highlights
Metric 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021
Gross Profit % 40.0% 39.3% 38.6% 36.3% N/A
Operating Margin % 19.2% 18.7% 18.3% 16.5% N/A
Net Income % 12.2% 12.4% 11.6% 10.0% N/A
Diluted EPS 17.57 16.69 14.66 12.53 N/A
Balance Sheet Highlights
Metric 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021
Total Assets $1.7B $1.7B $1.7B $1.6B N/A
Total Debt $5.0B $5.2B $5.2B $5.3B N/A
Working Capital $353M -$707M $270M $254M N/A
Years to Pay Debt 8.39 8.90 10.03 11.61 N/A
Cash Flow Highlights
Metric 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021
Free Cash Flow $672M $512M $485M $388M N/A
Owner Earnings $811M $785M $705M $620M N/A
CapEx % of Net Income 20.0% 19.3% 20.3% 19.3% N/A
These metrics estimate what Domino's Pizza, Inc. is worth based on its fundamentals — independent of what the market currently prices it at. Graham's Fair Value and NCAV are conservative floors rooted in 1930s–60s principles. EPV assumes zero growth. None are price targets — they are reference points for judging whether the current price offers a margin of safety.
Graham's Fair Value
N/A
Margin of Safety
Market Cap ÷ Company Value
-0.23

P/B Ratio
-2.82
Warren's Owner Earnings
$811M
Latest fiscal year
Graham's 7 Criteria
Defensive Investor Checklist
4/7 — Enterprising Investor
Adequate Size
$4.9B
vs > $1.5B revenue
Strong Financial Condition
1.65x
vs Current Ratio > 2.0x
Earnings Stability
No loss years (4 yrs data)
vs No negative EPS years
Dividend Record
2.13%
vs Uninterrupted dividends
Earnings Growth
+40.2% EPS growth
vs > 33% EPS growth
Moderate P/E Ratio
19.0x
vs P/E ≤ 15.0x
Moderate Price-to-Book
N/A (negative book value)
vs P/B ≤ 1.5x | P/E × P/B ≤ 22.5
Graham's 7 Criteria — Explained
What each criterion measures and why it may or may not apply to modern businesses.
✅ Adequate Size — $4.9B vs > $1.5B revenue
Graham required companies large enough to withstand economic downturns. This threshold ($1.5B) is inflation-adjusted from Graham's original $100M — virtually all S&P 500 companies pass this today.
"The minimum size of an enterprise should be not less than $100 million of annual sales."
❌ Strong Financial Condition — 1.65x vs Current Ratio > 2.0x
Current assets must be at least twice current liabilities. Note: highly profitable companies (Apple, Domino's) often run negative or low working capital deliberately — they collect cash fast and stretch payables. A failing score here is not always a warning sign.
"For industrial companies, current assets should be at least twice current liabilities."
✅ Earnings Stability — No loss years (4 yrs data) vs No negative EPS years
Graham required uninterrupted positive earnings. Any loss year is a red flag for defensive investors. Growth companies and cyclicals may show occasional losses during investment cycles or downturns without being fundamentally unsound.
"The company should have shown no deficit in the past ten years."
✅ Dividend Record — 2.13% vs Uninterrupted dividends
Graham valued dividends as evidence of financial discipline and shareholder alignment. Many excellent modern businesses (Alphabet, Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway) pay no dividend, preferring to reinvest cash at high rates of return. Failing this criterion does not indicate a poor business — it may indicate a high-growth one.
"Some current dividend payments — for at least the past 20 years."
✅ Earnings Growth — +40.2% EPS growth vs > 33% EPS growth
EPS grew from $12.53 to $17.57 over 3 years. Graham's 33% threshold was set over a 10-year period. Measured over fewer years (as here), the bar is proportionally lower. Share buybacks can also inflate EPS growth without reflecting underlying business improvement.
"A minimum increase of at least one-third in per-share earnings over ten years."
❌ Moderate P/E Ratio — 19.0x vs P/E ≤ 15.0x
Graham's 15x P/E threshold was calibrated to 1960s market averages when interest rates were higher. Today's lower rate environment structurally supports higher multiples — the S&P 500 long-run average P/E is now closer to 20–25x. A stock trading at 20x is not automatically speculative in the modern context.
"The price-earnings ratio should be no more than 15 times average earnings."
❌ Moderate Price-to-Book — N/A (negative book value) vs P/B ≤ 1.5x | P/E × P/B ≤ 22.5
This company has negative book equity — meaning accumulated buybacks and dividends exceed retained earnings on paper. This is common in highly profitable, capital-return-focused businesses (e.g. Domino's, McDonald's, Home Depot) and does not indicate financial distress. P/B is not a meaningful valuation metric for these companies.
"The price should not be more than 1½ times book value. P/E × P/B ≤ 22.5."
Net Current Asset Value
$-142.01
Negative NCAV — liabilities exceed current assets. Common in capital-return businesses (buybacks, debt-funded dividends) and capital-intensive industries. Not automatically a warning sign.
"Buy at two-thirds of net current assets." — Graham
Earnings Power Value
N/A
Per share, no-growth floor. Compare to current price.
Cash Flow Analysis
Metric 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021
Capital Expenditure % of Net Income 20.0% 19.3% 20.3% 19.3% N/A
Repurchase of Capital Stock -$358M -$330M -$269M -$294M N/A
Free Cash Flow $672M $512M $485M $388M N/A
Warren's Owner Earnings $811M $785M $705M $620M N/A
Peers & Industry Comparison
Restaurants — Auto-detected peers
Company Price Market Cap P/E Gross Margin Net Margin Revenue
DPZ $330.48 $11.0B 19.04 40.0% 12.2% $4.9B
MCD
McDonald's Corporation
$284.42 $202.2B 23.8 57.4% 31.9% $26.9B
SBUX
Starbucks Corporation
$105.00 $119.7B 80.2 21.9% 3.9% $38.5B
YUM
Yum! Brands, Inc.
$154.11 $42.6B 24.8 45.7% 20.5% $8.5B
QSR
Restaurant Brands International
$80.08 $36.6B 30.4 33.8% 8.2% $9.4B
"The management of a business is its most important single factor — more important than market position, patents, or financial structure."
— Benjamin Graham
Capital Allocation & Alignment
Insider Ownership
10.54%
High — management has strong skin in the game
Return on Assets (ROA)
35.1%
Strong — management uses assets efficiently
Share Buybacks (Latest Year)
$358M
Management is returning capital to shareholders via buybacks
Debt Trend YoY
-2.9% YoY
Debt is declining — management is deleveraging
Leadership Team
David Allen Brandon
Executive Chairman
Age 73
Pay: $169,523
0.028% of net income
Russell Weiner
CEO & Director
Age 57
Pay: $3,080,176
0.512% of net income
Sandeep Reddy
Executive VP & CFO
Age 54
Pay: $1,481,757
0.246% of net income
Joseph Hugh Jordan
COO & President of U.S.
Age 51
Pay: $2,529,238
0.420% of net income
Cynthia Headen
Executive Vice President & Chief Supply Chain Officer
Age 56
Pay: $1,038,917
0.173% of net income
Top Institutional Holders
Institution % Owned Shares
Vanguard Group Inc 10.57% 3,649,149
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc 9.70% 3,350,000
Blackrock Inc. 6.66% 2,298,728
T. Rowe Price Investment Management, Inc. 5.82% 2,008,278
Principal Financial Group, Inc. 4.94% 1,706,185
State Street Corporation 3.96% 1,368,924
FMR, LLC 3.13% 1,081,463
Geode Capital Management, LLC 2.97% 1,026,391
Risk Analysis
Beta (Market Risk)
1.02
Moderate volatility — moves slightly more than market
Short Interest
10.9% of float
Moderate short interest
Current Ratio
1.60x
Adequate liquidity
52-Week Price Range
Low: $326.54 Current: $330.48 High: $499.08
Currently at 2% of 52-week range

Domino's Pizza, Inc. (DPZ) fundamental analysis — Overall grade B based on profitability, financial health, valuation and cash flow. Graham's Fair Value: N/A. Gross profit margin: 40.0%. Operating margin: 19.2%. Net margin: 12.2%. Market cap: $11.0B. Sector: Consumer Cyclical. Industry: Restaurants. Analysis powered by 360investing — free fundamental stock analysis based on Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett principles.

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