Tesla (TSLA) through 7 value-investing frameworks: where Buffett, Graham, Lynch and Greenblatt agree (and disagree)
We ran Tesla through every value-investing framework on invest-like.com. Buffett scores 41/100, Graham 69, Fisher 34, Lynch 22, Greenblatt 3, Munger 33, T. Smith 39. Six of seven frameworks reject TSLA outright. The story under those scores is more interesting than the headline rejection.
Zaid Ghazal23 min read
Tesla is the cleanest stress test of value investing's seven frameworks. Every other mega-cap on the platform passes most of the canon at least directionally. Tesla fails six of seven outright, and the one it passes is the framework most readers would predict it would fail. That inversion is what makes the framework dispersion on TSLA more interesting than a flat "no": the disagreement is not whether Tesla is expensive (every framework says it is) but whether the structural quality and growth profile under the price merit any framework's "yes" at all.
We ran TSLA through all seven named-investor frameworks on invest-like.com in parallel and printed the scores side by side. Every number below is pulled from the production scoring tables on 26 May 2026, the same scores that power /buffett/tsla/ and every public API response for ticker TSLA.
TL;DR - TSLA on all 7 frameworks
Framework
Score
Grade
Verdict
Criteria met
Graham (defensive)
69
B
unclear
4 / 7
Buffett (moat + quality)
41
D
no
5 / 9
Smith (Fundsmith)
39
D
no
3 / 12
Fisher (growth quality)
34
F
no
3 / 10
Munger (mental models)
33
F
no
3 / 11
Lynch (GARP)
22
F
no
4 / 6
Greenblatt (Magic Formula)
3
F
no
0 / 5
Cross-framework average: 34.4 out of 100. Minimum score: 3 (Greenblatt). Six of seven frameworks fail the 60 pass-threshold the invest-like data study uses, which means TSLA is not one of the 47 US-listed stocks that pass all 7 value-investing frameworks at a B-minus or better. It is in the bottom decile of the 6,621-stock apples-to-apples cohort on cross-framework consensus. Source: the cross-framework consensus study, data snapshot 26 May 2026.
AAOIFI halal status: compliant. Interest-bearing debt to market cap: 0.42%.
The rest of this post walks through each framework, explains why it scored TSLA the way it did, and surfaces where the seven authors agree and where they part ways.
Why Tesla is value investing's hardest test case
Tesla is the only mega-cap stock on the platform where the value-investing canon's seven authors converge on an answer that is the opposite of what the equity market believes. The market values TSLA at $1.6 trillion, a price every framework reads as catastrophically disconnected from current earnings. The framework debate is not whether the price is expensive (every framework says so by 10x or worse on its own multiple test) but whether the underlying business is high enough quality to merit any framework's tolerance.
The collapse in TSLA's TTM profitability is the under-discussed driver. Five years ago, Tesla's ROIC was approaching 20% on the back of a 25%+ gross margin and the absence of meaningful competition in long-range EVs. Today's ROIC of 3.2% reflects two compressions stacking: industrial competition has cut Tesla's automotive gross margin from 25% to roughly 17%, and the company's reinvestment in Optimus, AI training capacity and Cybercab has front-loaded costs without commensurate revenue. Earnings have actually declined at a 10.9% annualised rate over five years. That is the math the frameworks are reading.
Run TSLA through the frameworks and the seams show in a different way than they do for any other mega-cap.
Buffett-fit: 41 out of 100, verdict no
The invest-like Buffett scorer marks TSLA as 5 of 9 criteria passing. The four failures concentrate on the criteria Buffett has spent his career emphasising:
ROIC of 3.21% against the 15% floor: fail (by 4x).
Owner-earnings yield 0.40% against the 5% floor: fail (by 12x).
Earnings yield 0.29% against the 5% floor: fail (by 17x).
5-year EPS CAGR -10.9% against the 8% floor: fail (negative growth).
What passes:
Gross margin of 19.1% against the 40% floor: fail (this one fails too in line items, but the scorer gives partial credit because gross margin was previously above 25% in recent years).
Net debt to EBITDA: -0.70x (net cash). Buffett's fortress balance sheet test passes.
Debt to equity at 0.11 clears the 1.0 ceiling.
Current ratio of 2.04 clears the liquidity floor.
5-year profitability: yes, never a loss year in the window (a tight pass; TSLA's earnings have compressed but stayed positive).
What this score means in plain English: Tesla is failing the Buffett scorer on the two criteria he weights most heavily (ROIC and owner-earnings yield) by an order of magnitude. The Buffett Brain breaks the overall score into five pillars, and the split is unusual: moat 24, durability 55, management 71, valuation 55, financial health 55. The 24/100 moat score is the lowest moat reading in the entire mega-cap universe on the platform. The 71/100 management score is the highest non-financial input - the qualitative cache gives Musk credit for execution while flagging the moat as unproven.
That 24/100 moat score is the most consequential reading in this entire analysis. The Buffett scorer's qualitative pillar does not see EVs as a wide-moat business because BYD, Hyundai, Volkswagen and (now) Chinese OEMs have closed the cost-of-production gap that defined Tesla's 2018-2022 advantage. The Buffett framework reads automotive manufacturing as a price-taker industry with no enduring competitive advantage, regardless of how much excitement attaches to FSD or Optimus.
The Buffett scorer's headline reads "Tesla's valuation at a P/E of 349.2 overshadows its growth potential and competitive positioning in electric vehicles." That is the framework speaking.
Graham: 69 out of 100, verdict unclear (the highest score and the only "yes" candidate)
The single biggest surprise in TSLA's seven-framework profile is that Graham is the one author whose framework gives it a borderline pass. Most readers will expect Graham, the most-conservative author in the value canon, to reject TSLA outright at a 349 P/E. He does on the line items, but the scorer's structural weighting saves it.
On the three classic defensive-screen lines, TSLA fails spectacularly:
P/E of 349.2 against the 15.0 Graham ceiling: fail (by 23x).
P/B of 16.1 against the 1.5 Graham ceiling: fail (by 11x).
Earnings yield of 0.29% against the 7% Graham floor: fail (by 24x).
So how does TSLA score 69? Because the invest-like Graham scorer applies the enterprising-investor weighting that gives partial credit for the four things TSLA does pass: a current ratio of 2.04x (Graham's signature liquidity test), a debt-to-equity of 0.11 (extraordinarily low for a capital-intensive manufacturer), five years of unbroken profitability (a tight pass; TSLA stayed marginally profitable through the 2025 margin compression), and a track record of revenue growth.
This is the cleanest case in the seven-framework set where the headline score and the lay reading of the framework diverge. A strict five-rule Graham defensive screen on TSLA would fail every valuation line by an order of magnitude and the verdict would be a hard no. The invest-like implementation gives TSLA a B because the structural pillars (no debt, profitable barely, growing, liquid) are uncontroversially strong even as the multiple is absurd. A reader using TSLA as a Graham test case should know which version they are reading.
The summary the scorer prints is honest about the split: "Meets 4/7 Graham criteria - classic deep-value candidate." That phrasing is misleading; TSLA is the polar opposite of a deep-value candidate. It is the most-expensive mega-cap on the platform that happens to pass Graham's structural pillars in spite of failing every valuation pillar.
This is also the only "unclear" verdict TSLA gets across the seven frameworks. The other six are explicit rejections.
Fisher: 34 out of 100, verdict no
Phil Fisher built his framework around growth quality - margin expansion, operational leverage, R&D-driven moat building. The invest-like Fisher scorer tests for ten things: gross margin above 50%, revenue CAGR above 10%, EPS growth that outpaces revenue (operational leverage), ROIC above 15%, operating margin above 15%, net margin above 10%, conservative balance sheet, FCF quality, no share-count dilution, and a P/E tolerance ceiling at 35.
TSLA passes only 3 of those 10. The seven fails are catastrophic:
Gross margin 19.1% against 50%: fail (by 31 percentage points).
EPS growth outpacing revenue: fail badly - EPS is shrinking 10.9%/yr while revenue is growing 15.2%/yr. This is the opposite of the operational-leverage signal Fisher built his framework around.
ROIC 3.21% against 15%: fail.
Operating margin 5.0% against 15%: fail.
Net margin 4.0% against 10%: fail.
Share count growing at 2.2%/yr (dilution): fail.
P/E 349.2 against 35: fail (by an order of magnitude).
What passes is the financial-strength layer:
Net debt to EBITDA -0.70x (net cash).
FCF to net income 1.64x (a pass, but inflated by the depressed net income denominator).
Revenue CAGR 15.2% against 10% (the only true business-growth pass).
Fisher is the framework most willing to pay up for genuine pricing power and durable growth. TSLA scores 34 because the qualities Fisher prized - margin expansion as a business matures, EPS compounding faster than revenue, R&D reinvestment translating to moat - are running in reverse. The 19% gross margin is below most mass-market auto OEMs. The negative EPS CAGR while revenue grows is the opposite of operational leverage. Fisher would not have been an early Tesla bull at the 2020 numbers, and at the 2026 numbers the score lands in the F range.
Lynch: 22 out of 100, verdict no
Peter Lynch's GARP framework is the framework most readers expect Tesla to pass on the growth side. The scorer's verdict is the harshest in the seven-framework set.
TSLA passes 4 of 6 Lynch criteria on paper: positive net margin (4.0%), manageable debt (D/E 0.11), positive free cash flow (FCF/NI ratio 1.64x), and revenue growth above the 10% Lynch floor. But the two fails are the heart of the GARP test:
PEG ratio of -8.94 against the 1.0 ceiling: catastrophic fail (the negative sign is because EPS growth is negative; mathematically PEG is meaningless when growth is negative, and Lynch's framework treats this as an automatic disqualifier).
EPS CAGR -10.9% against the 15% growth floor: fail (negative growth versus a 15% floor is a 26-point miss).
So why does the score collapse all the way to 22 when the criteria-met count is 4 of 6? Because the invest-like Lynch scorer applies a structural penalty when growth is negative. Lynch's framework explicitly does not allow purchase at any multiple when EPS is shrinking, regardless of revenue growth. The four pass criteria are dominated mathematically by the two fails, and the framework spirit (GARP - growth at a reasonable price) treats negative growth as a hard disqualifier rather than a soft fail.
This is the cleanest example in the entire seven-framework set of a stock where the criteria-met count understates the framework's actual verdict. By the surface count, TSLA passes more Lynch criteria (4) than it fails (2). By the framework's spirit, the two fails are disqualifying.
Lynch wrote explicitly in One Up on Wall Street that a falling EPS multiple is the leading indicator of a fading growth story, and that the GARP investor's exit signal is when reported earnings stop growing. By that test, TSLA stopped being a GARP candidate when the five-year EPS CAGR went negative.
Greenblatt (Magic Formula): 3 out of 100, verdict no (the lowest score)
This is the most extreme single score in the entire seven-framework system across any mega-cap stock the platform has ever scored. Joel Greenblatt's Magic Formula ranks every stock on combined earnings yield and ROIC, then buys the top decile. TSLA passes 0 of 5 line-item criteria:
ROIC of 3.21% against the 25% floor: fail (by 8x).
Gross margin of 19.1% against the 30% floor: fail.
EBIT/EV yield of 0.28% against the 10% floor: fail (by 36x).
EV/EBIT of 359.3 against the 12 ceiling: fail (by 30x).
Earnings yield of 0.29% against the 6% floor: fail (by 21x).
By line-item count, this is a 0/5 catastrophic fail. The rank-based Magic Formula puts TSLA in the bottom 1% of the 6,621-stock universe on combined ROIC and earnings yield. The combination of a sub-5% ROIC and a sub-1% earnings yield means TSLA ranks dead last or near it on both Magic Formula inputs.
The invest-like scorer compresses that into a 3/100 score because there is no recovery path inside the formula's two-pillar framework. ROIC excellence cannot save TSLA when the ROIC is 3.2%. Earnings-yield cushion cannot save TSLA when the earnings yield is 0.29%. The Magic Formula is the framework most explicitly built to be objective about combined quality and price, and on those two pillars TSLA is the worst-rated mega-cap on the platform.
This is the framework that gives TSLA its lowest score. The 3/100 is the cleanest data answer to the question "is Tesla a Magic Formula candidate?" No, definitively.
Munger: 33 out of 100, verdict no
Munger's mental-models filter passes only 3 of 11 TSLA criteria:
ROIC 3.21% against 18%, 5-year ROIC 14.5% against 15%: both fail.
Gross margin 19.1% against 40%, operating margin 5.0% against 18%, net margin 4.0% against 12%, ROE 5y 17.0% against 15%: every quality test fails except 5-year ROE (which barely passes).
Net debt to EBITDA -0.70x against 1.5x: pass.
FCF/NI 1.64x against 0.80x: pass.
Share count growing 2.2%/yr: fail.
EPS CAGR -10.9% against 8%: fail.
P/E 349.2 against 30: fail (by 12x).
Munger's "willing to pay up for quality" softens the P/E test (Buffett's floor at the Wonderful-Fair-Price test is 25; Munger lets it stretch to 30), but no version of that principle survives a 349 P/E on a business with a 3.2% ROIC. Munger publicly criticised Tesla multiple times in his late-life interviews on exactly this point: a low-margin, capital-intensive industry without an enduring moat does not become a quality compounder regardless of how much narrative gets attached.
The 33 score is mathematically driven by 8 of 11 criteria failing, with two of the passes (net debt position and FCF coverage of a depressed net income) being mechanical rather than reflective of quality. The verdict "no" is unambiguous; this is one of the few mega-caps the Munger framework explicitly rejects.
T. Smith (Fundsmith): 39 out of 100, verdict no
Terry Smith's Fundsmith framework passes only 3 of 12 TSLA criteria:
ROCE 4.5% against 20%: fail (by 4x).
Gross margin 19.1% against 45%: fail.
Operating margin 5.0% against 20%: fail.
Net margin 4.0% against 15%: fail.
5y ROCE roughly 13% against 18%: fail.
5y ROE 17.0% against 18%: fail (barely).
Net debt to EBITDA -0.70x against 1.5x: pass.
Revenue CAGR 15.2% against 7%: pass.
EPS CAGR -10.9% against 10%: fail (negative).
Share count diluting: fail.
FCF / NI 1.64x against the strict 0.95 floor: pass (mechanically, on a depressed net income base).
P/E 349.2 against 35: fail (by 10x).
Smith's framework is the strictest of the three "quality compounder" tests in the set, and TSLA fails on quality, growth and price simultaneously. The 39 score reflects 3 of 12 criteria passing, and even those three are mechanical passes (net cash position, raw revenue growth, FCF coverage of a depressed base) rather than evidence of compounding quality. Fundsmith has publicly never held TSLA, and the score explains the structural reason why.
Where the frameworks agree on TSLA
Despite seven different lenses, four things show up in every scoring breakdown:
The price is disconnected from current earnings by any framework's measure. Six of seven explicitly fail TSLA on at least one valuation test. The seventh (Graham) papers over the price fails with structural balance-sheet credit, but the line-item count on valuation is 0 of 3.
The balance sheet is genuinely strong. Net cash position (net debt-to-EBITDA -0.70x), D/E of 0.11, current ratio of 2.04, halal debt ratio of 0.42%. Every framework that includes a balance-sheet test passes TSLA on it. This is the cleanest universal pass in the seven-framework set.
Growth quality has deteriorated badly. Revenue is growing 15% per year. EPS is shrinking 10.9% per year. That gap is the opposite of operational leverage, and every framework with a growth-quality test fails TSLA on it. The Fisher framework, built around exactly this pattern, scores it 34/100.
ROIC has collapsed. The 3.21% TTM ROIC is the most consequential single number in this analysis. Every framework with a ROIC floor fails TSLA on it. The 5-year average ROIC of 14.5% is more flattering but still below most of the floors (Buffett 15%, Munger 18%, Smith 20%).
Where the frameworks disagree on TSLA
Three points of disagreement:
How much weight to put on the balance sheet. Graham's framework, which structurally weights solvency above almost everything else, lets TSLA's strong balance sheet partially offset the catastrophic valuation fails. Greenblatt's Magic Formula does not weight the balance sheet at all (it only ranks on ROIC and earnings yield), which is why the same data set produces a 3/100 Greenblatt score and a 69/100 Graham score on the same stock.
Whether the moat is real. Buffett Brain prints a 24/100 moat score, the lowest mega-cap moat reading on the platform. Lynch's framework does not have an explicit moat test, which is why TSLA's Lynch score (22) is driven by the growth half rather than the moat half. Munger's framework explicitly rejects TSLA on moat grounds (Munger publicly said as much repeatedly). The seven frameworks split on whether the FSD/Optimus narrative justifies a moat read - the scoring math, based on financial-statement evidence, does not.
Whether negative EPS growth is a disqualifier. Lynch's framework treats it as automatic. Fisher's tolerates negative short-term growth if the cause is reinvestment (but the 5-year window TSLA presents is too long to be reinvestment-driven). Buffett's framework softens it slightly because TSLA stayed profitable. The split is why TSLA's framework scores cluster between 22 (Lynch) and 41 (Buffett) on the growth/quality stack rather than collapsing uniformly.
Does TSLA make the 47-stock all-7-frameworks cohort?
No. TSLA's minimum framework score is 3 (Greenblatt), which fails the 60 pass-threshold by 57 points. The cross-framework average of 34.4 puts TSLA in the bottom decile of the 6,621-stock apples-to-apples cohort. Six of seven frameworks rate TSLA below 50, and the median framework score is 34 (Fisher).
The full 47-stock consensus list is in our cross-framework data study. The headline finding there is that 0.71% of the 6,621 stocks scored on every framework pass all seven at a B-minus or better. TSLA fails six of the seven by a wide margin, which puts it in the bottom decile rather than the top decile.
This is the data answer to a question the value-investing canon implicitly poses: when all seven of these authors are asked the same question, do they all say yes? On TSLA, six of seven say no - by 20 points or more in most cases - and the seventh (Graham) says "unclear" only because the structural balance-sheet weighting partially offsets the valuation fails.
That is not a recommendation to short TSLA. It is the data answer to a different question: does the value-investing canon, applied uniformly across seven frameworks to the 26 May 2026 numbers, see Tesla as a value-investing candidate today? The canon's collective answer is no.
Halal compliance: is TSLA AAOIFI Standard 21 compliant?
Yes. invest-like.com's halal screener applies the AAOIFI Standard 21 criteria as implemented in our halal screening methodology. TSLA's interest-bearing debt to market cap ratio is 0.42%, well below the 30% AAOIFI ceiling. The business activity (electric vehicles, batteries and energy storage) is not on the prohibited-industry list. The non-permissible income ratio (interest income from cash holdings) is below the 5% threshold.
TSLA shows up on /halal/tsla/ as compliant, and the halal status field in the database (halal_status = 'compliant') is consistent with that. For halal-mode users, the framework results above are unchanged - the AAOIFI test sits on top of the value-investing test as an additional filter, not a replacement. The TSLA halal verdict is one of the cleanest passes among mega-caps because the company carries almost no interest-bearing debt and the underlying business is permitted under Standard 21.
That said, a "halal" status does not mean the value-investing canon approves of the price. TSLA can be both AAOIFI-compliant and a six-of-seven framework rejection at the same time, which is exactly what the data shows.
What this means for an investor
The seven-framework breakdown is not a "sell TSLA" or "short TSLA" signal. It is a structured way to see which value-investing lenses agree on the business and which disagree on the price. Three observations a reader might draw, none of which are advice:
First, every framework agrees the current multiple is disconnected from current earnings. Six of seven explicitly fail TSLA on valuation, and the seventh papers over the failure rather than denying it. If your edge is the value-investing canon's collective discipline on price, TSLA is not a candidate at the 26 May 2026 numbers.
Second, the disagreement is on whether the balance-sheet strength offsets enough of the rest of the test for any framework to land at "unclear". Graham's 69 says yes. The other six say no, by 20 to 100 points. Graham was the most-conservative author in the canon, so his framework being the lone outlier is genuinely interesting - but it is because of weighting choices in the structural pillar, not because Graham would have actually bought TSLA at 349x earnings.
Third, the bull case on TSLA almost always rests on assumptions the value canon does not test - FSD success, Robotaxi economics, Optimus production at scale, the eventual transition from a low-margin auto business to a high-margin software/services business. None of those assumptions enter the framework scores. If you believe those assumptions, the framework verdict is a sunk cost of patience. If you do not, the framework verdict is consistent with a "stay away" read.
The Boardroom feature on /boardroom/tsla/ runs the four-investor debate in long form and is the natural follow-on to this post. It lets the four authors argue the moat and growth questions directly rather than letting the scorers paper over them.
FAQ
Why does Graham give Tesla a "B" when the P/E is 349?
Because the invest-like Graham scorer weights the balance-sheet and durability criteria (current ratio, debt-to-equity, profitability, revenue growth) alongside the price criteria (P/E, P/B, earnings yield), and the score is a weighted aggregate. TSLA's 4-of-7 pass count is dominated by structural strength (net cash, current ratio 2.04, never a loss year, growing revenue) that compensates for the three valuation fails. A reader looking for the pure 5-rule Graham defensive screen would reject TSLA on P/E alone. We document this nuance on the methodology page at /methodology/.
Is Tesla overvalued?
By every framework's price test. Buffett's owner-earnings yield test fails by 12x. Greenblatt's earnings-yield rank is in the bottom 1% of the universe. Lynch's PEG is mathematically meaningless because EPS growth is negative. Fisher's P/E ceiling fails by an order of magnitude. The seven-framework view: seven of seven say expensive, six rate it the most expensive mega-cap on the platform by their own multiple test.
Is TSLA a Buffett stock?
No, by the invest-like Buffett scorer. The 41/100 score with verdict "no" reflects 5 of 9 criteria passing, with the four fails clustered on the criteria Buffett weights most heavily (ROIC, owner-earnings yield, EPS growth, gross margin). The Buffett Brain pillars are moat 24, durability 55, management 71, valuation 55, financial health 55 - the 24/100 moat score is the lowest moat reading among mega-caps on the platform. Buffett has publicly never owned TSLA, and the framework score is consistent with that history.
What are good TSLA alternatives in the same sector?
The invest-like consumer-cyclical and EV-adjacent cohort contains a handful of names with better framework scores. Toyota (TM) trades at a much lower multiple with positive ROIC. General Motors (GM) is a deep-value candidate by some framework tests despite the legacy auto business. None of these are like-for-like substitutes for TSLA's energy storage and FSD optionality. The cleanest pure peer comparisons are on the TSLA vs TM, TSLA vs F and TSLA vs RIVN pages.
Why does Greenblatt give Tesla a 3 when Graham gives it a 69 on the same data?
Because the two frameworks weight different things. The Magic Formula ranks stocks on a 50/50 split of ROIC and earnings yield - both inputs TSLA fails catastrophically (3.2% ROIC, 0.29% earnings yield). Graham's framework rewards solvency, profitability and size in addition to price, and TSLA's structural balance sheet partially compensates for the price fails. The 66-point gap between Greenblatt's 3 and Graham's 69 on the same stock is the single largest dispersion in the entire seven-framework set, and it captures exactly the disagreement that defines value investing: how much weight to put on quality versus price versus solvency.
Is Tesla halal?
Yes, by AAOIFI Standard 21 as implemented on invest-like. TSLA's interest-bearing debt to market cap is 0.42%, well below the 30% ceiling. Its business activity (electric vehicles, batteries, energy storage) is not prohibited. Non-permissible income from cash interest is below the 5% threshold. The halal status field returns "compliant" on every API response for ticker TSLA. Halal-mode users can include TSLA in their watchlist with no purification required beyond the trivial portion attributable to interest income. The AAOIFI test is independent of the value-investing test; "halal" does not mean "fits the value canon".
How often do these scores update?
The strategy scores in the database refresh roughly every two weeks against the latest FMP fundamentals snapshot. The Buffett Brain pillar breakdown is cached for 30 days and re-runs on a schedule. The cross-framework data study underlying the 47-stock cohort is dated and re-runs quarterly. Specific number citations in this post are stable against the 26 May 2026 snapshot but will drift over time as new earnings get ingested.
Educational disclaimer
This is an educational analysis of how seven separately implemented value-investing frameworks score one stock. It is not investment advice, not a buy or sell recommendation, not a short call, and not a substitute for reading the original Buffett shareholder letters, Graham's Intelligent Investor, Fisher's Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits, Lynch's One Up on Wall Street, Greenblatt's Little Book that Beats the Market, Munger's Poor Charlie's Almanack, or Smith's Investing for Growth. The framework scores are deterministic outputs from financial-statement criteria; they do not predict price. Past performance of Tesla stock (or any stock) is not a forecast. A stock that fails every value-investing framework can outperform the market for years, and a stock that passes every framework can underperform.
All scores cited in this post come from invest-like.com's strategy_scores and buffett_analyses production tables, snapshot 26 May 2026. The methodology for each scorer is documented at /methodology/, and per-framework rule sets are at /methodology/buffett-fit/ and /methodology/deal-breakers/. The same scoring logic powers every verdict on the production site, including the per-ticker page at /buffett/tsla/ and the public API response at /api/public/verdict/TSLA.
If you want to run the same seven-framework treatment on a stock you actually own, paste its ticker into the search bar on the homepage. The free tier gives three full verdicts a week. For the same treatment on other mega-caps, see our deep dives on NVIDIA (NVDA), Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT).