AAPL
Is Apple Inc. (AAPL) undervalued?
Apple Inc. (AAPL) currently trades at a P/E of 36.0x with an owner-earnings yield of 2.2%. The Buffett-Fit valuation pillar - owner-earnings yield, intrinsic-value multiple, and the company's underlying compounding rate - is the framework used on this page to grade undervaluation. Educational only, not investment advice.
Headline multiples. Apple Inc. trades at a trailing P/E of 36.0x, a P/B of 41.47x, and an EV-to-EBIT of 33.5x. None of these in isolation tells you whether the stock is undervalued - a 30x P/E is cheap for a quality compounder and expensive for a cyclical commodity producer. The point is the relationship between price and the underlying business quality on the same scale.
Owner-earnings yield. Apple Inc.'s owner-earnings yield (free cash flow / enterprise value) currently sits at 2.2%. This is Buffett's preferred valuation lens because it asks "what does the business actually return to a 100% owner?" rather than accounting earnings that can be inflated by accruals. A yield above the 10-year Treasury plus a 4-5% equity-risk premium is the rough benchmark for "cheap" against a high-quality business.
Earnings yield (1/P/E). The inverted P/E gives an earnings yield of 2.8% - useful as a sanity-check against the owner-earnings yield above. Large gaps between the two usually mean either high stock-based compensation eroding cash earnings (yield gap negative) or aggressive working-capital management inflating cash earnings vs accounting earnings (yield gap positive).
What the framework concludes. Valuation alone doesn't decide whether AAPL is a buy - Buffett's full rule is "a wonderful business at a fair price beats a fair business at a wonderful price." The valuation sub-score in the Buffett-Fit verdict on this page combines the metrics above with the company's underlying compounding rate (ROIC × reinvestment) to produce a single 0-100 number. Read the full verdict to see how it sits alongside moat strength, durability, management, and financial health.
How invest-like measures this
Valuation on invest-like.com is graded against three benchmarks: the owner-earnings yield (Buffett's preferred metric - free cash flow divided by enterprise value), the multiple of intrinsic value (DCF and reverse-DCF), and the price relative to the company's underlying compounding rate.
The score weighs these against the sector's median quality benchmarks - a 20x P/E is cheap for a software compounder and expensive for a cyclical commodity producer, so the sector-relative bonus matters. Educational only, not investment advice.
More questions about AAPL
Dive deeper into AAPL
Related on invest-like
Educational framework analysis only. Not investment advice, not a recommendation, not personalized to your situation. Always do your own research.