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#H1 FY26 & Geopolitical issues
Last edited a month ago

@twee @Solvetheriddle would love your thoughts on the below

???? STRAWMAN POST: EOL – Is the 56x P/E a Mirage? A Probability-Weighted Deep Dive

The Core Thesis: Structural Operating Leverage

Energy One (EOL) is often dismissed by value investors due to its high headline multiple (56x TTM P/E). However, this completely ignores a massive inflection point in their unit economics.

The true "lead indicator" for EOL is Revenue per FTE (Employee). Because staff costs make up ~70% of opex, margins only expand if they can grow revenue without a linear increase in headcount.

  • FY22: $181k per FTE
  • FY24: $276k per FTE
  • H1 FY26: $342k per FTE (~20% CAGR)

By holding expense growth to ~50% of revenue growth, EOL just hit a 41 on the Rule of 40 (20% ARR Growth + 21% Cash EBITDA Margin). To see if the current $12.99 share price is justified, I ran the math through two distinct valuation frameworks, applying a 10% Bear / 60% Base / 30% Bull probability weight.

???? VALUATION 1: Strict DCF (Intrinsic Cash Value)

Base Inputs: TTM Rev: $67.1M | Tax: 28% | Reinvest: 35% | Net Debt: $5.8M

This measures the "Floor" of the stock based purely on future cash flows discounted to today's dollars. I ran two models to test the impact of their operating leverage.

Model A: "Normal" Operations (Margins Fluctuate)

This assumes costs scale normally alongside revenue, with margins slowly climbing.

  • Bear (10% Prob): 11.5% WACC | 12% Rev Growth | 20% EBIT Margin = $3.23
  • Base (60% Prob): 9.5% WACC | 18% Rev Growth | 26% EBIT Margin = $7.87
  • Bull (30% Prob): 8.0% WACC | 22% Rev Growth | 30% EBIT Margin = $14.98
  • ???? Weighted Fair Value (Model A): $9.53

Model B: The "Locked Margin" Thesis

This assumes the heavy R&D build is completely over. We lock the EBIT margin at a constant 28%, meaning every new dollar of revenue is highly profitable.

  • Bear (10% Prob): 11.5% WACC | 12% Rev Growth | 28% EBIT (LOCKED) = $4.47
  • Base (60% Prob): 9.5% WACC | 18% Rev Growth | 28% EBIT (LOCKED) = $8.83
  • Bull (30% Prob): 8.0% WACC | 24% Rev Growth | 28% EBIT (LOCKED) = $15.29
  • ???? Weighted Fair Value (Model B): $10.34

DCF Takeaway: On a strict cash-flow basis, EOL is currently trading at a premium to its "Fair Value" (~$10.34). At $12.99, the market is pricing in a flawless, low-interest-rate Bull Case environment.

???? VALUATION 2: Andrew Page "Thumb-Suck" (Hurdle Rate 10%)

Since SaaS companies rarely trade down to strict DCF values, this method tests what "Max Buy Price" we can pay today to achieve a 10% annual return. I’ve used dynamic Exit P/Es based on execution (20x Bear | 35x Base | 45x Bull).

Thumb-Suck MODEL A: "Normal" Operations (Margins Fluctuate)

EPS growth is constrained by standard cost increases.

  • Bear (10% Prob): 10% EPS Growth | 20x Exit P/E = $4.97
  • Base (60% Prob): 18% EPS Growth | 35x Exit P/E = $12.39
  • Bull (30% Prob): 22% EPS Growth | 45x Exit P/E = $22.91
  • ???? Weighted Expected Value (Model A): $14.80

Thumb-Suck MODEL B: The "Locked Margin" Thesis

Because the EBIT margin instantly locks at 28%, EPS compounds aggressively against top-line revenue.

  • Bear (10% Prob): 12% Rev Growth | 20x Exit P/E = $9.31
  • Base (60% Prob): 18% Rev Growth | 35x Exit P/E = $21.30
  • Bull (30% Prob): 24% Rev Growth | 45x Exit P/E = $34.93
  • ???? Weighted Expected Value (Model B): $24.19

???? The Final Verdict & Questions for the Forum

At $12.99, the math is telling a clear story.

The DCF acts as a reality check on the "intrinsic floor" ($10.34). However, if EOL successfully executes the "Locked Margin" operating leverage thesis (Model B), the multiple-based Expected Value explodes to $24.19. You aren't paying for multiple expansion here; you are betting that new CEO Ben Tranier can hold the cost base flat while European revenue scales. Given the 20% CAGR in employee productivity, I think it's a highly asymmetric bet.

I’m currently an Accumulator under $13.00.

My questions for the community:

  1. The Bear Case Weighting: I assigned a 10% probability to the Bear Case (which models a violent de-rating to a 20x P/E). Is a 10% chance of failure too optimistic given the "Key Person Risk" of the recent CEO transition? Should I be bumping that Bear probability closer to 20% or 30%?
  2. The 28% EBIT Lock: Is a constant 28% margin too aggressive, or is it firmly supported by the $342k/FTE productivity metric?

Would love to hear your thoughts and see how others are weighing the CEO transition risk!