Quality & Balance Sheet
Levermann
Source: fundamental data & SEC filings (annual and quarterly reports, 10-K/10-Q) · Market filter active: the list shows 3 hits from US
Susan Levermann's scoring system ('The Relaxed Path to Wealth'), here with 11 of the 13 original criteria: return on equity, EBIT margin, equity ratio, P/E, analyst opinion (scored contrarian for large caps), earnings revisions, price performance over 6 and 12 months, price momentum, three-month reversal, and expected earnings growth — each criterion scores +1, 0, or −1. Buy signal from 4 points for large caps (from $5B) or 7 points for small/mid caps; only stocks with data for at least 8 criteria are scored. Not mappable due to missing price history: the 5-year P/E and the price reaction on earnings day; the three-month reversal is compared against the universe median instead of an index. Source: fundamental data.
No global trading filters — this strategy checks the entire stock universe purely against its own criteria (mega caps over $50B included).
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Terms in This Scanner Explained
(17)
- ADR (Average Daily Range)
- The average daily swing of a stock in percent - measured over 10 or 30 trading days (columns "ADR 10D/30D"). An ADR of 5% means: on a normal day the gap between the intraday low and high runs about 5%. Traders look for movement - that is why stocks with an ADR under 1% are filtered out globally. Not to be confused with ADR meaning "American Depositary Receipt" (a US certificate for foreign shares) - here ADR always means the daily swing.
- AI Classification
- Our company-by-company assessment of the AI boom based on SEC filings (the last four quarterly 10-Q reports and two annual 10-K reports): "Sells AI" (AI is a revenue source), "Threatened" (AI is a concrete business risk), "Uses AI" (operational use), or "Neutral" (no material AI exposure). Every classification requires at least two direct quote citations - otherwise the column shows "-". Not a quality judgment or a buy recommendation; the full file is on the stock page, methodology at /stocks/ai-rating-methodology.
- Analysis (Full Company Analysis)
- If the Analysis column shows "Read," there is an in-depth Minnow Street company analysis for this stock: business model, scanner findings, quarterly results, evidence from SEC filings, plus opportunities and risks. One click opens it directly.
- Avg/Yr 3Y (Average Annual Return)
- The stock's average annual return over the past 3 years. Shows at a glance whether a stock delivers over the long run or just had a short hot streak.
- Earnings Date
- The date of the next quarterly earnings report. Price gaps in either direction are common around this date - that is why we color it red when it is 7 days away or less, and yellow when it is 14 days away or less: elevated risk for fresh positions.
- EBIT Margin
- Operating profit before interest and taxes (EBIT) as a percent of revenue - measures the earning power of the core business alone, independent of financing and tax rates.
- EPS (Earnings per Share)
- Quarterly earnings divided by the number of shares outstanding. The most important growth metric: if EPS rises strongly over several quarters, the company is earning more money per share.
- Free Cash Flow (FCF)
- Operating cash flow minus capital expenditures - the money left over for everything else (debt paydown, acquisitions, or buybacks). Consistently positive free cash flow is one of the most honest signs of a healthy business model.
- Funda Rating (Fundamental Rating A+ to F)
- Our proprietary fundamental rating from -100 to +100 with a school-grade rank from A+ to F. Every stock is scored against all others by percentile: growth in earnings and revenue, earnings surprises, analyst estimates, and quality criteria such as margins, cash flow, and balance-sheet strength. A/A+ are the fundamentally strongest stocks in the universe.
- Market Capitalization (Mkt Cap)
- The market value of the company: share price x total shares outstanding, shown here in billions of dollars. Micro caps (< $0.3B) are small and volatile, mega caps (> $200B) are heavyweights. Our scanner universe is deliberately capped at $50B - we look for stocks with room to run.
- Momentum
- The driving force behind a price trend: stocks that have recently risen sharply statistically tend to keep rising more often than not. Momentum strategies therefore buy strength - not perceived bargains.
- Net Margin
- How much of revenue is left as profit? Net income divided by revenue, in percent. A 20% margin means: out of every dollar of revenue, 20 cents is left as profit. Rising margins are a strong quality signal.
- Operating Cash Flow (OCF)
- The cash that actually flows into the company from day-to-day operations - without accounting effects such as depreciation. A company can report book profits while still burning cash; operating cash flow reveals that.
- Piotroski F-Score
- A balance-sheet health check developed by Joseph Piotroski: 9 yes/no criteria covering earnings, cash flow, leverage, and efficiency produce a score from 0 to 9. Scores of 7 or higher are considered financially very solid, scores under 3 a warning sign.
- Sector & Industry
- Two levels of industry classification: sector is broad (e.g., Technology), industry is narrow (e.g., Semiconductors). Many strategies watch industry strength, because strong stocks are almost always found in strong industries.
- Stage (Weinstein Stages 1-4)
- Stan Weinstein divides every price chart into four stages: Stage 1 = basing (sideways after a downtrend), Stage 2 = uptrend (the only buying stage), Stage 3 = topping, Stage 4 = downtrend (avoid, or short candidate). Measured against the 30-week line (150-day moving average) and its slope.
- Stress RS (Strength on Stress Days)
- A stress day is a day on which both the overall market and the stock's own sector fell at least 0.5%. Stress RS counts on how many of these days the stock still closed green (shown as "g/n" = green days out of n stress days) and turns that into a rating from 1 to 99. High values point to buyers stepping in even on weak days - often a sign of institutional accumulation.
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| Symbol | Levermann Points | Earnings | Avg/Y 3Y | Stress RS | Stage | Funda Rating | Piotroski | MktCap | Industry | AI Rating | Deep Dive | Deep-Dive Report | Sector | Price | YTD | 6 Mo. | 1 Year | Off High | Price Target | RS | EPS Rating | ADR 10D | ADR 30D | Beta | P/E | P/E (f) | P/S | P/B | P/FCF | PEG | EV/EBITDA | EBIT Margin | Gross Margin | Net Margin | ROE | ROA | Debt/Eq | Equity Ratio | Sales +/Y | Div. Yield | Payout Ratio | Altman Z | Inst. % | Short % | Analysts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DECK Deckers Outdoor Corporation | — | 07/23 | — | — | Stage 1 | B +14 | 4 von 9 | 14.2 | Footwear & Accessories | – | — | Consumer Cyclical | 106.60 $ | +0.0 % | — | — | — | — | 34 | 29 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 13.5 | 100.8 % | — | — | |
| LLY Eli Lilly and Company | — | 08/06 | — | — | Stage 2 | A +66 | 8 von 9 | 1,005.6 | Drug Manufacturers - General | – | — | Healthcare | 1,152.50 $ | +3.4 % | — | — | — | — | 72 | 89 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 7.3 | 85.4 % | — | — | |
| MU Micron Technology Inc | — | — | — | — | Stage 2 | A +84 | 6 von 9 | 1,576.3 | Semiconductors | – | — | Technology | 983.10 $ | +268.7 % | — | — | — | — | 99 | 96 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 11.7 | 81.6 % | — | — |
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Quarterly Figures
No quarterly data available.
Frequently Asked Questions
Susan Levermann's scoring system ('The Relaxed Path to Wealth'), here with 11 of the 13 original criteria: return on equity, EBIT margin, equity ratio, P/E, analyst opinion (scored contrarian for large caps), earnings revisions, price performance over 6 and 12 months, price momentum, three-month reversal, and expected earnings growth — each criterion scores +1, 0, or −1.
All scanners are recalculated daily across the entire stock universe — most recently on 15. July 2026. The data basis is fundamental data and SEC filings (10-K annual reports and 10-Q quarterly reports).
Currently, 3 stocks pass this scanner's criteria (as of 15. July 2026).
No global trading filters — this strategy checks the entire stock universe purely against its own criteria (mega caps over $50B included).
Susan Levermann's points system grades every stock criterion by criterion with +1 (good), 0 (neutral), or −1 (bad) and adds it all up. We implement 11 of the 13 original criteria: return on equity (above 20% good, below 10% bad), EBIT margin (above 12% good — not scored for financials), equity ratio (above 25% good, financials above 10%), P/E (below 12 good, above 16 or negative bad), analyst opinion (contrarian for large caps: a unanimous buy consensus scores a minus point, while for smaller names with few estimates it counts as positive), earnings revisions over the last 4 weeks, price performance over 6 and over 12 months, price momentum (6 months strong, 12 months not yet), three-month reversal (large caps only, compared against our universe's median instead of an index), and expected earnings growth (next fiscal year's estimate versus the current one). Not reproducible for lack of price history: the 5-year P/E and the price reaction on earnings day. A stock makes the scanner from 4 points (large caps from $5B market cap) or 7 points (small/mid caps) — and only if at least 8 of the 11 criteria have data.
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Note: pure fact-based analysis, not investment advice and not a solicitation to buy or sell. All figures without guarantee.