CROX
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+ FollowUndervalued by 1.8% based on the discounted cash flow analysis.
| Market cap | $5.90 Billion |
|---|---|
| Enterprise Value | $7.53 Billion |
| Dividend Yield | $- (-) |
| Earnings per Share | $-1.5 |
| Beta | 1.54 |
| Outstanding Shares | 50,282,000 |
| P/E Ratio | -57.52 |
|---|---|
| PEG | 408.41 |
| Price to Sales | 1.48 |
| Price to Book Ratio | 4.23 |
| Enterprise Value to Revenue | 1.87 |
| Enterprise Value to EBIT | -95.55 |
| Enterprise Value to Net Income | -73 |
| Total Debt to Enterprise | 0.23 |
| Debt to Equity | 1.24 |
No data
Market sentiment based on institutional option activity.
| Put/Call Ratio | 1.0910▲ 38.38% |
|---|---|
| Total Calls | 1,714,400▼ 47.46% |
| Total Puts | 1,870,400▼ 18.95% |
Holdings and activity of institutional investors.
| Ownership % | 88.62%▼ 1.77% |
|---|---|
| Total Invested | $3.98B▼ 4.89% |
| Investors Holding | 496▼ 13.00% |
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This committee directly impacts Crocs through its control over corporate tax policy (rates, credits) and trade policy (tariffs on imported goods or raw materials), both crucial for profitability and supply chain management.
This committee directly impacts Crocs through labor laws (minimum wage, worker safety, union regulations), which significantly affect manufacturing costs and operational practices.
Through its oversight of intellectual property law, this committee directly impacts Crocs' ability to protect its designs, patents, and brand, and also influences antitrust enforcement.
Through its oversight of the FTC, this committee directly impacts consumer protection, product safety standards, and advertising practices crucial for a consumer goods company like Crocs.