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February 20, 2026

Valuation Matters And It Matters A Lot, Controls Risk and Grows Your Money | FAST Graphs

By Chuck Carnevale

Co-Founder of FAST Graphs, aka Mr. Valuation

Valuation Matters and it Matters a Lot

In this video, Chuck Carnevale, co-founder of FAST Graphs and known as “Mr. Valuation,” explains a fundamental truth every investor must understand: valuation matters, and it matters a lot. Responding to subscriber questions about software companies, AI disruption, and specific stock requests, Chuck uses real examples to teach the core principles that drive long-term investment success.

The key message is that long-term returns are a function of three factors:

·        The price you pay (valuation)

·        The company’s earnings growth rate

·        Dividends, if applicable

Investors often focus only on growth or market excitement, but Chuck emphasizes that overpaying, even for a great company ,can dramatically reduce returns and increase risk.

Using FAST Graphs, he demonstrates how intrinsic value is tied to a company’s ability to generate future cash flows. The tool’s orange line represents a fair value estimate based on earnings growth and discounted cash flow principles. When stock price closely tracks this line over time, investors who buy at fair value tend to capture the business’s true performance.

Chuck contrasts slow-growth and high-growth companies to illustrate how valuation interacts with growth velocity. A utility like Eversource, growing earnings around 5–6% annually, may take 9–12 years to double earnings. Buying such a slow grower at an elevated valuation can lead to disappointing returns, even with dividends. However, buying at or below fair value allows investors to earn returns that closely match the company’s growth plus income.

On the other hand, high-growth companies such as ServiceNow or Salesforce can justify higher price-to-earnings multiples because their earnings compound rapidly. But the lesson remains the same: if you pay too much, even extraordinary growth may not translate into strong investor returns. Chuck shows cases where investors earned only modest returns after buying high-growth companies at extreme valuations.

Another important takeaway is that valuation is also a measure of risk. When stocks trade at premium multiples, they become more vulnerable to volatility and multiple compression. Even if the underlying business performs well, a decline in valuation alone can lead to significant losses or years of poor performance.

Chuck also addresses concerns about whether AI will disrupt software companies. While the long-term impact remains uncertain, he suggests that much of the recent market reaction reflects valuation adjustments rather than fundamental business collapse. Investors should focus less on headlines and more on growth expectations relative to price.

The bottom line: If you buy at fair value, you participate in the business’s performance. If you overpay, you may not—no matter how good the company is. As Warren Buffett famously said, many investors know the price of everything but the value of nothing.

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Disclosure: Long ES and NVDA

Disclaimer: The opinions in this document are for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell the stocks mentioned or to solicit transactions or clients. Past performance of the companies discussed may not continue and the companies may not achieve the earnings growth as predicted. The information in this document is believed to be accurate, but under no circumstances should a person act upon the information contained within. We do not recommend that anyone act upon any investment information without first consulting an investment advisor as to the suitability of such investments for his specific situation.

FAST Graphs™ is a stock research tool that empowers subscribers to conduct fundamental stock research deeper and faster than ever before.