I’ve been working on a tool to automate risk analysis specifically to catch red flags that often get buried in 10-Ks and other news. I usually run it on companies I’m eyeing to see if I missed any structural risks.
I recently ran it on Block (SQ) given the recent volatility and the "AI pivot and Crypto" narrative. While the stock has momentum, the tool surfaced some deep fundamental disconnects that go beyond the usual headlines.
I wanted to share the 4 biggest risks it flagged to see if you guys think these are valid concerns or if the market is rightfully ignoring them.
1. The "Value Destruction" Gap (ROIC vs. WACC)
This was the loudest signal. This was flagged a massive spread between return and cost:
ROIC (Return on Invested Capital): \\\~0.76%
WACC (Weighted Average Cost of Capital): \\\~8.21%
Despite reporting accounting profits, the business is technically destroying shareholder value on every dollar invested right now. Operational returns aren't covering the cost of capital. Usually, you see this in dying industries, not "growth" fintechs. Is this just temporary due to the restructuring, or is the core payments business losing efficiency?
2. Cash Flow Quality: Organic or Accounting Magic?
Headline Operating Cash Flow looks incredible: jumping from 101M to 1.7B (2024).
The Red Flag: The tool flagged that this wasn't driven purely by higher sales. It was driven by a sharp contraction in working capital.
Receivables dropped from $7.19B → $5.67B.
Payables fell from $141M → $118M.
Retained Earnings swung wildly from -528M to +2.3B.
This suggests the cash flow boom is largely "one-off" balance sheet timing (squeezing customers/suppliers) rather than a permanent improvement in earnings power.
3. The $11.4 Billion Goodwill Overhang
Goodwill: $11.4B
Intangibles: $1.4B
Total: \\\~35% of Total Assets.
With the company pivoting focus toward Bitcoin and AI, and away from legacy integrations, the tool flagged a high risk of impairment. If the acquisitions that make up that $11B (like Afterpay) underperform, we could see a massive writedown that wipes out reported equity.
4. Borrowing to Buy Back Stock
The financing activities section shows a contradiction.
Long-term debt jumped from $4.97B to $6.4B.
Simultaneously, they spent \\\~$1.17B on equity repayments/buybacks.
Leveraging up the balance sheet to buy back stock while ROIC is 0.76% seems like questionable capital allocation.
Conclusion:
The tool paints a picture of a company that is optically improving cash flow through working capital adjustments while the underlying capital efficiency (ROIC) is surprisingly weak.
For those tracking SQ: Do you view the ROIC/WACC spread as a dealbreaker, or is it a lagging indicator that will catch up as the layoffs/restructuring fully take effect?