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Barnes & Noble Education

BNED
46
Specialty Retail · Consumer Cyclical
Winston Score
46
Winston is serious
Mixed quality — meaningful strengths and weaknesses.

Barnes & Noble Education runs college bookstores across the United States. It sells textbooks, course materials, school supplies, and branded apparel to college students and university communities. The company operates physical stores on campuses and also runs online retail for those same schools, making it one of the largest campus retail operators in the country.

The company makes money by selling products directly to students and by charging schools a fee to manage their bookstore operations. It works almost entirely within the U.S., serving hundreds of colleges and universities. Its main competitive advantage is its long-term contracts with schools, which create a somewhat captive customer base. However, the business faces serious pressure from cheaper textbook alternatives like digital rentals, Amazon, and open-source course materials, which keep pulling students away from campus stores. Reversing declining textbook sales while growing its digital course materials business is the central challenge the company faces going forward.

Winston Score History

Growth Profile

When traditional metrics don't capture the full picture, these are the signals growth stock investors use instead.

Revenue Growth

+10.5% YoY

YoY Growth Rate

Steady revenue growth

EPS Growth

-17.4% YoY

YoY Growth Rate

Earnings declining

Insider Activity

73.9%ownership

Flat

Insiders holding steady — not selling despite ability to

Cash Runway

~1 months

$10M cash & investments

Quarterly Free Cash Flow

↑ Burn rate improving

Short runway — potential dilution ahead through share issuance

Cash watch

Barnes & Noble Education has less than a year of cash at its current burn rate. Growth investors should watch for potential share dilution from future fundraising — that directly reduces your ownership.

The Winston Score above measures business quality today. Growth stocks often score lower because they invest in the future rather than maximising current profits. These metrics show what matters most for evaluating that future.

Score breakdown

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Quality

Gross Margin
17.2%
Thin — 17.2% gross margin
Operating Margin
3.1%
Thin — 3.1% operating margin
ROCE
3.2%
Weak — 3.2% return on capital

ROIC between 0% and 5%. They earn a few cents back per dollar invested in the business.

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Growth

Sales YoY
+20.3%
Fast-growing sales (20.3% YoY)
EPS YoY
N/A
Data not available
EPS Consistency
4/8 quarters
Earnings inconsistent quarter-to-quarter

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Cash Flow

Cash Conversion
305%
Turns 305% of profit into real cash
FCF Margin
1.8%
Thin free cash flow (1.8%)

FCF margin between 0% and 10%. Some cash from sales, but not a lot.

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Stability

Debt / Equity
0.73
Moderate — manageable debt (0.73)
Interest Cover
8.36x
Comfortably covers interest (8.4x)

Interest coverage above 8. Profits cover interest many times over.

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Valuation

P/E Ratio (TTM)
26.1x
no trend
Growth-priced — P/E 26.1

P/E above the market average. People are paying up for expected growth.

P/E vs Forward
+10.1
GROWING
Earnings expected to grow meaningfully — cheaper on forward P/E (26.1 → 16.0)

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Dividends

Not applicable for this business.
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