How to use the screener to find stocks where the market price and business fundamentals tell contradictory stories.
The Question
How do I find stocks where the price doesn't match the fundamentals? Most screening looks for alignment — quality companies with quality characteristics, cheap stocks with value attributes, trending stocks with momentum signals. But some of the most informative situations arise when different dimensions disagree. A company's business is improving while its stock price is falling. Or the stock is surging while fundamentals are deteriorating. These divergences are structurally unusual and therefore worth examining.
This article covers a fundamentally different kind of screening. Instead of looking for alignment within a single dimension (as the existing screener guides do), divergence screening looks for disagreement between dimensions. The results are not "good" or "bad" companies — they are companies where something structurally unusual is happening that warrants investigation.
What Divergence Means Structurally
Markets and fundamentals usually agree, at least directionally. Companies with improving fundamentals tend to see rising stock prices. Companies with deteriorating fundamentals tend to see falling prices. This is the normal state — not perfectly synchronized, but broadly consistent over time.
Divergence is when this consistency breaks down. The fundamental signals say one thing; the price says another. This structural disagreement has limited possible explanations: the market is wrong and will eventually correct, the fundamentals are misleading and the market sees something the numbers don't show, or the timing is simply different — the market is leading the fundamentals or lagging them.
The screener cannot determine which explanation applies. What it can do is systematically identify where these disagreements exist. Divergence is a structural anomaly — a fact about the current state of a company and its market pricing that is worth knowing regardless of the ultimate resolution.
Key Signals
Price-Fundamental Divergence
What it measures: The degree to which a company's stock price trajectory differs from the trajectory implied by its fundamental metrics. When business fundamentals are improving (earnings growth, margin expansion, cash flow improvement) but the stock price is declining — or vice versa — this signal captures the magnitude of the disagreement.
Data source: Composite comparison of fundamental metric trends against price trends over matched time periods.
Earnings-Price Disconnect
What it measures: The gap between earnings momentum and price momentum. When earnings are accelerating but the stock price is flat or declining, or when earnings are decelerating but the stock price continues to rise, this signal captures the disconnect between the two most fundamental drivers of stock valuation.
Data source: Comparison of earnings growth trend against price return over corresponding periods.
Cash Flow-Valuation Gap
What it measures: The divergence between a company's cash generation trajectory and its market valuation trajectory. Cash flow is less susceptible to accounting manipulation than earnings, so a disconnect between cash flow trends and valuation trends can be particularly informative about whether the market price reflects economic reality.
Data source: Comparison of operating cash flow and free cash flow trends against market capitalization and enterprise value changes.
Stories That Emerge
Technical-Fundamental Divergence
Constituent signals: Price-Fundamental Divergence, Trend Strength, Earnings Quality
What emerges: The broadest divergence story. When the overall trajectory of fundamentals contradicts the overall trajectory of price, and the trend in one direction is strong (meaning the price movement is not random noise), and earnings quality is high (meaning the fundamental signals are based on real economics), the disagreement is structurally significant. Either the market is mispricing the company or the fundamentals are about to change direction.
Limits: This story identifies the divergence but cannot determine its resolution. The market may be correct — anticipating fundamental changes that have not yet appeared in the data. Or the fundamentals may be correct — and the market will eventually adjust. Both outcomes are possible, and the story is equally informative in both cases.
Apparent Value, Structural Quality Problem
Constituent signals: Graham Number, Earnings Reversion Risk, Accrual Intensity
What emerges: This diagnostic story identifies companies that appear statistically cheap (trading below Graham Number) but show structural quality concerns underneath. High accrual intensity suggests earnings may be accounting-driven rather than cash-driven. Earnings reversion risk suggests current earnings levels may not be sustainable. The company looks cheap, but the cheapness may reflect justified market skepticism about earnings quality.
Limits: Not every company triggering this story is a value trap. Some companies with elevated accruals and reversion risk will see their earnings stabilize. The story flags the structural concern — it does not determine the outcome.
Apparent Cash Generation, Structural Receivables Concern
Constituent signals: Free Cash Flow Conversion, Receivables Buildup, Revenue Quality
What emerges: This diagnostic story identifies companies where cash flow metrics look strong but receivables are building up unusually. Growing receivables can temporarily inflate cash-related ratios while masking an underlying collection problem. When free cash flow conversion appears strong but receivables growth outpaces revenue growth, the cash generation picture may be less robust than it appears.
Limits: Receivables growth has many benign explanations — seasonal business patterns, new large customers with longer payment terms, expansion into new markets. The story identifies the structural pattern without determining whether the receivables buildup is concerning or routine.
Apparent Growth, Structural Acquisition Dependence
Constituent signals: Revenue Growth, Organic Growth Rate, Acquisition Intensity
What emerges: This diagnostic story identifies companies showing headline revenue growth that is primarily driven by acquisitions rather than organic business expansion. When total revenue growth is strong but organic growth is flat or declining, and acquisition activity is intense, the growth story is structurally different from what headline numbers suggest. Acquisition-dependent growth is less predictable and often less profitable than organic growth.
Limits: Acquisition-driven growth is a legitimate strategy for some companies, particularly in fragmented industries where roll-up strategies create real value. The story identifies the structural composition of growth, not whether the strategy is sound.
Using the Screener
Finding Price-Fundamental Disagreements
Select Technical-Fundamental Divergence to identify companies where price and fundamentals are moving in opposite directions. Review the results and note the direction of each disagreement: companies where fundamentals are strong but price is weak may represent opportunity; companies where price is strong but fundamentals are weak may represent risk. The story identifies both — your analysis determines which is which.
For a more targeted divergence screen, combine Technical-Fundamental Divergence with a quality filter like Earnings Integrity. This limits results to divergences where the fundamental side of the equation is based on trustworthy numbers — filtering out cases where the fundamentals themselves may be misleading.
Diagnostic Check on Existing Results
Use diagnostic stories as a second-pass filter on companies that passed your primary screen. After identifying value candidates through Graham Value Position or Deep Value Position, run those results against Apparent Value, Structural Quality Problem to flag companies where the statistical cheapness may be a surface-level artifact rather than genuine value.
Similarly, after screening for growth with Revenue Acceleration, check results against Apparent Growth, Structural Acquisition Dependence to identify companies where headline growth masks organic stagnation.
Boundaries
What This Cannot Tell You
Divergence signals identify structural disagreements, not their resolution. When price and fundamentals disagree, one of them will eventually be proven right — but the screen cannot tell you which. Divergence is equally consistent with market mispricing (the fundamentals are right) and market foresight (the price is right). Using divergence signals effectively requires qualitative judgment about which explanation is more likely in each specific case.
Diagnostic stories identify apparent-vs-structural discrepancies in financial metrics. They do not prove that the surface metric is misleading — they identify structural factors that could undermine the surface reading. The distinction between "could undermine" and "does undermine" is the space where analysis and judgment operate.
Finally, divergence is time-sensitive. A divergence that exists today may resolve tomorrow — through price correction, fundamental revision, or both. These stories capture snapshots of structural disagreement at a point in time. The informational value of a divergence depends heavily on how recently it emerged, how large it is, and whether it is widening or narrowing — context that the screen identifies but cannot fully interpret.