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MR. MARKET TODAYKO 78.42COST 1015PG 167.30MCD 305.80AAPL 234.10MSFT 478.5530Y TREASURY 4.97%IV PROTOCOL v1.0 — OWNER EARNINGS DCF“BE FEARFUL WHEN OTHERS ARE GREEDY” — W. BUFFETTMR. MARKET TODAYESTABLISHED 2026
MR. MARKET TODAYKO 78.42COST 1015PG 167.30MCD 305.80AAPL 234.10MSFT 478.5530Y TREASURY 4.97%IV PROTOCOL v1.0 — OWNER EARNINGS DCF“BE FEARFUL WHEN OTHERS ARE GREEDY” — W. BUFFETTMR. MARKET TODAYESTABLISHED 2026
Vol. I, No. 1
A daily reckoning of price vs value

Mr. Market

The Daily Tape · Established 2026 · Edited from Olympia, Washington
Frequently asked questions
By the editors

The honest questions, with honest answers.

What readers actually ask before they subscribe, and what they ask once they have.

Is this investment advice?

No. It is editorial commentary on the gap between price and value for the businesses we cover. We do not know your situation. We do not manage money. We publish a publication.

The protocol marks each business BUY, WATCH, or PASS. The decision to act on any of those marks belongs to you.

Why do you publish a number for every business?

Because the alternative — opinions without numbers, or hot takes without cash-flow statements — is what most financial media already does, and we did not want to add another one.

The number is an estimate. It is sometimes wrong. It is, however, derived from the same eight-step protocol every day, applied identically to every business. That consistency is most of the value. A single number is honest about its uncertainty in a way that a thousand-word essay never quite is.

Why is the intrinsic value so different from what the financial press reports?

Because we are not asking the same question.

Wall Street analysts publish “price targets” — guesses about where the stock will tradeover the next twelve months. We publish “intrinsic value” — an estimate of what the business is worth, based on the cash it produces, irrespective of what the market thinks. The two numbers are related, but they are not the same number. Over a long enough horizon, prices tend to track value. Over the next quarter, they can wander a long way from it.

Why does Mr. Market's reckoning sometimes contradict Wall Street consensus?

Mr. Market and Wall Street are asked to do different jobs. The Wall Street analyst is rewarded for the recommendation that becomes consensus quickly; the patient owner is rewarded for the recommendation that is correct slowly.

When we publish a meaningfully different number, it is almost always because the protocol's discount rate, sector premium, and growth-fade assumptions are doing work that an “upgrade to Buy” doesn't bother with. Read The House Style and you can disagree with us in specifics.

What does my subscription actually pay for?

The publication, not the math. The methodology is free in The House Style. Anyone can read it. Anyone can implement it. Subscribers pay for the daily application of the methodology — pulling each business's most recent filing, running it through the eight-step protocol, comparing the result to the price the market is asking, and delivering it in their inbox at nine o'clock each morning.

They also pay for the watchlist that alerts them when one of their stocks crosses the buy line, the unblurred backtests that show whether the method has worked, the full archive of Dispatches, and the sector-specific valuation variants for banks, insurers, and REITs.

What happens if I cancel?

Nothing. You will lose access to the subscriber-only content at the end of your billing period and the recurring charge will stop. We will not nag you to come back. We will not email you in six months with a “we miss you” offer. If you want to come back you may.

Why is one Quote always free, but the rest are paywalled?

Because we wanted the free version of the site to be a thorough sample, not a teaser. A reader landing on Mr. Market for the first time should be able to see exactly what a paid subscriber gets — the full eight-step reckoning, every input visible, the audit trail back to the SEC filing — on at least one business per day. Coca-Cola is our current free sample.

On the other twenty-nine businesses on the Tape, you see the verdict and the headline numbers free, and the math is the paywall. That feels honest to us. We invite you to subscribe so you can see them all.

The bank reckoning looks wrong to me.

It probably is, for the moment. The standard Owner Earnings protocol does not handle deposit-and-loan economics gracefully — GAAP operating cash flow at a bank is dominated by deposit and securities-portfolio movement that has little to do with cash an owner could withdraw. We apply a sector exception that produces an informational figure, and we put a structural caveat on every bank's Quote page warning you not to act on it.

A proper banking valuation variant — Gordon residual on tangible book value times return on equity — is queued for the next version of the protocol. When it ships, the caveat banner comes down for banks specifically.

Do you cover stocks outside the United States?

Not yet. The protocol is method-agnostic but the data we use is U.S.-only at the moment. Once the publication is on its feet, international coverage is on the roadmap — starting with the largest names in the FTSE 100 and the Nikkei 225.

Where is the source data from?

Every business's fundamentals come from its own filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, retrieved through a commercial fundamentals data provider. Treasury yields come from the U.S. Federal Reserve's FRED service. Daily price history is mirrored from public exchange feeds. All of it is verifiable; none of it is exclusive.

Do you take advertising?

No. The moment one accepts advertising one's editorial integrity is compromised in a small and gradual way that, over time, becomes the entire publication. The brokerage that advertises on our site cannot become the brokerage we feel obligated to be polite about. So we will not accept their money. Yours is enough.

How do I contact you?

Write to the editors. We read every message, though we may not reply quickly.

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