NYT
New York Times Co
$73.19
▼ 0.9%Updated Today 12:11 PM ET
NYT at a glance — five pillars scored 0–100 from real filed financials.
Overall: Favorable · 61/100. A wider, greener shape means more pillars look healthy. Dividends scores 0 when a company pays none — that is a choice, not a flaw.
▲ Up 28.3% over the last 12 months
Market Cap
$11.95B
P/E
31.26x
Forward P/E (est.)
24.63x
ROE
19.2%
Revenue Growth
10.4%
EPS Growth
26.9%
Profit Margin
13.2%
FCF Yield
2.3%
Debt / Equity
0x
ROIC
15.0%
Interest Coverage
—
Current Ratio
1.6x
Dividend Yield
1.2%
Implied Growth (rev. DCF)
4.2%
Rating Score
61/100
New York Times Co (NYT) is a large-cap company in the Media industry, part of the Communication Services sector of the S&P 500, with a market value around $11.95B.
In its latest reported year it generated about $2.82B in revenue and $343.98M in net profit.
Our model rates NYT Favorable (61/100) on growth, profitability, financial health, and valuation. The summary below is built from its filed financials and current ratios and refreshes automatically.
Technical analysis reads price and volume to judge momentum and timing. It complements the fundamentals above — it does not replace them. Here is what NYT's chart says today, with each tool explained.
Trend — moving averages. A moving average is the average closing price over a window, which smooths out daily noise. NYT trades near $73.19, around its 50-day average ($75.40) and 200-day average ($70.80). Price tangled in its moving averages means there is no clear trend — the stock is ranging.
Momentum — RSI. The Relative Strength Index runs 0–100 and measures how strong recent gains are versus losses. Above 70 is "overbought", below 30 "oversold". At 50 it is in neutral territory — neither stretched nor washed out.
MACD. MACD compares two moving averages to flag shifts in momentum. Its histogram is currently positive — short-term momentum is improving.
Volatility — ATR. Average True Range is the typical daily move. NYT's is $1.98 (~2.7% of price), so swings of about that size each day are normal — handy for setting a stop that isn't too tight.
Support & resistance. Over the last month NYT found buyers near $68.52 (support) and sellers near $76.90 (resistance); its 52-week range is $51.03–$87.10. A decisive break beyond either edge often marks the next move.
Volume. The latest session traded 0.3× the 20-day average — lighter than usual, so the move carries less conviction. Rising volume on up-days suggests real buying; on down-days, real selling.
Educational information to help you read a chart — not a recommendation or a forecast. It updates daily as the price and indicators change.
4Y CAGR
8.0%
Revenue moved from $1.56B in 2016 to $2.82B in 2025, a 6.9% compound annual growth rate. The most recent year grew a steady 10.4% year over year. Consistent top-line growth is one sign of healthy demand.
Gross Margin
51.1%
Operating Margin
15.3%
Net Margin
12.2%
ROE
19.2%
New York Times Co keeps about 13.2% of each sales dollar as net profit, with a 51.1% gross margin and 15.3% operating margin. Return on equity is 19.2% and return on invested capital about 15.0%. Margins are moderate — typical of a competitive but profitable business.
Total Debt
$246.00M
Net Debt
$59.27M
Net Debt / EBITDA
0.14x
Debt / Equity
0x
Leverage: debt-to-equity is 0.0x, with a current ratio of 1.6x. That is a conservative balance sheet — a cushion in downturns. It carries roughly $246.00M of total debt against $186.73M of cash.
Operating CF
$584.49M
Free Cash Flow
$550.50M
FCF Margin
19.5%
In the latest year New York Times Co produced about $584.49M of operating cash flow and $550.50M of free cash flow after capital spending. That is a free-cash-flow yield of about 2.3% on today's price. Cash flow is what ultimately pays shareholders, so it is worth tracking over time.
P/E
31.26x
P/S
4.23x
P/B
5.52x
EV / EBITDA
23.26x
NYT trades at 31.3x trailing earnings (about 24.6x on estimated forward earnings), 4.2x sales, and 5.5x book value. Reverse-engineering today's price implies the market expects roughly 4.2% long-term free-cash-flow growth. That is a premium multiple that needs growth to justify it.
A two-stage discounted cash flow on real SEC-filed free cash flow — the intrinsic-value anchor professional analysts triangulate from.
DCF fair value / share
—
Current price
$73.19
Starting FCF (latest 10-K)
$550.50M
Growth, years 1–5
10.4%
Fade to terminal, years 6–10
2.5%
Discount rate
9.0%
Cash flows grow at the stage-1 rate (trailing revenue growth, capped at 20%) for five years, fade to 2.5% by year 10, and continue at that rate forever (Gordon terminal value), all discounted at 9.0%. Small changes in assumptions move the result a lot — treat this as one reference point, not a target price. Educational only, not investment advice.
Where this stock sits versus what most companies trade at.
Typical ranges are general references (e.g., many stocks trade at ~18–26x earnings), not hard rules. Context only — not investment advice.
The case for NYT:
- Revenue is growing 10.4% a year, a sign of real demand.
- Strong return on equity (19.2%) shows capital is put to work well.
- A conservative balance sheet (debt/equity 0.0x) lowers risk.
- Our model's overall read is Favorable (61/100).
The case against NYT:
- Like any single stock, it is exposed to competition, the economic cycle, and shifts in its end markets.
Valuation risk — at 31.3x earnings, disappointing results could compress the multiple.
Market risk — sector rotation, the economic cycle, and broad sentiment move the stock regardless of fundamentals.
On balance, the fundamentals screen favourably: New York Times Co is a large-cap communication services business still growing nicely, with solid profitability, and a sound balance sheet. It trades at 31.3x earnings, which our model scores Favorable (61/100). Weigh this against your own goals and time horizon — this is educational information, not a recommendation.
NYT — frequently asked questions
Is NYT a good stock to buy?
We don't give buy or sell advice. Our model rates New York Times Co Favorable (61/100) based on its growth, profitability, financial health, and valuation — use that as a research starting point and make your own decision.
What is NYT's rating on The Stocks School?
New York Times Co currently scores 61/100 (Favorable) on our transparent model, which weighs real fundamentals: growth, margins, returns on capital, balance-sheet strength, and valuation.
How our ratings work →Where does NYT's data come from?
Live price data plus real fundamentals and 5-year financials pulled directly from New York Times Co's SEC filings — refreshed automatically, not hand-entered.
How is the 5-year projection for NYT calculated?
It's a scenario model: it grows revenue at an assumed rate, applies a profit margin and a valuation multiple, and shows the resulting share-price range. The assumptions are yours to change — it's a tool for thinking, not a prediction.
Is this NYT analysis financial advice?
No. Everything on this page is educational research, not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell NYT. Always do your own research and consider a licensed professional.
Data notice. Fundamentals and financial statements are sourced from company filings (SEC EDGAR) and market-data providers; prices and market caps refresh on trading days and may be delayed. Ratings, projections, technical signals, and written summaries are model- or rule-generated for education and may simplify or lag the latest filings.
Not advice. Nothing on this page is investment advice or a recommendation to buy, hold, or sell any security. Do your own research and consult a licensed financial professional before investing.