Low — 0 expert voices, 0 traceable claims in the KB; the call rests entirely on fundamentals + quant
Position sizing
Value/satellite only, ~1–2% if at all — cheap deep-value, not a core holding
Next catalyst
2026-08-04 FQ4'26 earnings (Street EPS $1.41) + FIFA World Cup ad-revenue read
Single biggest risk
Secular cord-cutting: cable/broadcast affiliate & distribution fees erode as the pay-TV bundle shrinks
One-line thesis. FOX is a genuinely cheap, cash-generative, low-leverage media operator (FY25 revenue $16.3B, ~$3B FCF, net-debt/EBITDA <1×) whose FOX News/FOX Sports live-programming franchise is more defensible than most legacy TV — but the top line barely grows (~2% forward CAGR), the moat is under secular pressure from cord-cutting, and there is zero expert conviction behind it. The result is a value Watch, not a Synthos Buy.
◆ Synthos call — HoldFOX is a solid business largely reflected at ~$62 — fine to keep, no reason to chase; it gets interesting again below ~$53.
~2% forward revenue CAGR; ~6% EPS CAGR is mostly buyback, not organic — decent ROE ~15% on a shrinking-moat base.
Exponential Potential
2/10 · Low
Flat-to-declining top line; Tubi + Fox One streaming is a real but small optionality kicker. A mature cash cow, not an exponential.
⚖ Reverse-DCF cross-checkMarket-implied growth ≈ 11%/yrTo justify today’s $51, earnings would have to compound roughly 11% a year for 10 years (9% discount rate). Analysts forecast ~10%/yr, so the market is pricing in about what the Street expects.What do the 5 tiers mean? (Core · Tactical · Watch · Hold · Avoid)
Buy — CoreOwn it as a foundation — start or add now, size it for years, let dips be gifts.
Buy — TacticalGood price + confirmed trend + a defined exit — buy the setup, not a marriage.
WatchWe want the business, just not at this price/setup — act only when the listed trigger hits.
HoldFine to keep if you own it — no reason to buy more; new money does better elsewhere.
AvoidDon't own it — the problem is the business or the expectations, so a cheaper price won't fix it.
In plain English
Fox owns FOX News, FOX Sports, the FOX broadcast network, and Tubi (a free ad-supported streaming app). It makes money two ways: fees that cable and streaming distributors pay to carry its channels, and advertising — especially on live news and sports, which people still watch in real time.
Is the stock cheap or expensive? Cheap. You're paying about $10 for every $1 the company is expected to earn next year, versus $20+ for the average big US stock. It also throws off a lot of cash and doesn't carry much debt. The problem is it barely grows — fewer people pay for cable every year, and that slowly eats into Fox's fees.
Our verdict is Watch: a solid, cheap business we'd happily own at the right moment, but not one we have strong conviction in, because no expert in our research network covers it and its growth engine is stalling.
Here's what the three scores mean in everyday terms:
Downside Risk 3/10 (fairly safe). Cheap, low debt, and a stock that doesn't swing much — so the floor is reasonably solid.
Growth Quality 4/10 (below average). It's well-run and profitable, but sales are basically flat; most of the per-share earnings growth comes from buying back its own shares, not from getting bigger.
Exponential Potential 2/10 (low). This is a mature cash machine. Don't expect it to multiply — the upside is "cheap gets less cheap," not "small company becomes huge."
The one big worry: the whole pay-TV bundle is shrinking. Every year fewer households pay for cable, and that slowly erodes the fees that are Fox's most reliable income.
Solid = price · dashed = 50-day average · dotted = 200-day average · amber = 52-week high/low. Price above both averages is an uptrend.
Bollinger Bands 20-day average ± 2 standard deviations
The shaded band widens when the stock gets more volatile. Riding the upper edge = strong momentum (sometimes stretched); the lower edge = weak / potentially oversold.
Blue crossing above amber (bars flip green) = momentum turning up; below (bars red) = turning down. Bar height = the size of that gap.
Relative performance vs S&P 500 & its sector (XLC (sector)), set to 100 a year ago
Solid = FOX · dashed = S&P 500 · dotted = XLC (sector). A rising line means it is beating that benchmark — the sector line shows whether it is a leader or laggard within its own group.
Darker bars = actual results, brighter = analyst estimates. Taller bars to the right = expected growth.
Key stats an RIA wants
Price$50.56
Market cap$22B
P/E trailing2×
P/E FY26E / FY27E10× / 9×
EV / Sales1.6×
EV / EBITDA8.1×
Gross margin35.0%
Net margin10.6%
Dividend yield1.11%
Beta0.519
52-wk range$44 – $68
RSI(14)29
50 / 200-DMA$55 / $57
12-mo return+-2% (SPY +21%)
Street target$74 ($40–$97)
Analyst grades18 Buy · 20 Hold · 4 Sell
FMP ratingA
Next earnings2026-08-05
What the experts actually said 0 traceable claims on FOX · showing the highest-conviction voices
Every claim reconciles to a real claim_id in the Synthos knowledge base — this is the evidence the verdict is built on, not vibes. Management (the company itself) is shown but half-weighted; one cautionary voice is included on purpose.
1. What it is
Fox Corporation (Nasdaq: FOX / FOXA) is the US media company that was spun out of 21st Century Fox in 2019 when the entertainment assets were sold to Disney. What remained — deliberately — is the live, un-time-shiftable part of television: news, sports, and the broadcast network. CEO is Lachlan Murdoch (Executive Chair & CEO). Fiscal year ends June 30, so the latest reported quarter (period ended 2026-03-31) is fiscal Q3 2026.
The business runs in two reportable segments:
Revenue mix (FY2025, from FMP segmentation):
Television Segment — $9.33B (57%): the FOX broadcast network, 29 owned-and-operated stations, MyNetworkTV, and Tubi (the ad-supported streaming service). Advertising-heavy and therefore more cyclical.
Cable Network Programming — $6.93B (43%): FOX News, FOX Business, FS1/FS2, Big Ten Network. This is the profit engine — carriage/affiliate fees plus high-margin news advertising.
Revenue by component (nine months to Mar-2026, from the earnings release): Distribution $6.02B · Advertising $5.42B · Content & other $1.47B. Distribution (the recurring carriage/retrans/streaming-subscription line) is the ballast; advertising is the swing factor and is tightly tied to live sports scheduling (the Super Bowl rotates on and off Fox's air, which is why year-over-year ad comparisons whipsaw).
FMP provides no geographic segmentation (seg_geo is empty) — consistent with Fox being an essentially all-US operator, which is both a simplification (no FX) and a concentration (US news/politics and US sports rights).
2. The expert thesis (there is none — stated plainly)
There is no expert coverage of FOX in the Synthos knowledge base.total_claims: 0, net_bullish_voices: 0, and the top array is empty. We will not manufacture conviction: none of the voices we track (the ones who drive our high-conviction names) have said anything about Fox that we can reconcile to a claim_id.
What that means for this note. The verdict below is fundamentals- and quant-driven only — built from the financial statements, analyst estimates, valuation multiples, technicals, and management's own earnings release. It carries Low conviction by construction: a cheap, understandable business is not the same thing as a researched, high-signal opportunity. When the KB is silent, honesty requires us to say the case is quantitative and to size accordingly (§12). The Street itself is split — 18 Buy / 20 Hold / 4 Sell nets to a Hold consensus — which is consistent with our "cheap but going nowhere fast" read.
3. Synthos scores & the Bull / Base / Bear cases
Three scores, 0–10, each anchored to real metrics (not probabilities we can't honestly calibrate):
Score
0–10
The read
Downside Risk(lower = safer)
3 · Low-Moderate
Cheap (10× fwd EPS, 8.1× EV/EBITDA, ~13% FCF yield), low beta 0.52, net-debt/EBITDA <1×, ~$5.4B cash. The floor is solid. Offsetting: secular cord-cutting and heavy news/politics + sports-rights concentration cap the "safe" score.
Growth Quality
4 · Below-Average
Forward revenue CAGR only ~2%; EPS CAGR ~6% is mostly buyback, not organic. ROE ~15%, ROIC ~13% are respectable, but they sit on a moat that is structurally shrinking, so this is a quality-of-cash-flow score, not a growth score.
Exponential Potential
2 · Low
Flat-to-declining top line; second derivative is negative. Tubi + the new Fox One streaming bundle are real optionality but small relative to a $16B legacy base. This is a mature cash cow — own it for yield/value, not for a multibagger.
The three cases (our own scenario model — assumptions shown; each target is a ~12–18-month fair value). We deliberately do not attach probabilities: the base case is the expected path, so a weighted blend would just restate it with false precision. The cases bound the range; the scores above summarize them.
Case
Key assumptions
Fair value
Bull
Fox One streaming scales, Tubi keeps compounding ad dollars, live-sports pricing power holds, buybacks shrink the share count meaningfully. FY27E EPS beats to ~$6.2; the market re-rates a proven cash-compounder to ~13×.
~$80 (+58%)
Base(our anchor)
Estimates roughly hit — FY27E EPS ~$5.77; a low-growth but high-FCF cash cow earns a modest ~11× on that number (below the market because growth is scarce).
~$62 (+23%)
Bear
Cord-cutting accelerates, an ad-recession hits the cyclical Television segment, sports-rights inflation squeezes margins. FY27E EPS misses to ~$5.2; multiple stays a cheap ~9× (value trap).
~$44 (−13%)
Synthos fair value = the base case, ~$62 (+23%), with the full $44–$80 span as the honest range. Note our base sits below the Street's $74.2 consensus: the Street is applying a higher multiple than we think a ~2%-growth, secularly-pressured business deserves. Our anchor is the "cheap cash cow re-rates slightly" case, not the "growth returns" case. This is a tracked call — the Forecaster Scorecard grades it once it matures.
4. Exponential Potential
Synthos separates compounders (durable high returns on capital) from exponentials (accelerating multi-baggers-from-here). FOX is neither an exponential nor really a compounder — it is a mature cash cow:
Forward growth: revenue CAGR FY25→FY30E is only ~2.1% ($16.3B → $18.1B on FMP estimates). EPS CAGR is a better ~6.5% ($4.91 → $6.72), but the gap between the two is almost entirely share-count reduction (buybacks), not organic expansion.
Acceleration (2nd derivative) is roughly flat-to-negative: estimated revenue is $16.5B (FY26E) → $17.3B (FY27E) → ~$17.3B (FY28E) → $18.4B (FY29E) → $18.1B (FY30E) — a plateau, not a ramp. There is no inflection to underwrite.
Room to run: at $22B market cap FOX is small enough that it could move, but the binding constraint isn't size — it's a shrinking addressable base (US pay-TV households decline every year). The one genuine expansion vector is streaming: Tubi (free ad-supported, growing) and the newly launched Fox One direct-to-consumer bundle. These are real, but small against the legacy business, and they partly cannibalize the high-margin carriage fees they aim to replace.
Reinvestment runway: modest capex (~$0.3B/yr, <2% of revenue); the capital story is return-of-cash (buybacks + dividend), not reinvest-for-growth. Appropriate for the asset, but the opposite of an exponential.
Exponential Potential: Low (2/10). Own FOX for cheap cash flow and downside protection, not for growth. The honest framing is that this is a value/yield holding whose best-case outcome is "cheap becomes fairly-valued," not "small becomes huge."
Revenue: FY25 (ended Jun-2025) $16.30B, +16.6% over FY24's $13.98B — but that jump is flattered by the Super Bowl LIX broadcast in that fiscal year; the underlying run-rate is flattish. Nine months to Mar-2026 were $12.91B vs $13.01B a year earlier — essentially flat, and down slightly, once the Super Bowl rotates off Fox's air.
Segments (FY25): Television $9.33B, Cable Network Programming $6.93B. The Cable segment is the margin engine — in the latest nine months it delivered $2.37B of segment EBITDA on $5.68B revenue (~42% margin) vs Television's $733M on $7.18B (~10%).
Margins: gross ~35% TTM, EBITDA margin ~19% TTM, net margin ~10.6% TTM. FY25 EBITDA $3.85B, operating income $3.23B.
Earnings: FY25 net income $2.26B, diluted EPS $4.91 (up from $3.13 in FY24). Note quarterly EPS is lumpy — FQ3'26 GAAP EPS was just $0.38 (depressed by a non-operating charge), while adjusted EPS was $1.32 (management non-GAAP), up from $1.10 a year earlier. TTM GAAP diluted EPS of ~$3.79 understates normalized earning power for this reason.
Cash flow: FY25 operating CF $3.32B, capex only −$0.33B → FCF ~$2.99B — a ~13% FCF yield on market cap. This is the single best feature of the story: a lot of free cash on a cheap price.
Balance sheet: cash $5.35B, total debt $7.47B → net debt just $2.1B; net-debt/EBITDA ~0.55–0.97× (well within investment-grade). Current ratio 2.9×. A genuinely sturdy balance sheet.
6. Valuation — cheap, but cheap for a reason
FOX is unambiguously cheap on every multiple: 13× trailing GAAP EPS, ~10× FY26E, 8.8× FY27E, 7.5× FY30E, EV/Sales 1.6×, EV/EBITDA 8.1×, and a ~13% free-cash-flow yield. FMP's own letter rating is "A" (overall score 4/5), driven by strong DCF, ROE and ROA sub-scores. On paper this screens as deep value.
The catch is what the cheapness is pricing in: a market that expects ~2% revenue growth and secular decline in the core pay-TV franchise. A single-digit P/E on a business that isn't growing is not obviously mispriced — it can be a value trap if cord-cutting accelerates or if sports-rights costs inflate faster than distribution revenue. The bull's answer is that (a) live news + live sports are the last things to leave the bundle, (b) Tubi/Fox One add a growth vector, and (c) relentless buybacks (remaining authorization $3.5B, ~16% of the market cap) compound per-share value even on flat revenue.
Street targets (context, not our anchor): consensus $74.2, high $97, low $40 — a very wide spread that itself signals low conviction / a genuine bull-bear standoff. Our base-case $62 is deliberately below consensus: we won't pay up a growth multiple for a no-growth asset. Cheap, yes; a screaming buy, not quite — hence Watch.
7. Technicals (from the tech block)
Trend: down. $50.56 sits below both the 50-DMA ($55.25) and 200-DMA ($57.03), and the 50 is below the 200 (death-cross posture). MACD −2.71 (negative).
Location:−25.4% off the 52-week high ($67.76), only +13.9% off the 52-week low ($44.39) — near the lower end of its range, with a max drawdown of −25.4% from peak.
Momentum: RSI(14) 28.9 — oversold (<30). That's a mean-reversion flag: the selling may be stretched, which can precede a bounce, but it also confirms the tape is weak.
Relative strength (the tell): FOX −2.0% over 12 months vs SPY +20.6% and QQQ +30.3%; −4.4% 3-mo vs SPY +13.7%. Persistent, broad underperformance of both the market and the Nasdaq — the opposite of a leadership name.
Read: technicals do not confirm a buy. This is a downtrending, oversold stock. The oversold RSI plus deep-value fundamentals argue that a patient value buyer waits for either a base to form above the 50-DMA or a clear catalyst (World Cup ad read, buyback acceleration) — consistent with Watch, not chase.
8. Moat & competitive position
Fox's moat is narrower than a decade ago but not gone: it is concentrated in live, must-watch, real-time content — FOX News (the #1 US cable news network, with pricing power on both affiliate fees and news advertising) and live sports (NFL, MLB, college football, the FIFA Men's World Cup in 2026). Live content is the most cord-cutting-resistant category because it can't be time-shifted and advertisers pay a premium for it. That's why the FY19 spin deliberately kept news and sports and sold the entertainment library.
The offsets: (1) secular cord-cutting shrinks the distribution-fee base every year; (2) sports-rights inflation — the cost of NFL/MLB/college packages rises faster than the ad revenue they generate, pressuring Television-segment margins; (3) news concentration risk — FOX News is disproportionately important to profits and is exposed to political cycles and litigation; (4) streaming (Tubi, Fox One) is growing but lower-margin and partly cannibalistic.
Peer set (from FMP peers, market cap): Charter $19.4B, Live Nation $43.4B, Nebius $51.7B, Pinterest $14.7B, Rogers Communications $17.1B, Telefónica $21.5B, Vodafone $30.3B, Liberty Live $9.9B, Telkom Indonesia $13.7B. Note this FMP peer list is a loose "Communication Services" bucket rather than true media comps — the more relevant benchmarks are other legacy-media operators (Disney, Comcast/NBCU, Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount). Against that real peer group, FOX is the cleanest balance sheet and most focused live-news/sports pure-play, which is why it trades at a deserved premium to the more levered, more entertainment-exposed peers.
9. Management, capital allocation & guidance
Capital allocation: disciplined and shareholder-friendly. Fox has cumulatively repurchased ~$6.7B of Class A + ~$1.8B of Class B stock, with $3.5B remaining authorization (~16% of the market cap), and pays a modest dividend ($0.56/yr, ~1.1% yield, ~17% payout). Capex is minimal (<2% of revenue). This is a textbook mature-cash-cow capital-return story — the per-share compounding lever is the buyback.
Insider activity: the recent Form 4s in the data are routine equity-compensation events — RSU vesting, an award to the CFO (Steven Tomsic), a director's deferred-stock units, and tax-withholding ("F-InKind") dispositions — not open-market discretionary selling. No alarming signal in the sampled window.
Management's own guidance (half-weighted — their own book): the SEC 8-K earnings release (FQ3'26, filed 2026-05-11) is a real earnings release (revenue, segment EBITDA, buyback detail), but Fox does not issue formal forward numeric guidance — no revenue or EPS outlook. What management does say (treat as self-interested): CEO Lachlan Murdoch cited "continued strength and momentum," "robust core advertising trends," "leadership in live programming," strength at Tubi, and the FIFA Men's World Cup (June–July 2026) as the next big event, plus the launch of Fox One streaming and a "commitment to delivering long-term shareholder value supported by our strong balance sheet." Bottom line: no quantified guidance was available; the qualitative tone is upbeat but non-specific and should be discounted accordingly.
10. Catalysts & what to watch
Next earnings: 2026-08-04 (FQ4'26, fiscal-year-end; Street EPS $1.41, revenue ~$3.62B). The key line: distribution-revenue trend (is cord-cutting outpacing price increases?) and Television-segment ad strength.
FIFA Men's World Cup (Jun–Jul 2026): a major live-sports ad-revenue event on Fox's air — the single biggest near-term swing factor for advertising, and a real-world test of live-sports pricing power. Watch the FQ4 and FQ1'27 ad numbers.
Fox One streaming ramp: early subscriber and engagement data — proof (or not) that Fox can offset bundle erosion with DTC.
Tubi trajectory: continued AVOD ad-revenue growth is the clearest organic growth line Fox has.
Buyback pace: with $3.5B authorized, the speed of repurchase directly drives per-share value on flat revenue.
Thesis tripwires (what would change the call): two-plus quarters of accelerating distribution-revenue declines; a sharp ad-recession hit to Television; sports-rights costs inflating segment margins below ~8%; or the buyback slowing materially. On the upside: a Fox One/Tubi inflection that returns the company to mid-single-digit organic revenue growth would justify moving from Watch toward Buy.
11. Key risks
Secular cord-cutting (structural): the pay-TV bundle shrinks every year, eroding the high-margin distribution/affiliate-fee base that anchors profits. This is the core bear case and the reason the multiple is low.
Sports-rights inflation: NFL/MLB/college-football rights costs rise faster than the ad + distribution revenue they generate, structurally pressuring Television-segment margins.
News concentration & political/litigation risk: FOX News drives a disproportionate share of profit and is exposed to political cycles, regulatory scrutiny, and defamation-type litigation.
Advertising cyclicality: the Television segment is ad-heavy and would be hit hard in a recession; ad comparisons also whipsaw with the Super Bowl rotation.
No expert coverage / low conviction: unlike our high-conviction names, FOX has zero traceable expert claims — the entire case is quant/fundamentals, so there is less independent signal corroborating it.
Value-trap risk: a single-digit multiple on a no-growth asset can stay cheap indefinitely if the secular decline outpaces buybacks.
12. Verdict, position sizing & monitoring
Watch. FOX is a cheap, cash-rich, low-leverage, well-run media operator with a genuinely defensible live-news/live-sports core — but it is not growing (~2% forward revenue CAGR), its moat faces steady secular erosion, the tape is in a confirmed downtrend, and there is no expert conviction in the Synthos KB to lean on. That combination is the definition of a Watch: worth owning at the right price and with a catalyst, but not a Synthos Buy today. A move to Buy — Tactical would need either a cheaper entry (toward the $44–$48 low) with the oversold RSI resetting, or evidence (Fox One/Tubi, World Cup ad strength) that organic growth is inflecting.
Sizing: if owned at all, value/satellite ~1–2% — a cheap deep-value holding, not a core or flagship position. The low beta and FCF yield argue it can be a defensive ballast, but the absent conviction and secular headwind cap the weight.
Monitoring: re-underwrite on the §10 tripwires; formal re-score each earnings print (next: 2026-08-04). This verdict is logged as a tracked Synthos call as of 2026-07-03 at $50.56.
Single biggest risk: secular cord-cutting eroding the distribution-fee base faster than buybacks and streaming can offset.
Provenance & disclosures
Traceability:0 KB claims, breadth 0, net conviction 0 — there is no expert coverage of FOX in the Synthos knowledge base. This note is explicitly fundamentals- and quant-driven, and the Low conviction rating reflects that. Fabricated conviction is structurally impossible (claim-ID reconciliation), and none is claimed here.
Data as-of: fundamentals 2026-03-31 (FQ3'26) · estimates & prices 2026-07-02/03 · no expert claims. Forward figures are analyst consensus (FMP), labeled as estimates.
Management caveat: management's earnings-release commentary is self-interested and half-weighted; Fox issues no formal numeric guidance, so no guidance figures are represented here.
Not investment advice. Independent research, educational and informational only, never personalized. Hypothetical/forward figures are labeled; the only performance numbers Synthos will headline are the live, real-money Flagship's.
Version: 2026-07-03. Prior versions available via the deep-dive version dropdown ("based on the info at the time").