The post The Greenblatt Magic Formula: How H&R Block, Molina, and Peabody Stack Up for Retirement Investors appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Joel Greenblatt’s Magic Formula ranks stocks on two factors: earnings yield (EBIT divided by enterprise value) and return on capital. It surfaces good companies trading at cheap prices.
For retirees, “cheap and high-quality” is only the starting point. Income reliability, drawdown control, and earnings predictability matter as much as a low multiple. Here is a look at how three Magic Formula candidates stack up, ranked from least to most appropriate for a retirement portfolio.
Peabody Energy (NYSE: BTU) screens as the deep-value, optionality-rich name Greenblatt enthusiasts love. Shares closed most recently at $23.69, with a price-to-book ratio of 0.85 and a forward P/E near 22x. The one-year return of 83.8% reflects renewed enthusiasm for coal tied to AI data-center power demand.
The retirement case breaks down on consistency. Q1 FY26 produced an EPS of −$0.26 versus a $0.22 estimate, a −218% earnings surprise, after Centurion mine commissioning issues caused roughly $80 million of damage to the Seaborne Met segment. CEO Jim Grech cited “temporary equipment and roof control challenges.” The $0.075 quarterly dividend has held since Q3 2023. However, the historical record shows cuts from $0.145 to $0.115 during the 2018 downturn and losses from 2015 through 2020. Cyclical coal is a trade, rarely a retirement holding.
Molina Healthcare (NYSE: MOH) is the classic Magic Formula recovery setup. The managed-care operator trades at a forward P/E of 38x against trailing revenue of $43.1 billion. Shares rebounded 24.5% year to date to $216.04, though that still is 26.6% below year-ago levels.
Q4 2025 delivered an ugly adjusted EPS of −$2.75 against a $0.50 estimate, but Q1 2026 turned with reported EPS of $2.35 versus $1.91 expected, a 23.04% beat. CEO Joseph Zubretsky stated: “We believe that the imbalance between rates and trend marks 2026 as a trough year for Medicaid industry margins.” Management guides to at least $5.00 in adjusted EPS for 2026, burdened by Florida contract costs and MAPD underperformance, with embedded earnings above $11.00 by 2027 to 2029.
For retirees, the problem is income. Molina pays no dividend, regulatory risk on Medicaid rates is real, and operating cash flow turned negative $535 million in FY2025. It is a value bet on a regulated turnaround that offers no income while investors wait..
H&R Block (NYSE: HRB) is the cleanest fit for the Magic Formula and retirement portfolios. The tax-prep franchise trades at a trailing P/E of 6x and forward P/E of 6x, with a return on equity of 67.9% and an operating margin of 43.2%. That combination of a low multiple and high capital returns is precisely what Greenblatt targets.
Q3 FY26 results were strong: adjusted diluted EPS of $6.02 beat the $5.77 estimate, revenue of $2.40 billion grew 5.31% year over year, and net income rose 17.51%. Management raised FY2026 guidance to adjusted EPS of $5.10 to $5.20 on roughly $3.91 billion to $3.92 billion in revenue. CEO Curtis Campbell called the quarter “an important inflection point” as the assisted channel gained share for a third consecutive year.
Capital return crystallizes the retirement thesis. The quarterly dividend stepped up to $0.42 from $0.375, extending a 60-year streak of consecutive quarterly dividends. The board added an additional $100 million buyback authorization on top of the roughly $700 million remaining under the existing $1.5 billion program. Year-to-date capital returns reached $560.9 million. The dividend held flat through both the 2008 crisis and the 2020 pandemic. With a beta of 0.37 and a 4.7% yield, the volatility profile matches what an income-focused investor needs, though seasonal revenue concentration and AI-native tax competition remain genuine risks.
Greenblatt’s framework surfaces all three names as cheap businesses generating real returns on capital. The retirement filter separates them. Peabody is a commodity play masquerading as a value stock. Molina is a regulated turnaround with no income to collect during the wait. H&R Block pairs a high-margin, cash-generative franchise with the longest dividend history in this group and a management team that is actively shrinking the share count. For a retiree using the Magic Formula as a starting point, H&R Block stock survives the second screen.
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The post The Greenblatt Magic Formula: How H&R Block, Molina, and Peabody Stack Up for Retirement Investors appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


