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16 Nisan 2026 Perşembe

Market Revenue Inflation | What's Real Value of Your Stocks? | New Terminology

Original Financial Concept · April 16, 2026
▸ 2025 Data · Magnificent 7

Market Revenue Inflation

How much of your stock return is genuine value creation — and how much is just the company growing its top line?

SA
Selçuk AslantasOriginal concept · 2025 actual data · April 16, 2026

Every time the stock market hits a record, headlines celebrate. But how much of that gain truly represents new value creation — and how much is simply the market pricing in a company's own revenue growth?

To answer this, I'm introducing a new concept: Market Revenue Inflation (MRI) and its companion metric, Real Equity Return (RER).

Core Formula
Real Equity Return (RER) = Stock Price Return (%) − Revenue Growth Rate (%)
Revenue growth = "Market Revenue Inflation" proxy · Analogous to: Real Wage = Nominal Wage − CPI

WHY IT MATTERS?

We understand consumer inflation (CPI): as prices rise, money buys less. That's why we calculate real wages — Nominal Wage Growth − Inflation = Real Wage Growth.

Yet this adjustment is almost never applied to equity returns. If a company's stock rises 40% but its revenue also grew 35%, the net value delivered to investors beyond the company's own expansion is just 5%. The rest is simply the market mechanically pricing in top-line growth: Market Revenue Inflation.

"2025 flipped the script: for several Magnificent 7 companies, revenue growth outpaced stock returns. Market Revenue Inflation consumed the investor's gain."

MAGNIFICIENT 7 — 2025 ACTUAL DATA

Using 2025 full-year results as of April 16, 2026 — not estimates, but actual reported figures — the picture is striking:

Company
Stock Return
2025
MRIRERVerdIct
GOOGL+66%+15%+51%Strongest real return
TSLA+21%−3%+24%Revenue fell — still speculative
MSFT+16%+16%0%Breakeven — zero real value
AAPL+10%+5%+5%Modest real return
META+11%+22%−11%Inflation consumed the return
AMZN+5%+11%−6%Couldn't keep pace with revenue
NVDA+41%+65%−24%Revenue growth left stock behind
Key Finding — 2025

In 2025, four of the seven Magnificent 7 companies delivered negative Real Equity Returns. Investors saw nominal gains while the company's own revenue growth surpassed those gains. The most striking case: NVDA. Its stock rose 41% — but its revenue surged 65%. Despite appearing to "win," Nvidia's Real Equity Return was −24%.

CONTRAST WITH 2024: A 180° REVERSAL

In 2024, the Magnificent 7 averaged +63% stock returns against +25% revenue growth, delivering a solid +38% average Real Equity Return. In 2025, the dynamic reversed: average stock returns compressed to +24% while revenue growth held at ~19%, pushing most companies into negative RER territory.

This reversal demonstrates the power of the concept: the same "growth story" can deliver wildly different real value to investors depending on which side of the equation dominates.

DEFINITIONS

Market Revenue Inflation (MRI)
The portion of a stock's price appreciation attributable solely to the company's own top-line revenue growth — value that was already mechanically "owed" to investors, not genuinely created above and beyond the company's expansion. Just as consumer inflation erodes purchasing power, MRI inflates apparent equity returns while masking whether real value was created.
Real Equity Return (RER)
A stock's price return net of the company's revenue growth rate. This metric answers the essential question: did this investment create value beyond what the company's own growth would mechanically explain?

THE QUESTION WORTH ASKING EVERY TIME

The next time you see a headline about record-breaking stock gains, one question cuts through the noise: "Is this return above or below the company's own revenue growth?"

2025 taught us clearly: nominal gains are not always real gains. For Nvidia, Meta, and Amazon, the market actually underpriced their own revenue expansion. I believe Real Equity Return deserves a place in every investor's toolkit — because markets speak in nominal numbers, but rarely tell us the real story.

What do you think? Does the RER metric change how you evaluate portfolio performance?

Data Sources (as of April 16, 2026): Stock returns based on 2025 full-year closing prices. Revenue growth: NVDA FY2026 (Feb 2025–Jan 2026) +65% (NVDA Newsroom, Feb 2026); META calendar 2025 +22% (InvestmentNews, Jan 2026); GOOGL calendar 2025 +15% (Investing.com, Feb 2026); MSFT FY2025 (Jul 2024–Jun 2025) +16%; AMZN calendar 2025 approx. +11%; AAPL FY2025 approx. +5%; TSLA calendar 2025 −3% (InvestmentNews, Jan 2026). MSFT and NVDA values are approximate due to differing fiscal year calendars.

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