DASH trades against a final fair-value range of $69.43-$224.99, with the midpoint set by the accepted valuation synthesis rather than earlier draft model outputs. Fair value range: low $69.4, high $225, with mid-point at $143.
Analysé: 2026-05-20·Prochaine mise à jour: 2026-08-20·Methodology v2.4·Data cut-off:·Quality gate: pass·Sources: all material sources passed deterministic freshness/provenance gates·Review: automated·Archetype: Mature compounder
Currently screens above fair value, so patience matters more than entry speed.
Fair value
$143
Margin of safety
-13.9%
Confidence
80/100
Moat
6.5/10
Educational analysis only — not financial advice. Always do your own due diligence.
$162.67Price
Low $69.43
Mid $142.82
High $224.99
DASH trades against a final fair-value range of $69.43-$224.99, with the midpoint set by the accepted valuation synthesis rather than earlier draft model outputs.
Network Effects
Dense two-sided liquidity between merchants, consumers, and Dashers.
Switching Costs
DashPass memberships drive high recurring volume and platform lock-in.
Cycle upside
Accelerating digital penetration in grocery and retail expands the total addressable market, while rational duopoly pricing in US food delivery stabilizes take rates.
DASH (DASH)'s intrinsic value is triangulated from discounted earnings at two cost-of-equity levels (strict CAPM with raw beta, moderate with adjusted beta), with owner earnings used as a floor for high-growth names.
Each model produces a per-share value; the composite range comes from a weighted blend driven by the archetype's model-applicability matrix. Cost of equity, terminal growth, and the deceleration curve are documented in the assumption ledger.
EPS-based models are discounted at cost of equity; FCFF models use WACC and then subtract net debt to bridge enterprise value to equity value. Each model is labelled with its discount-rate convention so the reader can verify the bridge.
Owner earnings (Buffett's definition) is net income plus depreciation and amortization minus maintenance capex. We do not subtract stock-based compensation again because net income already includes it; dilution is tracked separately via share-count growth.
FAQ
DASH — frequently asked questions
Based on our latest analysis, DASH screens modestly overvalued. The current price is $163 versus a composite fair-value midpoint of $143 (range $69.4–$225), which implies roughly 12.2% downside to the midpoint.
Our composite fair-value range for DASH is $69.4–$225, with a midpoint of $143. The range is triangulated across multiple valuation models (discounted earnings, forward earnings scenarios, peer multiples, and where applicable owner earnings or reverse DCF) and weighted by reliability for DASH's archetype.
Our current rating for DASH is Reduce with a confidence score of 80/100. DASH is rated Reduce at $162.67 versus the reconciled fair value midpoint of $142.82, implying -12.20% upside/downside. Confidence is separately disclosed at 80/100. This is research for educational purposes, not personalized investment advice.
The top risks our latest report flags for DASH are: Gig Worker Reclassification; Ad Revenue Stagnation; Take-Rate Price War. The single biggest risk is The biggest risk is that the bear-case drivers materialize: growth slows, margins compress, or competitive pressure reduces the fair-value range.
Our current rating for DASH is Reduce, issued with a confidence score of 80/100 and a moat score of 6.5/10. The rating reflects the composite fair-value range ($69.4–$225) versus the current price of $163.
DASH is classified as a mature compounder stock. Archetype determines how every downstream parameter — discount rate, terminal growth, deceleration curve, terminal multiple, scenario probability weights, scorecard weights, and which valuation models are prioritized — is calibrated for DASH.