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coach outlet coach strategy likes its impressive 27.8% long term earnings per share growth rate (based on an average of the three and five year EPS growth rates).Lynch famously used the P/E to Growth ratio to find bargain priced growth stocks, and when we divide Finish Line's 11.9 price/earnings ratio by that long term growth rate, we get a PEG of 0.43. That falls into this model's best case category (below 0.5).The Lynch based model also gives Finish Line bonus points because its net cash/price ratio is above 30%, a very tough target to meet. Lynch defined net cash as cash and marketable securities minus long term debt. A net cash/price ratio over 30% should dramatically cut down on the risk of a security.The Buffett based strategy thinks Coach has more room to run. It looks for firms with lengthy histories of earnings growth, manageable debt, and high returns on equity (which is a sign of the "durable competitive advantage" Buffett is known to seek). Coach has upped EPS in all but one year of the past decade, has just $1 million in debt vs. $1 billion in annual earnings, and has averaged an ROE of 37% over the past ten years, so it passes with flying colors.Coach also gets high marks from my Lynch inspired strategy, in part because of its solid 17.1% long term EPS growth rate (based on an average of the three , four , and five year growth rates). For moderate growth, dividend paying companies, Lynch added dividend yield to the "G" portion of the PEG ratio. Coach's 17.1 P/E, 2% yield, and that 17.1% growth rate make for a solid yield adjusted PEG of 0.90.Consumer confidence drops in OctoberThe New York based Conference