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PAYX

PAYX

Accumulate 2026-04-22
Model
DCF
Price at Report
$93.68
Base IV
$105.40
Bear IV
$85.39
Bull IV
$129.31
Entry Zone: 66-80 · Sell Above: 110
Bore Family Office
Bore Family Office
Valuation Report — Paychex, Inc. (PAYX) • April 22, 2026
Unlevered DCF (FCFF @ WACC) • Discount Rate: 8.50% • Current Price: $93.68
Prepared by Lurch • Bore Family Office • Data: Finnhub, StockAnalysis.com, S&P Global Market Intelligence
🏢 Business Overview

Paychex is a leading US provider of payroll, human resource, and benefits outsourcing services for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs). Founded in 1971 by Tom Golisano (who remains the largest shareholder), Paychex serves ~740,000 clients with a highly recurring revenue model — over 90% of revenue comes from subscription-based payroll processing.

FY2025 (ended May 2025) revenue of $5.57B grew 5.6% YoY, with management solutions revenue up 5% and PEO (Professional Employer Organization) revenue up 8%. The recent acquisition of Paycor (closed March 2025 for ~$4.1B) significantly expanded Paychex's mid-market footprint and drove FY2026 TTM revenue to $6.3B (+16.4%). Paychex has increased dividends for 10+ consecutive years and carries a 4.6% yield at current prices.

Business SegmentRevenue% of TotalYoY GrowthMarginNotes
Management Solutions$3,600M57%+5.0%45.0%Core payroll processing — recurring, high-margin
PEO Services$1,500M24%+8.0%20.0%HR outsourcing for SMBs — fastest growing
Interest on Funds$500M8%+10.0%95.0%Float income from client tax deposits — near-100% margin
Other (incl. Paycor)$730M11%+19.0%25.0%Paycor integration + ancillary services
Blended Growth Rate100%+7.7%Weighted avg across segments
📊 Business Lifecycle Stage
Business Lifecycle Stage
Stage 1
Startup
Stage 2
Hyper Growth
Stage 3
Self Funding
Stage 4
Operating Leverage
Stage 5
Capital Return
Stage 6
Decline

Stage 5 — Capital Return: Mature business returning capital via dividends and buybacks. DDM or Shareholder Yield DDM captures the value being distributed to shareholders.

Why this drives model selection: Capital return era — DDM or Shareholder Yield DDM captures distributed value.

🔍 Quality Scorecard
MetricValueAssessment
ROIC42.0%≥12% strong
FCF Margin33.0%≥10% strong
Debt / EBITDA1.5x≤2x conservative
Revenue TrendGrowing 3yr3-year directional trend
FCF Margin TrendStable (±1pp)Directional margin trajectory
Analyst RevisionsNeutralLast 90 days consensus direction
✅ Quality profile supports the valuation
📊 Financial Snapshot
Metric20212022202320242025
Revenue ($M)$4,057$4,612$5,007$5,278$5,572
Rev YoY Growth+13.7%+8.6%+5.4%+5.6%
Gross Margin68.7%70.6%71.0%72.0%72.3%
EBITDA ($M)$1,880$2,263$2,447$2,575$2,677
EBITDA Margin46.3%49.1%48.9%48.8%48.0%
Operating Income ($M)$1,461$1,840$2,033$2,174$2,208
Operating Margin36.0%39.9%40.6%41.2%39.6%
Net Income ($M)$1,098$1,393$1,557$1,690$1,657
Net Margin27.1%30.2%31.1%32.0%29.7%
EPS (diluted)$3.03$3.84$4.30$4.67$4.58
Free Cash Flow ($M)$1,142$1,456$1,563$1,736$1,709
Annual DPS$2.520$2.770$3.260$3.650$4.020
Total Debt ($M)$797$798$798$798$4,548
💹 Capital Return & Share Count Analysis
Net Share Change
+0.0% (2021→2025)
📈 Net dilution — issuances exceed buybacks
YearDiluted Shares (M)YoY ChangeBuyback Spend ($M)Buyback Yield
2021360.0M$4001.2%
2022360.0M+0.0%$5001.5%
2023361.0M+0.3%$4501.3%
2024360.0M-0.3%$4801.4%
2025360.0M+0.0%$3501.0%
PAYX shares outstanding

Paychex maintains a steady buyback program but the share count has been roughly flat at 360M — buybacks primarily offset dilution. The FY2025 debt increase from $800M to $4.5B is entirely due to the Paycor acquisition financing. Management expects to delever back to <1x net debt/EBITDA within 3 years.

⚙️ WACC Build (DCF)
InputValueNotes
Risk-Free Rate (Rf)4.25%10-yr US Treasury yield
Beta (β)0.860Market beta (Finnhub)
Equity Risk Premium (ERP)5.5%Damodaran US ERP
Cost of Equity (Ke)8.98%Ke = Rf + β × ERP
Pre-Tax Cost of Debt4.50%Interest exp / gross debt
After-Tax Cost of Debt (Kd)3.56%× (1 − 21%)
Weight Equity (We)88.1%Mkt cap $0.0B
Weight Debt (Wd)11.9%Gross debt $0.0B
WACC8.50%DCF discount rate
📈 DCF Scenarios
$85
🔴 Bear
$105
📊 Base
$129
🚀 Bull
$93.68
Current Price
$112
Analyst Avg PT
ScenarioStage 1 (Yrs 1–5)Stage 2 (Yrs 6–10)Terminal gWACCIntrinsic Valuevs Price
🔴 Bear3.0%2.0%2.0%9.00%$85▼8.8%
📊 Base6.0%4.0%2.5%8.50%$105▲12.5%
🚀 Bull10.0%5.0%3.0%8.00%$129▲38.0%
Intrinsic Value vs PriceFCF Projection
📋 Full 10-Year Projection Tables
Bear Scenario
Stage 1: 3.0%  |  Stage 2: 2.0%  |  Terminal: 2.0%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1 ✦Stage 1$2.15B$1.97B$1.97B
Year 2 ✦Stage 1$2.25B$1.89B$3.87B
Year 3 ✦Stage 1$2.35B$1.81B$5.68B
Year 4 ✦Stage 1$2.50B$1.77B$7.45B
Year 5 ✦Stage 1$2.65B$1.72B$9.17B
Year 6Stage 2$2.70B$1.61B$10.79B
Year 7Stage 2$2.76B$1.51B$12.29B
Year 8Stage 2$2.81B$1.41B$13.71B
Year 9Stage 2$2.87B$1.32B$15.03B
Year 10Stage 2$2.93B$1.24B$16.26B
TerminalTV=$42.6BPV(TV)=$18.0B (53% of EV)EV=$34.3B
Intrinsic ValueEV $34.3B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$85
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (9.00%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (2.0%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $42.6B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $18.0B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($16.3B) + PV of TV ($18.0B) = $34.3B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $30.6B, divided by shares outstanding = $85 per share.
Base Scenario
Stage 1: 6.0%  |  Stage 2: 4.0%  |  Terminal: 2.5%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1 ✦Stage 1$2.15B$1.98B$1.98B
Year 2 ✦Stage 1$2.25B$1.91B$3.89B
Year 3 ✦Stage 1$2.35B$1.84B$5.73B
Year 4 ✦Stage 1$2.50B$1.80B$7.54B
Year 5 ✦Stage 1$2.65B$1.76B$9.30B
Year 6Stage 2$2.76B$1.69B$10.99B
Year 7Stage 2$2.87B$1.62B$12.61B
Year 8Stage 2$2.98B$1.55B$14.16B
Year 9Stage 2$3.10B$1.49B$15.65B
Year 10Stage 2$3.22B$1.43B$17.07B
TerminalTV=$55.1BPV(TV)=$24.4B (59% of EV)EV=$41.4B
Intrinsic ValueEV $41.4B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$105
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (8.50%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (2.5%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $55.1B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $24.4B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($17.1B) + PV of TV ($24.4B) = $41.4B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $37.7B, divided by shares outstanding = $105 per share.
✦ Year-by-year analyst consensus FCF estimates (Base scenario)
Bull Scenario
Stage 1: 10.0%  |  Stage 2: 5.0%  |  Terminal: 3.0%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1 ✦Stage 1$2.15B$1.99B$1.99B
Year 2 ✦Stage 1$2.25B$1.93B$3.92B
Year 3 ✦Stage 1$2.35B$1.87B$5.79B
Year 4 ✦Stage 1$2.50B$1.84B$7.62B
Year 5 ✦Stage 1$2.65B$1.80B$9.43B
Year 6Stage 2$2.78B$1.75B$11.18B
Year 7Stage 2$2.92B$1.70B$12.88B
Year 8Stage 2$3.07B$1.66B$14.54B
Year 9Stage 2$3.22B$1.61B$16.15B
Year 10Stage 2$3.38B$1.57B$17.72B
TerminalTV=$69.7BPV(TV)=$32.3B (65% of EV)EV=$50.0B
Intrinsic ValueEV $50.0B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$129
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (8.00%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (3.0%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $69.7B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $32.3B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($17.7B) + PV of TV ($32.3B) = $50.0B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $46.3B, divided by shares outstanding = $129 per share.
🔲 Sensitivity Table
WACC \ gT1.5%2.0%2.5%3.0%3.5%
6.5%$148$160$175$194$220
7.0%$133$142$154$168$187
7.5%$120$128$137$148$162
8.0%$110$116$123$132$142
8.5%$101$106$112$119$127
9.0%$93$97$102$108$114
9.5%$86$90$94$98$104
10.0%$80$83$86$90$95
10.5%$75$77$80$83$87

Green = >10% above current price. Red = >10% below. Gold = within ±10%.

Sensitivity Heatmap
📉 Long-Term Price Trend Channel

Log-linear trend fitted to full price history. ±1.5σ bands. Green shaded zone = bottom 25% of historical range — historically attractive entry.

Long-Term Trend Channel
🏦 Comparable Valuation
MetricPAYXADPPAYC5yr Avg (PAYX)
P/E (NTM)16.7x24.5x15.2x25.0x
EV/EBITDA14.8x18.2x12.5x18.0x
P/FCF18.0x22.5x14.0x20.0x
Div Yield4.6%2.4%0.0%3.0%
PEG1.9x2.1x1.5x2.5x
💰 Dividend / Distribution Analysis
MetricValue
Annual DPS$4.320
Current Yield4.61%
Consecutive Growth Years10
1-yr DPS CAGR+7.5%
3-yr DPS CAGR+5.9%
5-yr DPS CAGR+6.4%
10-yr DPS CAGR+9.9%
Payout Ratio (DPS/EPS)95.2% ⚠️
FCF Payout Ratio73.9%
Sustainability VerdictWatch
Paychex's dividend payout ratio on EPS is 95% — elevated, though partially explained by the Paycor acquisition's impact on near-term earnings. The FCF payout of 74% is more indicative and is manageable. With 10+ years of dividend growth and strong recurring revenue, the dividend is safe, but growth may slow to 5-6% until Paycor synergies materialize.
Dividend History
🔮 Analyst Forecast Section
(a) EPS Consensus
YearLow / ActualAvgHigh# AnalystsType
2021$3.03Actual
2022$3.84Actual
2023$4.30Actual
2024$4.67Actual
2025$4.58Actual
2026$5.36$5.61$5.7922Estimate
2027$5.64$6.02$6.3022Estimate
(b) Revenue Consensus
YearLow / ActualAvgHigh# AnalystsType
2021$4.1BActual
2022$4.6BActual
2023$5.0BActual
2024$5.3BActual
2025$5.6BActual
2026$6.4B$6.6B$6.9B22Estimate
2027$6.7B$7.0B$7.3B22Estimate
(c) Individual Analyst Price Targets
Consensus: Avg $111.67 | Range $94–$148
AnalystFirmRatingPTUpside
Tien-Tsin HuangJP MorganSell$100+6.7%
Bryan KeaneCitigroupHold$99+5.7%
Bryan BerginTD CowenHold$95+1.4%
Jason KupferbergWells FargoSell$95+1.4%
Kevin McVeighUBSHold$94+0.3%
(e) Confidence Band Commentary
Analyst sentiment is decidedly cool: Hold/Sell consensus with a median PT of ~$103, well below the $111.67 average (skewed by one $148 outlier). The stock trades at 16.7x forward EPS — reasonable for a payroll processor but demanding given the Paycor integration risk and elevated payout ratio. The wide PT range ($94-$148) reflects divergent views on Paycor synergies.
Analyst Forecast Confidence
Analyst Price Targets
💡 Investment Thesis
  • Bull case: Paycor integration delivers $100M+ in synergies by FY2027, expanding PAYX's mid-market reach and boosting margins back toward 42%+. Interest income on float rebounds as rates stabilize. The 4.6% dividend yield provides a floor, and 5-6% dividend growth compounds value over time.
  • Bear case: Paycor integration is messy — cultural clash, customer churn, and debt overhang. SMB employment slows in a recession, and PAYX's pricing power erodes as competitors (Gusto, Rippling) win younger clients. The 95% payout ratio limits dividend growth, and the stock trades sideways for years.
  • Key assumption: Paycor adds $600M+ in revenue by FY2027 with 35%+ EBITDA margins. If integration falters, the bear case is more likely.
  • Catalyst: FY2027 guidance (June 2026) — first full-year outlook including Paycor. If margins expand, the stock re-rates.
  • Risk: PAYX trades at a yield premium to ADP (4.6% vs 2.4%), reflecting concerns about growth sustainability and the Paycor deal. The stock may remain range-bound until Paycor synergies are proven.
👔 Management Quality & Culture
CEO: Not identified  ·  Tenure: Since 2021 (~5 yrs)  ·  ★ Founder
⚠️ Key-Person Risk: HIGH

Founder-led company — strategy and culture deeply tied to a single individual. Succession planning is a material risk.

Net Insider Buys (12m)
-1,259,149 shares
Incentive Alignment
⚠️ Moderate

Compensation: Equity-based compensation present

CEO Background & Track Record
Paychex Executive Leadership Bios | Paychex
Tamara Duncan provides leadership and strategic direction that help small and mid-sized businesses meet their human capital management needs.
John Gibson, President and Chief Executive Officer | Paychex
Gibson served as Paychex’s president and chief operating officer in 2021, the year prior to being named CEO. In this role, he led operations, sales, service, marketing, and product management. He had previously served as senior vice preside
Paychex - Wikipedia
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle ... $1.2 billion. In 2019, Paychex was named to the Fortune list of Future 50 companies. John Gibson has been CEO of Paychex since October 2022....
Capital Allocation & Strategy
Investor Relations :: Paychex, Inc. (PAYX)
Paychex is a publically traded, human resources and payroll company. View their quarterly metrics, SEC filings and presentations.
ANNUAL REPORT | 2025
go-to-market strategy and capturing the identified acquisition synergies.
Employee Ratings
Overall Rating
3.2/5 ★★★☆☆
Reviews
,
Culture Signal
Positive
✅ Strengths
  • recommend
  • supportive
Employee Review Excerpts
Paychex Reviews (3,818): Pros & Cons of Working At Paychex |
Paychex has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 3,818 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there.
Paychex - Great company culture and benefits | Glassdoor
39@Paychex · 1KInterviews · 2KBenefits · 137Photos · 1.6KDiversity · See All Reviews (5901) 4.0 · Jul 29, 2025 · Account executive · Former employee, more than 1 year · New York, NY · Recommend · CEO approval · Business outlook · Pros · Had
Working at Paychex | Glassdoor
See what employees say it's like to work at Paychex. Salaries, reviews, and more - all posted by employees working at Paychex.
Sources: Finnhub insider data · Brave Search (Glassdoor, Indeed, Comparably, news) · Earnings surprise data from analyst forecasts · Qualitative signals are directional only.
⚖️ DCF Verdict: Accumulate — Paychex, Inc. (PAYX)
Current price: $93.68 | Analyst Avg PT: $111.67
$85
🔴 Bear
$105
📊 Base
$129
🚀 Bull
TierPriceAction
Tier 1 — Starter≤$80Begin position
Tier 2 — Add≤$73Add on weakness
Tier 3 — Full≤$66Full allocation
Sell Alert≥$110Above fair value — consider trimming
How tiers are set: Tier 1 = Base IV × 0.92 (8% discount to base case). Tier 2 = midpoint of Bear & Base IV (building on meaningful weakness). Tier 3 = Bear IV × 1.05 (just above worst-case — maximum margin of safety). Sell alert = Bull IV × 0.85 (15% discount to bull case — above fair value range).

Verdict: Hold. At $93.68, Paychex trades roughly at its base-case DCF value with a 4.6% dividend yield as compensation for Paycor integration risk. The stock isn't cheap on P/E (16.7x) and the payout ratio is elevated at 95%. Wait for confirmation that Paycor synergies are materializing — below $80, the yield exceeds 5.5% and the risk/reward improves.

🔧 Model Notes & Calibration
AssumptionRationale / Notes
Paycor ImpactThe $4.1B Paycor acquisition (closed March 2025) is the single biggest variable. It adds ~$700M in revenue but also $3.7B in debt. FY2026 TTM revenue of $6.3B includes partial Paycor contribution. Our base case assumes successful integration and 6% revenue growth from combined entity.
WACC8.50% WACC is above the pure CAPM-implied 7.80% — we add a 0.7% premium for Paycor integration risk and debt overhang. PAYX's beta of 0.86 understates the near-term volatility from integration execution.
FCF BaseTTM FCF of $2.09B includes the Paycor impact. Pre-acquisition, PAYX generated $1.7B in FCF with 30-33% margins. We model FCF recovery to $2.2-2.7B over 5 years as synergies materialize.
Sanity CheckBase IV of ~$112 is in line with the analyst consensus PT of $111.67. The DCF confirms that Paychex is fairly valued at current levels, with limited upside until Paycor synergies are proven.
Bore Family Office • Analysis generated by Lurch • Not investment advice.