Intuitive Surgical (ISRG) Stock Analysis: Munger Quality Rubric Evaluation 2026

Intuitive Surgical (ISRG) Munger Quality Rubric Evaluation - 79% PASS Score

View All Stock Evaluations | Evaluation Date: 2026-01-12


Key Takeaways: Is ISRG a Quality Investment?

  • Verdict: ✅ PASS — Score: 166/210 (79.0%)
  • Moat Strength: Strong — Dominant 80%+ market share in robotic surgery with 85% recurring revenue, high switching costs, and surgeon training lock-in
  • Financial Health: Excellent — Zero debt, $8.8B cash, 69% gross margins, 18% ROIC exceeding WACC
  • Valuation: Overvalued — P/E 73x vs 5yr avg 74x (fair), but P/B 12.5x is historically high; trading at significant premium to intrinsic value
  • Key Risk: Premium valuation leaves little margin of safety; antitrust litigation ongoing over EndoWrist instrument restrictions

This evaluation uses the Charlie Munger Quality Rubric framework analyzing management, moat, financials, and valuation across 8 dimensions.


How This Company Makes Money

Intuitive Surgical generates 85% of revenue from recurring sources through a “razor-and-blade” model: hospitals purchase or lease da Vinci surgical systems (~$1.5M each), then must buy proprietary instruments and accessories (~$1,800 per procedure) plus service contracts. With 10,700+ systems installed globally and 2.7M+ annual procedures growing 17-19%, the company captures lifetime value through procedure volume rather than one-time capital sales. This capital allocation strategy prioritizes installed base growth over short-term profits, creating a durable competitive moat with strong intrinsic value drivers.


Table of Contents

  1. Key Takeaways
  2. Executive Summary Scorecard
  3. Company Overview
  4. Leadership & Board of Directors
  5. Business Model Visual
  6. Dividends & Upcoming Events
  7. Competitor Comparison Summary
  8. Visual Score Summary
  9. Key Graham/Buffett/Munger Quotes Applied
  10. Detailed Analysis
    1. Section A: CEO & Management
    2. Section B: Board of Directors
    3. Section C: Incentive Structures
    4. Section D: Regulatory & Political
    5. Section E: Business Quality & Moat
    6. Section F: Financial Strength
    7. Section G: Geopolitical Risk
    8. Section H: Valuation
    9. Section J: Benjamin Graham Screen
  11. Red Flag Analysis
  12. Final Verdict: Is ISRG a Quality Buy per Munger’s Rubric?
  13. Frequently Asked Questions
  14. Related Munger Quality Rubric Evaluations
  15. Source Reliability & Citations

Executive Summary Scorecard

CategoryScoreMax%Rating
A. CEO & Management222588%🟢
B. Board of Directors172085%🟢
C. Incentive Structures172085%🟢
D. Regulatory & Political182572%🟡
E. Business Quality & Moat323591%🟢
F. Financial Strength323591%🟢
G. Country & Geopolitical121580%🟢
H. Valuation & Margin of Safety183551%🔴
I. Red Flag Deductions-201 flag
J. Graham Screen2/7InfoFAIL

Munger Verdict: ✅ PASS


Scorecard Visualization

People & Governance
A. CEO88%
B. Board85%
C. Incentives85%
Risk Assessment
D. Regulatory72%
G. Geopolitical80%
Business Quality
E. Business/Moat91%
F. Financial91%
Valuation
H. Valuation51%
Final Score
166/210
79%
Verdict
✅ PASS
80%+ Excellent 60-79% Good <60% Concern

Rating Guide: 🟢 = 80%+ | 🟡 = 60-79% | 🔴 = <60%


Company Overview

  • Company: Intuitive Surgical, Inc.
  • Ticker: ISRG
  • Exchange: NASDAQ
  • Industry: Medical Devices
  • Sector: Healthcare
  • Founded: 1995
  • Headquarters: Sunnyvale, California, USA
  • Employees: 15,000+
  • Market Cap: $207B (Dec 2025)
  • FY2024 Revenue: $8.35B

Revenue Breakdown by Segment (FY2024)

SegmentFY Revenue% of TotalYoY GrowthTrend
Instruments & Accessories$5.08B60.8%+18.8%🟢
Systems$1.97B23.5%+17.0%🟢
Services$1.31B15.7%+11.9%🟢

Geographic Revenue Mix (Installed Base)

Region% of Systems% of Revenue (Est.)Note
United States59%~60%Core market, 5,807 systems
Europe19%~18%UK/Germany budget pressures
Asia18%~17%China growth below average
Other5%~5%Emerging markets

Business Outlook (2025)

  • Da Vinci procedure growth guidance: 17-17.5%
  • Non-GAAP gross margin expected: 67-67.5%
  • Da Vinci 5 adoption accelerating
  • Ion lung biopsy procedures growing 52%

Leadership & Board of Directors

Executive Leadership

RoleNameNotable Background
CEO (Jul 2025-)David J. Rosa20+ years at Intuitive, President since 2023
Executive ChairGary S. Guthart, PhDCEO 2010-2025, 15-year tenure, Caltech PhD
CFOJamie E. SamathCFO since 2022, 12+ years at Intuitive

Board of Directors

NameRoleNotable Background
Gary S. Guthart, PhDExecutive ChairFormer CEO, robotics pioneer
Craig H. Barratt, PhDLead Independent DirectorFormer Intel/Google exec, Chair since 2020
David J. RosaDirectorCEO, operational expertise
Lewis ChewDirectorFormer Dolby CFO (elected Apr 2024)
Monica P. Reed, MDDirectorCEO UChicago Medicine Advent Health
Amy L. Ladd, MDDirectorStanford orthopedic surgery professor
Keith R. Leonard, Jr.DirectorIndustry executive
Amal M. JohnsonDirectorFormer Author-it Chairman
Joseph C. BeeryDirectorTechnology executive

Business Model Visual

Platform Inputs
Surgeon Training
89,000+ trained
R&D Investment
$1B+ annually
Regulatory
510(k) clearances
Operations
da Vinci Systems
10,700+ installed
Ion Lung Biopsy
700+ systems
Service Network
Global support
Revenue Streams
Systems
$1.97B (24%)
Services
$1.31B (15%)

Dividends & Upcoming Events

Dividend Policy

MetricValue
Current Dividend$0.00 (No dividend)
Dividend Yield0.00%
Dividend HistoryNever paid
Payout PolicyReinvests in growth and buybacks

Note: Intuitive Surgical has never paid a dividend, choosing instead to reinvest earnings and conduct share repurchases ($4B buyback authorization).

Upcoming Events

EventExpected DateDetails
Q4 2025 EarningsJanuary 2026Full year results
Annual Shareholder MeetingApril 2026Board elections

Competitor Comparison Summary

CompanyTickerMarket ShareKey ProductRevenue GrowthP/E Ratio
Intuitive SurgicalISRG~80%da Vinci, Ion+17%73x
MedtronicMDT~5%Hugo RAS+4%25x
StrykerSYK~3%MAKO (ortho)+10%40x
Johnson & JohnsonJNJ<1%Ottava (development)N/A16x
CMR SurgicalPrivate~2%VersiusN/AN/A

Competitive Position: Intuitive Surgical maintains dominant market leadership with ~80% share in soft-tissue robotic surgery. Competitors are gaining traction but face significant barriers including surgeon training networks, installed base lock-in, and regulatory clearances.


Visual Score Summary

Category
Score
Progress
%
A. CEO & Management
22/25
88.0%
B. Board of Directors
17/20
85.0%
C. Incentive Structures
17/20
85.0%
D. Regulatory & Political
18/25
72.0%
E. Business Quality & Moat
32/35
91.0%
F. Financial Strength
32/35
91.0%
G. Country & Geopolitical
12/15
80.0%
H. Valuation & Margin of Safety
18/35
51.0%
Red Flag Deductions – Minor concerns
-2
TOTAL
166/210
79.0%

Key Graham/Buffett/Munger Quotes Applied

“A great business at a fair price is superior to a fair business at a great price.” — Charlie Munger

Applied: Intuitive Surgical is unquestionably a “great business” with dominant market share, 85% recurring revenue, and exceptional financial metrics. The challenge is the premium valuation.

“The ideal business earns very high returns on capital and can reinvest at those high returns.” — Warren Buffett

Applied: ISRG’s 18%+ ROIC exceeds its cost of capital, and the company reinvests heavily in R&D, new products (da Vinci 5, Ion), and geographic expansion.

“In business, I look for economic castles protected by unbreachable moats.” — Warren Buffett

Applied: The combination of 89,000+ trained surgeons, 10,700+ installed systems, and proprietary instruments creates a formidable competitive moat.


Detailed Analysis

Section A: CEO & Management (Score: 22/25)

“If you’re looking for a manager, you want someone intelligent, energetic, and moral. But if they don’t have the last one, you don’t want the first two.” — Charlie Munger

A1. Integrity & Honesty (5/5)

Gary Guthart led Intuitive for 15 years with an exemplary record. No personal scandals or ethical breaches. Say-on-pay approval exceeded 93% in 2024, reflecting shareholder trust. The transition to David Rosa was orderly and planned, with Guthart moving to Executive Chair role.

Evidence:

A2. Track Record – No Scandals (4/5)

Strong operational track record with consistent execution. Ongoing antitrust litigation regarding EndoWrist instrument policies is a minor concern, though company won the SIS competitor case.

Evidence:

  • Won antitrust trial vs SIS in 2024 (Paul Weiss, 2024)
  • Class action from hospitals still pending

A3. Capital Allocation Skills (5/5)

Excellent capital allocation: zero debt, $8.8B cash position, strategic R&D investment (da Vinci 5 launched 2024), prudent buybacks ($4B authorization), and no value-destroying acquisitions.

Evidence:

A4. Transparency & Communication (4/5)

Regular earnings calls, clear guidance (procedure growth 17-17.5%), admits challenges in China market openly. Preliminary results shared promptly.

A5. Owner-Orientation (4/5)

CEO David Rosa holds 234,256 shares directly. Gary Guthart exercised options under prearranged 10b5-1 plan. Focus on long-term value creation over short-term earnings manipulation.


Section B: Board of Directors (Score: 17/20)

B1. Business Savvy (5/5)

Board includes healthcare executives (Monica Reed, MD), surgeons (Amy Ladd, MD), technology leaders (Craig Barratt from Intel/Google), and financial experts (Lewis Chew, former Dolby CFO). Highly relevant expertise.

B2. Personal Financial Stake (4/5)

Directors hold meaningful positions. Gary Guthart is largest insider. Craig Barratt holds ~27,198 shares through trust. New director Lewis Chew building position.

B3. Independence (4/5)

Craig Barratt serves as Lead Independent Director. Fully independent committees (Audit, Compensation, Nominating). Regular executive sessions. Two management directors (Guthart, Rosa) appropriate for company of this size.

B4. Shareholder Representation (4/5)

No poison pills. Regular board refreshment (Levy/Kania retired 2024, Chew added). Say-on-pay approval high. Annual elections.


Section C: Incentive Structures (Score: 17/20)

“Show me the incentive and I’ll show you the outcome.” — Charlie Munger

C1. Long-term Performance Tied (5/5)

50% PSUs / 50% RSUs for executives. PSUs tied to multi-year procedure growth and relative TSR. No stock options since 2024—purely performance and restricted stock.

Evidence:

C2. Management Stock Ownership (4/5)

CEO Gary Guthart compensation of $18.2M in 2024 includes $15.6M in stock awards. Significant skin in the game. New CEO Rosa owns 234,256 shares.

C3. Incentives Aligned with Shareholders (4/5)

Company Incentive Plan tied to Adjusted Operating Income. 2024 CIP funding at 113.6%, reflecting strong performance. PSU metrics include procedure growth (core business driver).

C4. No Perverse Short-term Incentives (4/5)

No option repricing allowed. Double-trigger change-in-control provisions. No tax gross-ups. CEO pay ratio of 153:1 is elevated but not extreme for large-cap medtech.


Section D: Regulatory & Political Environment (Score: 18/25)

D1. Political/Regulatory Moat Quality (4/5)

FDA 510(k) clearances create meaningful regulatory moat. Da Vinci 5 cleared March 2024. However, 510(k) pathway is less protective than PMA approval—competitors can file predicate device applications.

D2. Government Relationship Sustainability (3/5)

Medicare reimbursement supports robotic surgery adoption, but no preferential treatment vs traditional surgery. No government contracts dependency.

D3. No Corruption/Bribery Scandals (5/5)

Clean FCPA record. No bribery allegations. Global operations with compliance program.

D4. Antitrust Exposure Assessment (3/5)

Active antitrust litigation: hospital class action certified for EndoWrist aftermarket monopolization claims. Court ruled Intuitive holds monopoly power in instrument repair market. Company won SIS case but class action ongoing.

Evidence:

D5. Regulatory Tailwinds vs Headwinds (3/5)

Generally favorable: aging population, minimally invasive surgery trend, hospital competition for patients. Headwinds: potential tariff impacts on instruments manufactured in Mexico (~0.7% gross margin impact), European budget pressures.


Section E: Business Quality & Moat (Score: 32/35)

“The best moats are those that would take decades and billions of dollars to replicate.” — Charlie Munger

E1. Sustainable Competitive Advantage (5/5)

Multi-layered moat: (1) Installed base of 10,700+ systems, (2) 89,000+ trained surgeons, (3) Proprietary instruments with use-limited technology, (4) First-mover advantage, (5) 20+ years of clinical data. Competitors would need decades to replicate.

E2. Pricing Power (5/5)

Da Vinci 5 ASP increased to $1.5M from $1.44M. Instrument revenue per procedure stable at ~$1,800. No evidence of competitive price pressure despite new entrants. Hospitals accept pricing due to patient demand and surgeon preference.

E3. High Barriers to Entry (5/5)

Requires: massive R&D investment, FDA clearances, surgeon training infrastructure, service network, and clinical validation. Medtronic’s Hugo took years to develop and still has limited adoption.

E4. Low Threat of Disruption (4/5)

Technology leadership maintained with da Vinci 5. Ion system expanding into lung biopsy. AI integration ongoing. Risk: fundamental surgical approach changes (drug therapies, non-surgical treatments for some conditions).

E5. Industry Structure – Favorable (4/5)

Essentially a monopoly in soft-tissue robotic surgery (~80% share). Competitors gaining but from very low base. Hospital buying is rational (patient outcomes, surgeon recruitment).

E6. Intellectual Property & Brand Value (5/5)

Da Vinci is the recognized brand in robotic surgery globally. Extensive patent portfolio. Continuous innovation pipeline.

E7. Earnings Predictability & Recurring Revenue (4/5)

85% recurring revenue from instruments, accessories, and services. Highly predictable tied to procedure volume. Some lumpiness in system sales quarter-to-quarter.

Evidence:


Section F: Financial Strength & Capital Efficiency (Score: 32/35)

“The ideal business earns very high returns on capital and can reinvest at those high returns.” — Warren Buffett

F1. Conservative Debt Levels (5/5)

Zero debt. Debt-to-equity ratio of 0.00. Net debt to EBITDA is negative (-1.4x), indicating net cash position.

F2. Strong Credit Rating (5/5)

Not formally rated (doesn’t need debt markets), but implied AAA based on zero debt, $8.8B cash, and strong cash generation.

F3. Adequate Cash Reserves (5/5)

$8.83B in cash, cash equivalents, and investments at end of 2024. Covers years of operations. Current ratio of 5.0x is exceptional.

Evidence:

  • Current ratio 5.0x (DCFmodeling, 2024)
  • Quick ratio 2.5x, working capital ~$7B

F4. No Aggressive Accounting (5/5)

PwC as auditor (historically). No restatements. Conservative revenue recognition. Preliminary results match final. Stock-based compensation clearly disclosed.

F5. Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) (4/5)

ROIC of 18.2% (TTM Sep 2025) exceeds WACC of ~11.7%. Creating shareholder value. Historical 5-year average ~15%.

Evidence:

F6. Free Cash Flow Generation (4/5)

FY2024 FCF of $1.3B, up 74% YoY. TTM FCF of $2.27B. FCF/Net Income ratio improving but historically variable due to capital investments.

F7. Capital Allocation Track Record (4/5)

Excellent: no failed acquisitions, sensible buybacks, heavy R&D investment that produces results (da Vinci 5, Ion), maintains pristine balance sheet.


Section G: Country & Geopolitical Risk (Score: 12/15)

G1. Operates in Rule-of-Law Jurisdictions (5/5)

~60% of revenue from US. 19% Europe. Developed markets dominate. Minimal emerging market dependency.

G2. Limited Geopolitical Exposure (4/5)

China represents growing but still minority share. Company acknowledged China growth “slightly below corporate average” due to domestic competition and government activities. Not critical dependency.

G3. Supply Chain Diversification (3/5)

Instruments manufactured in Mexico (tariff exposure ~0.7% margin impact). Some supply chain concentration concerns. Company evaluating mitigation strategies.

Evidence:


Section H: Valuation & Margin of Safety (Score: 18/35)

“Price is what you pay, value is what you get.” — Warren Buffett

H1. P/E vs Historical Average (3/5)

Current P/E of ~73x vs 5-year average of ~74x and 10-year average of ~60x. Trading near historical norms but at premium absolute levels.

H2. P/FCF – Price to Free Cash Flow (2/5)

EV/FCF of ~82x is expensive. Price implies very high growth expectations built in.

H3. EV/EBITDA vs Sector (2/5)

EV/EBITDA of ~42x vs 5-year average of ~39x. Above historical average. Medical device sector median much lower.

H4. PEG Ratio (2/5)

PEG of ~3.8 (P/E 73 / 19% growth). Above 2.0 suggests growth not fully justifying valuation.

H5. P/B Ratio – Graham's Value Test (1/5)

P/B of 12.5x is near 13-year high (median 8.4x). Fails Graham’s P/B ≤ 1.5 criterion dramatically.

H6. Graham Number vs Current Price (2/5)

Graham Number = √(22.5 × $6.42 EPS × $44 BVPS) = √$6,356 = $79.72

Current price ~$560 = 702% of Graham Number. Massively above Graham’s upper bound.

H7. Margin of Safety Assessment (2/5)

DCF intrinsic value estimates range $120-$180 vs current ~$560. Trading at 200-400% premium to most intrinsic value calculations. No margin of safety from value perspective.

Note: Premium valuations can be justified for exceptional businesses, but fail Graham’s conservative criteria.


Section J: Benjamin Graham Defensive Investor Screen

#CriterionThresholdISRG ValuePass/Fail
1Adequate SizeMarket Cap > $2B$207B
2Strong Financial ConditionCurrent Ratio ≥ 2.05.0x
3Earnings StabilityPositive EPS 10 consecutive years10/10
4Dividend RecordUninterrupted dividends 20+ years0 years
5Earnings GrowthEPS growth ≥ 33% over 10 years>100%
6Moderate P/E RatioP/E ≤ 1573x
7Moderate P/B RatioP/B ≤ 1.5 OR (P/E × P/B) ≤ 22.512.5x (P/E × P/B = 913)

Graham Number Analysis

ComponentValue
EPS (TTM)$6.42
Book Value per Share$44.00
Graham Constant22.5
Graham Number$79.72
Current Price~$560
Price / Graham Number702%
VerdictSignificantly Overvalued by Graham standards

Net Current Asset Value (NCAV) Analysis

ComponentValue
Current Assets$7.11B
NCAV~$3.9B
NCAV per Share~$11
Current Price~$560
VerdictNot a Net-Net (Price >> NCAV)

Graham Screen Summary: ISRG passes operational criteria (size, liquidity, earnings stability, growth) but fails all valuation criteria. This is typical for high-quality growth companies—Graham’s conservative approach would exclude them entirely.


Red Flag Analysis

Governance Red Flags (Max: -35 pts)

Red FlagPresent?DeductionEvidence
Unrealistic promises to investorsN0Guidance historically accurate
Excessive CEO compensation (>100x median)Y-2CEO pay 153:1 ratio, elevated
Related-party transactionsN0None disclosed
Accounting restatements (last 5 years)N0Clean record
High CFO/auditor turnoverN0Samath CFO since 2022, stable
Reluctance on tough questionsN0Openly discusses China challenges
Corruption/bribery allegationsN0Clean FCPA record

Financial Red Flags (Max: -21 pts)

Red FlagPresent?DeductionEvidence
High leverage (Debt/EBITDA > 4x)N0Zero debt
ROIC below cost of capital (5yr avg)N0ROIC 18% > WACC 12%
Declining FCF (3 consecutive years)N0FCF up 74% in 2024
Net share issuance >2% annuallyN01.3% increase 2024
Gross margin declining >500bpsN0Stable 69% margins

Business Risk Red Flags (Max: -14 pts)

Red FlagPresent?DeductionEvidence
Customer/supplier concentration >25%N0Diversified hospital base
Single-country exposure >50% revenueN0US ~60%, below threshold
Revenue decline in 3+ of last 10 yearsN0Growth every year
Unstable government subsidy dependenceN0No subsidies

Valuation Red Flags (Max: -13 pts)

Red FlagPresent?DeductionEvidence
P/FCF > 40Borderline0~82x is high but growth supports
Trading >30% above fair value estimateNote0Premium expected for quality

Red Flag Summary

CategoryDeduction
Governance-2
Financial0
Business Risk0
Valuation0
Red Flag Count1 of 19

Severity: Minor concerns (0 to -10 range)


Final Verdict: Is ISRG a Quality Buy per Munger's Rubric?

Investment Thesis Summary

The Bull Case: Intuitive Surgical represents one of the highest-quality businesses in healthcare. The company has built an extraordinary competitive moat through 89,000+ trained surgeons, 10,700+ installed systems, and proprietary instruments that generate 85% recurring revenue. Financial strength is exceptional with zero debt, $8.8B cash, and 18%+ ROIC. The da Vinci 5 and Ion systems extend the technology leadership. Management has executed flawlessly for 15+ years with a smooth CEO transition completed. Global procedure growth of 17-19% annually provides a long runway.

The Bear Case: The stock trades at 73x earnings with a P/B of 12.5x—near all-time highs. Intrinsic value estimates suggest 200-400% overvaluation by conservative measures. Antitrust litigation over instrument policies poses regulatory risk. China growth has slowed. Competition from Medtronic, J&J, and CMR Surgical is increasing, though from a low base. Tariffs on Mexico-manufactured instruments could pressure margins.

Bottom Line: Intuitive Surgical earns a PASS (79.0%) as a Munger-quality business. The company exemplifies Munger’s ideal: a wonderful business with durable competitive advantages, excellent management, and strong capital efficiency. However, the premium valuation means investors pay full price for quality—there is no margin of safety at current levels. This is a “quality at full price” rather than “quality at a bargain” situation.

Who Should Consider ISRG?

  • Value Investors: No — Trading far above intrinsic value by most measures
  • Growth Investors: Yes — 17%+ revenue growth, expanding TAM, Ion opportunity
  • Dividend Investors: No — Has never paid a dividend
  • Long-term Holders: Yes — One of the best 10-20 year compounders in healthcare

Price Considerations

ScenarioEntry PointRationale
AggressiveCurrent priceBest-in-class business, willing to pay premium
Moderate15-20% pullback (~$450-475)More reasonable P/E of ~60x
Conservative30-40% pullback (~$335-390)Closer to historical average multiples

“It’s far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.” — Warren Buffett

ISRG is the wonderful company. The question is whether today’s price is fair. For long-term investors with 10+ year horizons, the business quality may justify patience even at premium valuations.


Frequently Asked Questions About ISRG

Is Intuitive Surgical a good stock to buy in 2026?

Based on the Munger Quality Rubric evaluation, ISRG scores 166/210 (79.0%), earning a PASS rating. The company has exceptional business quality with 85% recurring revenue, zero debt, and dominant 80%+ market share. Key strengths include unmatched competitive moat and pristine financial health. Main concerns are premium valuation (73x P/E) and ongoing antitrust litigation. Consider on pullbacks rather than at all-time highs.

What is Intuitive Surgical's competitive moat?

Intuitive Surgical’s competitive advantage comes from multiple reinforcing moat sources: (1) installed base of 10,700+ da Vinci systems creating switching costs, (2) 89,000+ trained surgeons with platform-specific skills, (3) proprietary instruments generating recurring revenue, (4) regulatory approvals across dozens of procedure types, and (5) 20+ years of clinical data. This moat scored 32/35 in our Business Quality analysis, indicating exceptional durability that would take competitors decades to replicate.

Is ISRG stock overvalued or undervalued?

At current prices, ISRG trades at 73x earnings and 82x free cash flow. Compared to its 5-year average P/E of 74x, the stock appears fairly valued historically but expensive absolutely. The Graham Number analysis suggests the stock at $560 is 702% above Graham’s upper bound of $80. Our Valuation score of 18/35 (51%) reflects significant overvaluation—this is the company’s weakest area by far.

Does Intuitive Surgical pay dividends?

No, Intuitive Surgical does not currently pay dividends and has never paid dividends in its history. The company reinvests earnings into R&D (da Vinci 5, Ion systems), geographic expansion, and share repurchases ($4B buyback authorization). With strong growth opportunities still ahead, management prioritizes capital allocation toward long-term value creation over dividend distributions.

What are the main risks of investing in ISRG?

The primary risks identified in our analysis include: (1) Premium valuation leaves no margin of safety—any execution miss could cause significant downside, (2) Antitrust litigation regarding EndoWrist instrument policies could result in business model changes, and (3) Increasing competition from Medtronic Hugo, J&J Ottava, and CMR Versius could pressure market share over time. Our Red Flag analysis identified 1 concern (CEO pay ratio) totaling -2 points in deductions.

How does Intuitive Surgical compare to competitors?

In the robotic surgery sector, Intuitive Surgical competes with Medtronic (Hugo), Johnson & Johnson (Ottava), Stryker (MAKO), and CMR Surgical (Versius). Key differentiators include 80%+ market share dominance, largest surgeon training network, and deepest installed base. Intuitive’s da Vinci systems have 20+ years of clinical data versus competitors’ limited track records. While competition is increasing, no competitor has gained meaningful share yet.


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Source Reliability & Citations

Source Summary

  • Total Sources Used: 35+
  • HIGH Reliability: 28 (80%) — SEC filings, company IR, major financial news
  • MEDIUM Reliability: 7 (20%) — Analyst reports, industry publications
  • Sources Removed: 0

Primary Sources (SEC Filings & Company)

  1. Intuitive Surgical Annual Report 2024
  2. Intuitive Q4 2024 Earnings Release
  3. Intuitive Q3 2025 Earnings Release
  4. Intuitive CEO Transition Announcement

All Citations

  1. MacroTrends – ISRG Revenue: https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/ISRG/intuitive-surgical/revenue
  2. Intuitive Surgical Investor Relations: https://isrg.intuitive.com/
  3. GuruFocus ROIC Analysis: https://www.gurufocus.com/term/roic/ISRG
  4. Yahoo Finance ISRG Statistics: https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/ISRG/key-statistics/
  5. Stock Analysis ISRG: https://stockanalysis.com/stocks/isrg/statistics/
  6. Medical Design & Outsourcing – Executive Compensation: https://www.medicaldesignandoutsourcing.com/intuitive-surgical-ceo-pay-median-worker-executive-compensation-analysis/
  7. Cohen Milstein – Antitrust Litigation: https://www.cohenmilstein.com/case-study/re-da-vinci-surgical-robot-antitrust-litigation/
  8. Paul Weiss – Antitrust Trial Win: https://www.paulweiss.com/practices/litigation/antitrust/news/intuitive-surgical-wins-high-stakes-antitrust-trial-regarding-da-vinci-surgical-system?id=56389
  9. Companies Market Cap: https://companiesmarketcap.com/intuitive-surgical/marketcap/
  10. Simply Wall St Management Analysis: https://simplywall.st/stocks/us/healthcare/nasdaq-isrg/intuitive-surgical/management
  11. Glassdoor Employee Reviews: https://www.glassdoor.com/Reviews/Intuitive-Reviews-E8090.htm
  12. Rijnberk Invest Insights – Deep Dive: https://rijnberkinvestinsights.substack.com/p/intuitive-surgical-a-60-market-share
  13. DCFmodeling Financial Health: https://dcfmodeling.com/blogs/health/isrg-financial-health

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