P/E of 15.4 suggests value, but gross margins at historic 31.1% warn that some bargains aren't worth catching.
A business trading at 15.4x earnings with deteriorating gross margins offers no margin of safety despite generating substantial cash flow.
Does the price protect me from permanent loss of capital?
The framework sees a significant discount to intrinsic value, suggesting a margin of safety exists. However, the persistent drawdown and negative implied growth expectations indicate Mr. Market sees deteriorating fundamentals that the DCF model may not fully capture.
Has the company demonstrated consistent earnings over many years?
This framework appreciates the remarkable consistency—beating estimates in 37 of 39 quarters while maintaining profitability. The earnings record demonstrates the stability Graham required, even as underlying gross margins deteriorate.
Can this company survive a prolonged downturn?
The balance sheet meets Graham's stringent requirements—low debt, high liquidity, strong coverage ratios. This financial fortress could weather severe economic storms, though the gross margin erosion suggests operational stress beneath the strong balance sheet.
What do I receive in earnings and assets per dollar of price?
Applying this lens, the valuation appears reasonable by historical standards but expensive versus risk-free alternatives. The 271bp negative spread to treasuries demands growth the market clearly doesn't expect, creating valuation risk despite moderate multiples.
This framework sees a business with strong earnings consistency and balance sheet strength trading at a reasonable multiple, yet the gross margin collapse to 0th percentile reveals fundamental deterioration that no amount of financial engineering can cure. The 271bp negative spread to treasuries reflects Mr. Market's recognition that CTSH's economics are eroding even as it generates cash. Can a margin of safety exist when the foundation—gross margins—crumbles beneath your feet?
This analysis applies Benjamin Graham's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Benjamin Graham. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.