A client recently asked whether discounted cashflow analysis is dead as an investment concept. While my response was a categorical ‘no’, the question says much about the investment conditions that produced it.
In recent years, equity markets have largely rewarded promise over the hard evidence of present cash generation. Businesses with an AI story, a platform claim or an option on technological change have attracted investors like bees to a honey pot, whereas stable, cash-generative companies have been treading water. In such environments, the discipline of assessing whether a business can convert revenue into long-term cash generation can start to feel outdated.
Deja vu
Such conditions may seem eerily familiar. In 1999 and 2000, it was fashionable to argue that discounted cashflow analysis belonged to an analogue age. Analysts spoke of eyeballs, page views and first-mover advantage as though these were balance-sheet items. But whilst market exuberance today feels similar to 1999, some of the hottest stocks back then were furthest from generating any cash at all. Today, many of the higher growth companies have cashflows, but don’t have the long-term track record to give confidence on their longevity or predictability.
The notion that focusing on business quality and cash generation is outdated does not stand up to scrutiny. The idea long predates its modern packaging, descending from Benjamin Graham in the 1930s, whose tests for assessing a company concerned its quality rather than simply its price.[1] Nor is the approach only defensible in theory. MSCI’s sector-neutral quality indices have typically outperformed their global equity benchmarks since 1998, with lower risk. A key driver of that edge has been profitability, while low leverage and stable earnings have cushioned against losses during periods of stress.[2]
The relative strength of quality has historically been widest precisely during episodes of serious turbulence.
A fundamental truth
The technologies of the dotcom era were, of course, real. The internet reshaped the economy, with the eventual winners finding favour with investors by demonstrating durable economics and consistent cash generation.
This is a lesson worth holding onto. The case for cashflow does not rest on whether a narrative proves true but on what cashflow measures. Accounting earnings can be smoothed or flattered by market cycles, margins can be temporarily boosted by underinvestment and revenue growth can be bought.
Cashflow is harder to manufacture. It is a financial record of whether a business is genuinely self-funding – whether customers pay, whether pricing power is real, whether growth demands ever more investment to fund it and whether management allocates surplus judiciously. When share prices are largely driven by themes, cashflow helps investors separate what is observable from what is assumed.
Risk matters
Cashflow is also important in another key context. When a single narrative becomes dominant, it stops respecting the boundaries investors use to organise risk. The assumption that AI will disrupt a given industry has been extended, with little discrimination, across enterprise software, data providers, information services and almost any business with intangible assets.
Sector and geography labels are too blunt to capture this. A company can be listed in one country and earn most of its cash somewhere else; it can sit in the same sector as another business while sharing almost none of its economic risks. A more useful question is which businesses would suffer value destruction from the same underlying event.
Cashflow analysis, applied at a portfolio level, is one of the few tools that can answer this. A collection of individually defensible holdings can still amount to a concentrated bet if too many holdings depend on the same future cashflows being able to survive the same disruption.
The answer to whether cashflow is dead today will be the same answer markets have arrived at every time the question has been asked before. Businesses that generate cash, allocate it well and compound their intrinsic value do not stop doing so because the market has temporarily lost interest. Sometimes it just takes time for them to be noticed again.
Marina Lund is Chief Executive Officer and Head of Institutional Clients at Longview Partners
[1] S&P Dow Jones Indices, Quality: A Practitioner’s Guide, January 2017.
[2] MSCI, Repositioning for Slower Growth: The Case for Quality, December 2025.












