CSL shares: bargain or value trap?

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CSL Ltd (ASX: CSL) shares have not felt like a classic blue-chip winner lately.

The biotechnology giant has disappointed the market, reset expectations, and left many long-term shareholders wondering whether the old investment case still applies.

The question is whether its heavy decline is a genuine bargain or a value trap.

What is a value trap?

A value trap is a share that looks cheap on the surface but is cheap for a reason.

It may trade on a low price-to-earnings (PE) ratio, offer a tempting dividend yield, or sit far below its former highs. But if earnings keep falling, margins keep narrowing, or management cannot fix the business, the cheap valuation can prove misleading.

Essentially, the share price may not be signalling an opportunity, it may be signalling a permanently weaker company.

That is the risk investors need to think about with CSL shares. The company has been through a difficult period, and confidence in the business has been badly shaken.

What the forecasts say

The market is not expecting CSL to bounce back immediately.

Consensus estimates point to earnings per share of $8.06 in FY 2026. That would represent a decline on FY 2025, which helps explain why investors have been cautious.

But the outlook improves after that. The market is forecasting earnings per share of $8.41 in FY 2027 and then $8.42 in FY 2028.

Based on the current CSL share price of $106.55, this means the stock is trading on approximately 13.2 times FY 2026 earnings and approximately 12.7 times FY 2027 and FY 2028 earnings.

For a company with CSL’s pedigree, global footprint, and exposure to healthcare demand, those multiples look undemanding.

Dividends are also expected to be attractive. Consensus estimates are for dividends per share of $3.58 in FY 2026, $3.72 in FY 2027, and $3.80 in FY 2028.

That implies forward dividend yields of approximately 3.4%, 3.5%, and 3.6%, respectively.

The key issue with CSL shares

The numbers suggest CSL shares could be cheap. But the market will not simply take that on faith.

The key is whether investors can trust management to deliver on the recovery path. CSL needs to stabilise earnings, rebuild confidence, and show that recent problems are not the start of a long-term decline.

If management delivers, the current valuation looks very attractive. A global healthcare business trading on around 13 times earnings is not something investors see often, particularly one with CSL’s long history of innovation and scale.

But if earnings disappoint again, the low multiple may not matter as much. The market could continue to treat CSL as a business with lower quality earnings than in the past.

Bargain or value trap?

On balance, CSL looks more like a bargain than a value trap.

The company still owns valuable healthcare assets, operates in markets with long-term demand, and has the potential to restore earnings growth if management executes well.

But this is no longer a stock that can rely on its reputation alone. CSL has to earn back the market’s trust.

The post CSL shares: bargain or value trap? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has positions in CSL. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended CSL. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended CSL. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.