Grade: F — Major Red Flags
Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles
Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-02-26) + Yahoo Finance
Auditor: PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP — Clean opinion (1 Critical Audit Matter)
One-line verdict: Thermo Fisher closed 2025 at $44.6B revenue, up 4% on 2% organic growth as pharma/biotech demand rebounded but academic, government, and China spending weakened. Cash flow quality is actually excellent — CFFO of $7.82B comfortably exceeds net income of $6.70B (ratio 1.17) and free cash flow of $6.3B covers 94% of earnings — but two structural red flags trip our screen: cash of $9.85B covers only 26% of $39.4B in gross debt, and goodwill plus intangibles of $65.2B equals 122% of stockholders' equity, the accumulated residue of a 23-year acquisition spree that PwC has audited since 2002. The 2025 10-K discloses a new $4.01B reporting unit from the September 2025 filtration and separation acquisition whose "fair value was not substantially in excess of its carrying value," explicitly warning that small cash-flow shortfalls could trigger goodwill impairment. The business is not broken — it is over-levered by M&A.
| Metric | Result |
|---|---|
| Red Flags | **2** (C4, D1) |
| Watch Items | **1** (D3) |
| Checks Completed | **17/18** (D4 N/A — no write-off data) |
| Beneish M-Score | **-2.46** (below -2.22 — unlikely manipulator) |
| F-Score (Fraud Probability) | **1.41** (0.52% probability) |
| Altman Z-Score | **4.07** (safe zone) |
| Auditor | PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP — Unqualified opinion, auditor since 2002 |
| Fiscal Year | 2025 (ended December 31, 2025) |
| Report Date | 2026-04-05 |
Four Segments, Life Sciences Ecosystem
Per the MD&A, Thermo Fisher "operations fall into four segments: Life Sciences Solutions, Analytical Instruments, Specialty Diagnostics, and Laboratory Products and Biopharma Services." 2025 segment results from the filing:
| Segment | 2025 Revenue | 2024 Revenue | Segment Margin 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laboratory Products & Biopharma Services | $23,984M | $23,157M | 14.0% | +4% |
| Life Sciences Solutions | $10,374M | $9,631M | 36.3% | +8% |
| Analytical Instruments | $7,554M | $7,463M | 23.0% | +1% |
| Specialty Diagnostics | $4,676M | $4,512M | 26.9% | +4% |
| Eliminations | ($2,033M) | ($1,885M) | — | — |
| **Consolidated** | **$44,556M** | **$42,879M** | **17.4% GAAP op margin** | **+4%** |
The MD&A breaks 2025 revenue growth into components: "Revenue growth 4%, Impact of acquisitions 1%, Impact of currency translation 1%, Organic revenue growth 2%." Only 2% of growth was organic.
The MD&A is candid about where the softness lives: "Revenues in the academic and government market declined, driven by customer hesitancy in a more uncertain environment in the U.S. and macro conditions in China... During 2025, sales grew in North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific, but declined in China." The 10-K also flags the October 2025 U.S. government shutdown "due to a lapse in appropriations" as a specific headwind.
Analytical Instruments segment income fell 11% to $1,736M — segment margin dropped 3.2 points to 23.0%, which the filing attributes to "the impacts of tariffs and related foreign exchange, strategic investments, and unfavorable business mix."
Profitability: Margin Holding, Growth Stalled
Per the consolidated statements:
| Metric | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $44,915M | $42,857M | $42,879M | $44,557M | Flat for 3 years |
| Gross Profit | $18,971M | $17,100M | $17,702M | $18,239M | +3% YoY |
| Gross Margin | 42.2% | 39.9% | 41.3% | 40.9% | -0.3pp |
| GAAP Operating Income | — | — | $7,337M | $7,746M | +6% |
| GAAP Op Margin | — | — | 17.1% | 17.4% | +0.3pp |
| Net Income | $6,950M | $5,995M | $6,335M | $6,704M | +6% YoY |
| GAAP Diluted EPS | — | — | $16.53 | $17.74 | +7% |
| Adjusted EPS | — | — | $21.86 | $22.87 | +5% |
| ROE | 15.8% | 12.8% | 12.8% | 12.6% | Declining |
Revenue in 2025 of $44.56B remains below the 2022 peak of $44.92B — the company is roughly flat on revenue over three years while earnings have partially recovered from the 2023 COVID-rollover trough. The MD&A attributes margin support to "very strong productivity improvements" from Thermo's "Practical Process Improvement (PPI) Business System, partially offset by unfavorable business mix and strategic investments." Restructuring charges were $362M in 2025 and $379M in 2024 — ongoing.
The reconciliation table in the 10-K shows adjusted operating income of $10,109M vs. GAAP $7,746M — the $2.4B bridge is dominated by "Amortization of acquisition-related intangible assets $1,730 million" (3.9% of revenue). This is recurring non-cash but real economic cost of the acquisition strategy.
Cash Flow: Quality Holds, But Capital Returns Slipped
Per the consolidated statements of cash flows (from MD&A):
| Metric | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net Income | $5,995M | $6,335M | $6,704M |
| Operating Cash Flow | $8,406M | $8,667M | $7,818M |
| **CFFO / Net Income** | **1.40** | **1.37** | **1.17** |
| CapEx (PP&E purchases) | — | -$1,400M | -$1,525M |
| Free Cash Flow (per 10-K) | $6,927M | $7,324M | **$6,337M** |
| **FCF / Net Income** | **1.16** | **1.16** | **0.94** |
CFFO comfortably exceeded net income for three straight years — C1 passes. But 2025's ratio dropped from 1.37 to 1.17. The MD&A explains: "During 2025, cash provided by income was offset in part by investments in working capital. Increases in accounts receivable used cash of $0.43 billion and changes in contract assets/liabilities used cash of $0.38 billion... Changes in other assets and liabilities used cash of $1.31 billion primarily due to the timing of payments for income taxes."
Free cash flow fell from $7.32B to $6.34B — a $1B decline in a year where revenue grew only $1.7B and the tax timing alone cost $1.3B.
The MD&A also notes: "Cash payments for income taxes were $1.78 billion during 2025" — for a GAAP tax provision of only $547M (a 7.5% effective rate), meaning deferred tax timing differences are consuming more cash than the P&L shows.
Per the MD&A, 2025 investing activities used $4.04B for acquisitions plus $1.52B for PP&E. Financing activities: debt issuance provided $7.76B, debt repayment used $2.41B, share repurchases used $3.00B, dividends $0.64B. The company then announced a further $3.00B repurchase "early in the first quarter of 2026" and issued another $3.80B of senior notes in Q1 2026.
The $39.4B Debt Pile and the $65.2B Intangibles Pile
Per the balance sheet:
| Item | 2024 | 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cash + ST investments | $5,570M | $10,105M | +$4.5B |
| Total Debt | $31,275M | $39,384M | +$8.1B |
| Goodwill | — | $49,362M | — |
| Definite-lived intangibles | — | $14,605M | — |
| Indefinite-lived intangibles | — | $1,233M | — |
| Stockholders' Equity | — | ~$53.4B | — |
Cash of $10.1B covers only 26% of total debt of $39.4B — our C4 check, a red flag. Goodwill plus intangibles of $65.2B equals 122% of equity — our D1 check, a second red flag. Debt/EBITDA of 3.4x is investment-grade, interest coverage 5.7x — the company can service this comfortably, but the balance sheet is structurally thin on tangible assets.
The MD&A contains an explicit warning about the filtration and separation acquisition closed in September 2025: "With the completion of the filtration and separation business acquisition in September 2025, the company established a new reporting unit that solely consists of the legacy business, the book carrying value of which equaled its fair value as of the acquisition date... Given that the fair value of the reporting unit was not substantially in excess of its carrying value as of the annual 2025 assessment date, relatively small decreases in future cash flows versus anticipated results, decreases in peer trading multiples and/or increases in the weighted average cost of capital could result in impairment of goodwill. The reporting unit consisting of the filtration and separation business had $2.10 billion of goodwill, and an overall carrying value of $4.01 billion as of December 31, 2025."
Translation: Thermo Fisher just bought a business at full price in September 2025 and by the annual impairment test (tenth fiscal month) had zero cushion before a write-down would be required. This is the Serial Acquirer Risk flagged by Schilit — management pays what the market demands, books the difference as goodwill, and the impairment sword hangs from day one.
Per the 10-K risk factors: "As of December 31, 2025, we had approximately $39.38 billion in outstanding indebtedness... Our leverage could have negative consequences, including increasing our vulnerability to adverse economic and industry conditions, limiting our ability to obtain additional financing." The company's Consolidated Net Interest Coverage Ratio covenant requires a minimum of 3.5:1.0 — current interest coverage of 5.7x leaves room but not limitless room.
Tax Valuation Allowance Tripled
Buried in MD&A: "The company's tax valuation allowance totaled $3.56 billion and $1.04 billion at December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively." A $2.5B surge in the valuation allowance means management concluded it is no longer "more likely than not" that certain deferred tax assets will be realized — a quiet bearish signal about certain foreign or jurisdiction-specific operations.
This is also why income taxes became the one and only Critical Audit Matter. PwC wrote: "The principal considerations for our determination that performing procedures relating to income taxes is a critical audit matter are (i) the significant judgment by management when interpreting the numerous and complex tax laws and regulations... (ii) a high degree of auditor judgment, subjectivity, and effort in performing procedures and evaluating audit evidence related to the provision for income taxes, deferred tax assets and liabilities, including the valuation allowance, and liabilities for unrecognized tax benefits."
GAAP effective tax rate of 7.5% in 2025 is unusually low — boosted by "a $269 million deferred tax benefit resulting from the recognition of tax attributes related to domestication transactions, a deferred tax benefit of $153 million related to capital losses generated as part of intra-entity transactions, a $158 million benefit in jurisdictions where the deferred tax assets are now expected to be realized due to forecasted income, and a $93 million tax benefit from tax return reassessments." That is roughly $673M of discrete tax benefits — close to 10% of net income.
The 18-Point Screening
| # | Check | Result | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | DSO Change | PASS | DSO 73 days, change +3 days YoY |
| A2 | AR vs Revenue Growth | PASS | AR growth 8.7% vs revenue growth 3.9% |
| A3 | Revenue vs CFFO | PASS | Revenue +3.9%, CFFO -9.8% — cash declined faster than revenue grew, borderline |
| B1 | Inventory vs COGS | PASS | Inventory +9.0% vs COGS +4.5% — normal |
| B2 | CapEx vs Revenue | PASS | CapEx growth 8.9% vs revenue 3.9% — normal |
| B3 | SG&A Ratio | PASS | SG&A/Gross Profit = 47.9% |
| B4 | Gross Margin | PASS | 40.9%, -0.3pp — stable |
| C1 | CFFO vs Net Income | PASS | CFFO/NI = 1.17 — profits backed by cash |
| C2 | Free Cash Flow | PASS | FCF $6.3B, FCF/NI = 0.94 |
| C3 | Accruals Ratio | PASS | -1.0% — low, benign |
| C4 | Cash vs Debt | **FAIL** | Cash $10.1B covers only 26% of debt $39.4B |
| D1 | Goodwill + Intangibles | **FAIL** | Goodwill $49.4B + Intangibles $15.8B = $65.2B, 122% of equity |
| D2 | Leverage | PASS | Debt/EBITDA = 3.4x, interest coverage 5.7x |
| D3 | Soft Asset Growth | WATCH | Other assets +30.7% vs revenue +3.9% |
| D4 | Asset Impairment | N/A | No write-off data in yfinance feed |
| E1 | Serial Acquirer FCF | PASS | FCF after acquisitions positive |
| E2 | Goodwill Surge | PASS | Goodwill+Intangibles +6% YoY |
| F1 | Beneish M-Score | PASS | -2.46 (< -2.22) — unlikely manipulator |
Beneish M-Score Component Breakdown:
| Component | Value | What It Measures | Concern? |
|---|---|---|---|
| DSRI | 1.046 | Days Sales in Receivables | Slightly elevated |
| GMI | 1.009 | Gross Margin Index | Neutral |
| AQI | 0.952 | Asset Quality Index | Normal |
| SGI | 1.039 | Sales Growth Index | Low growth |
| DEPI | 1.202 | Depreciation Index | Elevated — depreciation rate declining |
| SGAI | 0.978 | SG&A Index | Good |
| TATA | -0.0101 | Total Accruals to Assets | Slightly negative, benign |
| LVGI | 1.062 | Leverage Index | Rising leverage |
M-Score of -2.46 is safely below the -2.22 manipulation threshold. The only slightly suspicious signal is LVGI at 1.062 — leverage rising — which aligns with the $8B debt increase in 2025.
Key Risks from the 10-K
1. Customer Capital Spending / China Exposure
Per Item 1A: "Demand for some of our products depends on capital spending policies of our customers and on government funding policies... Spending by some of these customers fluctuates based on budget allocations and the timely passage of the annual federal budget. In October 2025, the federal government entered a shutdown due to a lapse in appropriations." The MD&A confirms revenue declined in China in 2025 due to "macro conditions." Academic and government revenue fell due to "customer hesitancy in a more uncertain environment in the U.S."
2. Acquisition Integration and Goodwill Impairment
Per Item 1A: "Our business strategy includes the acquisition of technologies and businesses... As a result of these acquisitions, we recorded significant goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets (primarily trade names) on our balance sheet, which amount to approximately $49.36 billion and $1.23 billion, respectively, as of December 31, 2025. In addition, we have definite-lived intangible assets totaling $14.60 billion as of December 31, 2025... If we are not able to realize the value of the goodwill and intangible assets, we may incur material charges relating to the impairment of those assets." The filtration and separation reporting unit explicitly lacks cushion.
3. Indebtedness and Covenant Risk
Per Item 1A: "As of December 31, 2025, we had approximately $39.38 billion in outstanding indebtedness... Our ability to make scheduled payments, refinance our obligations or obtain additional financing will depend on our future operating performance... The covenants in the Facility include a Consolidated Net Interest Coverage Ratio (Consolidated EBITDA to Consolidated Net Interest Expense)... it will maintain a minimum Consolidated Net Interest Coverage Ratio of 3.5:1.0 as of the last day of any fiscal quarter."
4. Tariffs and Global Supply Chain
Per Item 1A: The 10-K lists "tariffs imposed by the U.S. on goods from other countries and tariffs imposed by other countries... (including volatility resulting from the imposition of (and changing policies around) tariffs and related countermeasures)" among factors that could harm operations. The Analytical Instruments segment already took an 11% decline in segment income in 2025, attributed partly to "the impacts of tariffs and related foreign exchange."
5. Pharma Services Quality Control
Per Item 1A: "Our pharma services offerings are highly exacting and complex, due in part to strict quality and regulatory requirements... A failure of our quality control systems could result in problems with facility operations or preparation or provision of products... Such problems could affect production of a particular batch or series of batches of products, requiring the destruction of such products or a halt of facility production altogether." With pharma services and research/safety together producing $879M of reported revenue growth in Laboratory Products & Biopharma Services — the segment most dependent on execution — a single contamination event at one plant could meaningfully dent earnings.
6. Cybersecurity and Sole-Source Supply
Per Item 1A: "A significant cyber-attack or other disruption in, or breach in security of, our information technology systems could adversely harm our operating results" and "Our reliance upon sole or limited sources of supply for certain materials or components could cause production interruptions, delays and inefficiencies."
Key Financial Trends (4-Year)
| Metric | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $44.9B | $42.9B | $42.9B | $44.6B |
| Net Income | $7.0B | $6.0B | $6.3B | $6.7B |
| Gross Margin | 42.2% | 39.9% | 41.3% | 40.9% |
| Net Margin | 15.5% | 14.0% | 14.8% | 15.0% |
| ROE | 15.8% | 12.8% | 12.8% | 12.6% |
| CFFO | $9.2B | $8.4B | $8.7B | $7.8B |
| CFFO/NI | 1.32 | 1.40 | 1.37 | 1.17 |
| FCF | $6.9B | $6.9B | $7.3B | $6.3B |
| Cash | $8.5B | $8.1B | $5.6B | $10.1B |
| Total Debt | $34.5B | $34.9B | $31.3B | $39.4B |
Revenue is flat three years running. CFFO and FCF peaked in 2024 and receded in 2025. Debt is climbing again after a 2024 reduction — the company re-levered by $8B to fund the $4B filtration acquisition, $3B in buybacks, and $0.6B in dividends.
Summary
Grade: F. Two structural red flags warrant a closer look at the acquisition strategy.
This is not a company cooking its books. Cash flow quality is strong (CFFO/NI 1.17), the M-Score is clean at -2.46, the F-Score implies only a 0.52% probability of manipulation, the Z-Score of 4.07 is solidly in the safe zone, and PwC — Thermo Fisher's auditor since 2002 — issued an unqualified opinion with a single Critical Audit Matter on tax complexity.
But Thermo Fisher has been an acquisition machine for two decades, and the 2025 10-K shows the bill:
Yellow flags:
What would change our view: A successful integration of Solventum's filtration business (measured by the 2026 annual goodwill test), a return to mid-single-digit organic revenue growth, and a visible deleveraging path (not more debt + more buybacks). None of these are visible in the 2025 10-K.
Thermo Fisher is a quality operator that has spent the last two decades paying full price for growth. The balance sheet is the bill.
**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Thermo Fisher Scientific's fiscal year 2025 10-K filed with the SEC on February 26, 2026. This is NOT investment advice.
**About EarningsGrade**: We screen earnings reports for financial red flags using an 18-point forensic framework. Grade F means major red flags were detected that warrant thorough investigation.
