Bloomberg ships black-box multiples.
CIPHER ships YAML you can read.
~600ms debounce · then auto-resolves SIC-matched peers from EDGAR

A comparable-company analysis lines up a target company against public peers and compares valuation multiples like EV/Revenue, EV/EBITDA, and P/E using the same definitions across the whole peer set.
Bankers use comps as a market reality check. A DCF says what a company could be worth under assumptions; comps show what investors are currently paying for similar revenue, earnings, and cash-flow profiles.
A junior banker can spend 2-8 hours building a clean public comps table: choosing peers, pulling filings, aligning fiscal periods, fetching market data, calculating multiples, and explaining every excluded cell.
A chatbot may mix peer definitions, use stale market caps, mismatch fiscal years, or invent missing denominators. CIPHER uses sealed multiple definitions, SEC-backed facts, fiscal-alignment flags, and explicit refusals when a comp is unsafe.