Here is an interesting way to analyze cash flow on a company.
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by Rika Yoshida and Haywood Kelly Back in October, we interviewed Brian Posner, the manager of the Warburg Pincus Growth and Income Fund. In the interview, Posner talked about cash-on-cash return, a figure he likes to use in his search for undervalued companies.
Essentially, cash-on-cash return is a modified earnings yield. And as with earnings yield, the higher the cash-on-cash return, the better. However, instead of expressing a company's earnings per share as a percentage of the stock price, as the traditional earnings yield does, Posner's version looks at how much cash flow a company generates as a percentage of how much it would cost an investor to buy the whole company, including shouldering the company's debt burden. In other words, if an investor were to buy a company with a cash-on-cash return of 10%, he or she would be getting an investment that generated $0.10 in annual free cash flow for every dollar invested.
The Basics For this Database Detective, we designed a screen around cash-on-cash return. The first thing we did was to create a proxy for Posner's equation. For the cash-flow figure, Posner takes a company's EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) and subtracts out the company's capital spending. We substituted free cash flow, which is total cash flow less capital spending. This figure will be similar to Posner's except that it expresses cash flow net of interest and taxes. In general, that means that our cash-flow figure will be lower--and thus more conservative--than Posner's.
For the denominator, Posner uses each company's enterprise value, or its market capitalization plus its net debt. An investor buying the whole company, lock, stock, and barrel, would not only need to buy all the shares at market value, but would also be taking on the burden of any debt (net of cash) the company has. Posner's reasoning is that it's more reasonable to look at the return a company makes on the entire investment, not just the return it's making on its market value. Following Posner, we looked for a minimum cash-on-cash return of 5%.
The Frills Posner also likes to limit the companies on his shorter list to those which don't go overboard with their capital spending. That is, they aren't spending so freely that a glut of new capital investments might radically alter the business' future cash-generation potential. Companies spending heavily on expansion may be throwing money into investments that have little or no chance of making a decent return. That's why Posner generally caps capital spending at 110% of the companies' depreciation and amortization. The depreciation and amortization on a company's existing assets is a proxy for the capital spending necessary to maintain current assets, and by setting a cap slightly higher than that, Posner opens the door for companies to grow moderately, too.
To narrow the list still further, we added a few criteria of our own. First, we set a minimum market cap of $300 million, reasoning that very small companies are more prone to have highly fluctuating cash flows. A tiny company that had very good recent results is less likely to be able to generate similar results going forward than is a larger one. We also looked for companies that have increased their earnings per share in each of the past five years. Increasing earnings are a proxy for increasing cash flow, and at a minimum, these criteria limit the list of companies to those that have had stable or growing profits.
Eighteen companies passed all the criteria. They are listed below, ranked by cash-on-cash return. We've taken a closer look at some of the more promising investment possibilities.
Company Name and Ticker Cash on Cash % Price/ Earnings Price/ Cash Flow Market Cap ($M)
ASA Holdings ASAI 9.21 16.6 9.4 854.1 Wolverine Tube WLV 9.21 16.1 7.2 435.9
Kimball International B KBALB 8.96 13.3 8.5 765.3
Centex Construction Products CXP 8.41 12.9 11.1 668.3 National Service Industries NSI 7.53 20.3 10.7 2190.6 International Dairy Queen 7.23 15.7 12.8 590.3 Instrumentarium INMRY 7.10 15.2 11.0 665.0 Morton International MII 7.04 15.4 10.0 4576.4 Mueller Industries MLI 6.03 17.0 12.2 1033.0 Helix Technology HELX 6.00 21.1 15.7 385.5
Tracor TTRR 5.39 25.7 9.8 761.2 Federal Signal FSS 5.33 15.4 12.4 986.1 Luxottica Group LUX 5.31 21.1 10.7 2808.1 Quebecor Printing PRW 5.31 15.8 5.3 1717.9 DQE DQE 5.28 14.2 7.2 2728.2
Wallace Computer Service WCS 5.27 20.6 12.8 1670.9 IDEX IEX 5.10 18.5 12.9 1019.8 Mine Safety Appliances MNES 5.07 12.4 8.3 331.3
Data as of 12-31-97. Click on Analysis buttons to read detailed analyses of selected stocks. Click on ticker symbols to see Quicktake reports for each stock.
P o s t e d : 0 1 - 2 3 - 9 8 Rika Yoshida and Haywood Kelly are editorial analysts for Morningstar StockIdeas, the electronic newsletter that accompanies Morningstar StockTools. |