While I don't hold a position in this stock, this article should be of interest to any MMTM shareholders:
  thestreet.com
                                               The Ultimate Value Play: Stocks Worth                                              Less Than Their Cash                                              By John Rubino                                               Special to TheStreet.com                                              11/10/00 10:42 AM ET 
                                    It took a little longer than usual this time, but Benjamin Graham is once again                                   back in style. The godfather of value investing, his Security Analysis is the most                                   owned and least read book in the business. His ideas are dismissed in every bull                                   market, only to regain respect when excess leads to chaos. 
                                    In a nutshell, Graham believed that the crowd is usually wrong, and that the best                                   returns therefore come from buying what no one else wants -- after making damn                                   sure it's not going bankrupt. 
                                    His kind of stocks come in two varieties: earnings plays, where the price is                                   extremely low in relation to sustainable profits; and asset plays, where the value                                   of a company's cash, inventories, factories or whatever exceeds its stock price. It                                   has been so long since either was common that I'd gotten out of the habit of                                   looking for them. But this week I did a screen for the purest kind of asset play,                                   where cash on hand exceeds the stock price, and found there are dozens of                                   them. 
                                    Cash-rich companies are interesting for at least three reasons. First, since cash                                   is easy to value, you know exactly what that part of the balance sheet is worth. If                                   it exceeds the stock price, you get the rest of the company for free. Second, in                                   hard times -- which I'm increasingly convinced are coming -- cash protects a                                   company from panicked creditors, guaranteeing its survival. Third, in the                                   aforementioned hard times, a big cash balance allows a company to buy up                                   competitors' assets for a song when no one else wants them. 
                                    In short, they're defensive plays going into bear markets and -- if they make wise                                   acquisitions at the bottom -- growth plays coming out the other side. But you've                                   got to tread carefully here. In calculating cash, subtract out the company's debt                                   to get a "net cash" number, and use this for comparison with the stock price.                                   And -- the voice of bitter experience here -- pay special attention to the structure                                   of a company's balance sheet. If a company's debt is all short-term, it might                                   gobble up a big part of the cash balance when it comes due. 
                                    Finally, and by far most important, watch the burn rate -- $100 million in cash can                                   evaporate in no time if a company is losing $75 million a year. Stamps.com                                   (STMP:Nasdaq - news), to take just one of the zillion possible New Economy                                   examples, has cash per share that exceeds its stock price, but if current trends                                   continue, it will burn through it in two years. 
                                    And don't take the stock quote services at their word. I was all set to make                                   Airspan (AIRN:Nasdaq - news) a central part of this story because Yahoo!                                   Finance listed cash per share of $35, vs. a share price of $6. But according to                                   the company's most recent 10-Q report filed with the Securities and Exchange                                   Commission, net cash is actually less than a buck a share. So always verify                                   balance-sheet stats through services like 10K Wizard or Free Edgar. 
                                    Because we're just at the beginning of what might be a bear market to remember,                                   most of the cash plays out there now are flawed in one way or another. But a                                   couple are worth a look. 
                                    Calton (CN:Amex - news) was a home builder until it sold out in 1999 and                                   became, in effect, a tech company incubator. Its three start-ups, eCalton,                                   PrivilegeONE and Innovation Technology, are eating cash at the rate of                                   around $2 million a quarter. And, given the probable nasty year ahead for tech                                   start-ups, there's no reason to expect a letup anytime soon. But with cash of $32                                   million and no debt, Calton's net cash per share comes to $7.50 vs. a Thursday                                   closing price of $3.56. 
                                    Momentum Business Applications (MMTM:Nasdaq - news) was formed in                                   1998 by PeopleSoft (PSFT:Nasdaq - news) as a development arm for                                   applications "outside PeopleSoft's traditional areas of product development                                   focus." PeopleSoft gave Momentum $250 million -- those were heady days -- and                                   then distributed its stock to existing shareholders. 
                                    Momentum is now a separate company, though under a development agreement                                   with PeopleSoft, it's obligated to create products to meet PeopleSoft's needs,                                   using the latter's staff and software development tools. Momentum will own the                                   applications it creates, though PeopleSoft will have the option to license and/or                                   buy them. 
                                    This is one of the odder deals you'll come across. But the balance sheet is nice                                   and clear: net cash of $40 a share vs. a price of $10. |