by Eric J. Fry
Cash flow is the alpine spring water of the financial world. Pure. Crystal clear. Free of impurities and pollutants. It is "la source" of every growing enterprise. And yet, like water, cash flow is so basic, so unassuming, that it is easily overlooked by investors -- particularly during exuberant financial epochs.
Saturday night revelers will toss back martinis and margaritas, not water. But come morning, these same revelers will crave only water, repulsed by the very thought of another martini or margarita.
So it is in the financial markets. During the "party years" of the stock market bubble, most investors cared little about cash flow. Instead, they became intoxicated with New Era notions: that revenue growth, by itself, would lead to profit growth; that multibillion-dollar fiber-optic networks would inspire their own demand; that "page views" would some day lead to earnings; that options-incentivized managements would guide stocks ever higher; and, most importantly, that Alan Greenspan's special interest rate would always prevent a falling stock market.
Cash flow did not matter to anyone except short sellers. Because investors did not focus on cash flow, corporations were only too happy to bury the information in their quarterly financial filings. During thousands of conference calls throughout the late 1990s, thousands of CFOs acted as if they'd never heard of cash flow. On those rare occasions when an investor raised the issue, most CFOs would say something like, "Uh, I don't have the information readily available. But we're very pleased with our growth. I could have someone get back to you on this after the call."
Instead of presenting the truth that these numbers impart, companies devised myriad schemes for hiding or obscuring the cash flow data. Specifically, accounting departments from coast to coast concocted various versions of the now-infamous "pro forma earnings" -- a calculation designed to exclude as many expenses as possible from the reported earnings. Expert practitioners of the pro forma charade could paint a very pleasing picture of a company's financial health, no matter how grim the actual cash flow trend.
Here's a hypothetical example of how pro forma earnings can be used to mask deteriorating cash flow. Imagine for a moment that Eric Fry is a publicly traded company. Let's say that I make $100,000 per year. Let's further assume that my annual expenses consist of $25,000 in taxes, $30,000 in mortgage payments, $25,000 for food, insurance and all other miscellaneous living expenses, plus $80,000 for a new Porsche. As a public corporation, what is my pro forma net income? Answer: $20,000 -- or $100,000 minus all the expenses except for the cost of the Porsche. You see, it's inappropriate to include the Porsche because it's a "one-time, nonrecurring" expense and, therefore, not a true reflection of my actual profitability.
On my quarterly conference call, I boast about my $20,000 pro forma net income and how I soundly beat the prior year's $15,000 pro forma net income. All the sell-side analysts applaud my "strong organic earnings growth," and fall all over themselves to reiterate their "strong buy" recommendations. None of the analysts asks any questions about cash flow. That would be bad form.
The obvious irony is that my net cash flow - including the Porsche purchase - is a NEGATIVE $60,000. I own the Porsche, of course, and it remains an asset on my balance sheet with a substantial value. But this particular asset -- much like a fiber-optic network -- will gradually depreciate and will never produce any net income for me. |