Thanks for the heads up. Here is the Heard on the Street column from todays WSJ.
Heard on the Street Compaq Deal May Mask Problems in PC Business
By SUSAN PULLIAM and EVAN RAMSTAD Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Most of Wall Street hasn't stopped applauding since Compaq Computer announced its record-breaking $9.6 billion merger with Digital Equipment last month. Indeed, Compaq shares have soared nearly 25% since news of the merger hit the wires Jan. 26.
But some analysts and investors say the DEC deal, while potentially a long-term boon for Compaq, could be masking problems in its underlying personal computer business. Merging with DEC will move Compaq into higher-margin, bigger-box computers and networks.
Some Compaq watchers say recent financial transactions, including two transactions involving receivables in the third and fourth quarters, suggest that Compaq is having a tougher time cutting costs out of its PC business than it told Wall Street it would last summer.
Factoring of Receivables
In particular, some investors don't like the fact that Compaq factored, or sold off, $732 million in receivables in the third quarter and a similar amount in the fourth quarter. Such factoring transactions allow a company to convert its bills payable by customers for computers already sold into cash, albeit at a discount.
Compaq Computer
Business: Personal computers
Year ended 1997 1996 Revenue (in millions)
$24,584.0
$20,009.0 Net Income (in millions)
$1,855.0*
$1,318.0 Share earnings (diluted)
$2.37*
$1.74
Latest quarter (Dec. 31, 1997) Per-share earnings: $0.84 vs. $0.63 Average daily volume: 21,350,525 shares Shares outstanding: 792.6 million Trailing P/E: 30 Dividend yield: 0.2%
*Includes charge of $252 million or 32 cents a share for R+D and merger-related costs. Note: Share and per-share amounts haven't been adjusted to reflect a 2-for-1 stock split effective Jan. 20, 1998.
The transactions raised red flags in the minds of some investors and analysts not only because they are unusual for a personal computer maker but also because they lowered Compaq's costs for the period. The two transactions also raised the company's "return on invested capital," which is simply a fancy name for profitability that takes into account the costs of carrying receivables.
In a recent report to clients, Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette analyst Kevin McCarthy told clients that without the receivables deals, Compaq's return on invested capital "would have been essentially flat over the past three quarters instead of posting sequential improvement."
'Inflated Improvement'
With the factoring in the second half of 1997, Mr. McCarthy said, "Compaq arguably inflated its improvement" in return on invested capital, or ROIC, and another financial measure, days sales outstanding, which is the average time it takes to be paid for a product. "This apples to oranges comparison of these key yardsticks has some investors crying foul," the DLJ analyst observed.
In an interview Wednesday, Earl Mason, Compaq's chief financial officer, acknowledged the transactions helped profitability. "It helps ROIC," he said. "Otherwise, we wouldn't do it." Mr. Mason also said the company factored more receivables in the second, third and fourth quarters of last year than it normally does.
But he added the Houston-based company only uses factoring when it can get a "positive carry," earning more from the immediate cash received than it must sacrifice in fees and discounts to the bank or company collecting the receivable.
Wall Street has been following Compaq's return on invested capital closely because the company has said it is one of the best measures of its attempts to cut costs. Last summer, Compaq told analysts it would cut its costs of doing business so much that return on invested capital would climb from 50% to "triple digits."
But without the factoring transactions, Compaq would not have even come close to that goal, according to Mr. McCarthy.
Mr. Mason didn't dispute Mr. McCarthy's analysis but said it includes the performance of Tandem Computers, the large systems maker Compaq bought last summer. With Tandem excluded, Mr. Mason said Compaq's ROIC reached 107% without the factoring transactions.
Lowering its cost of doing business is especially critical for Compaq. With the surging popularity of $1,000 personal computers and price pressure in the corporate market, Compaq -- like all PC makers -- is being forced to cut its PC prices.
Without a more cost-efficient model for making computers, Compaq will have a hard time competing with direct sellers such as Dell Computer. Alternatively, its profit margins could fall. DLJ's Mr. McCarthy says the difference "could mean a percentage-point drop in its net margin," now 5% to 7% in personal computers.
Of course, Compaq's merger with DEC would reduce its reliance on the low margin personal computer business, giving it entry into the higher margin, server business. But some analysts aren't willing yet to overlook questions about Compaq's underlying business, especially since there are plenty of unanswered questions about how Compaq will integrate DEC.
"Compaq is faced with the task of integrating yet another acquisition. Moreover, this integration comes at a time when Compaq is attempting to reduce [distributors'] inventories of PC products, fundamentally alter its manufacturing and distribution, deal with declining prices and avoid missing product cycles in the fiercely competitive PC market. This seems like a daunting task," Salomon Smith Barney analyst Richard Gardner told clients following the deal's announcement.
Worries about whether Compaq was meeting its own goals in adopting a more Dell-like business model began surfacing last fall, almost as soon as the company began making promises to Wall Street.
Last summer, Mr. Mason not only promised higher returns on invested capital but also told Wall Street that the number of weeks of inventory Compaq would carry would be cut to about three from about 10. Soon after, however, rumors began circulating that Compaq was "stuffing the channels," a phrase used to describe the practice of selling lots of computers near the end of a quarter to distributors in order to improve results.
Compaq denied the rumors at the time. But it didn't help matters when one distributor said its supply of Compaq PCs had grown, suggesting to some investors that Compaq hadn't progressed as far as expected with the transition to a build-to-order, or Dell, business model.
In the interview Wednesday, Mr. Mason said Compaq's distributors missed a separate goal he'd set last summer for the distributors to be down to only two weeks of inventory. The distributors, he said, feel that goal is unrealistic, particularly with more advanced products. But he said the company hasn't set new goals yet.
Some shareholders take a more benign view of the issue. "Compaq has brought this on itself by setting goals that were too ambitious," says money manager Kent Simons of Neuberger & Berman, one of Compaq's biggest shareholders with about 14 million shares. Although Neuberger remains bullish on Compaq, it recently had to sell some shares to keep its positions under certain size limits within its funds. |