Jubak article in Microsoft Investor. $55 ASND target and interesting analysis
[Personally, because I believe ASND and analysts are lowballing all estimates at this point, I'd just take Bernstein's current $1.75/sh estimate (possibly low) for FY99 and multiply by 40/50 PE (lower than CSCO) to get $70/$87.50 or roughly a double in 1.5 years. And, in the bullish case, if ASND earns $2.00/sh in FY99, it would be $80/$100. It's nice to dream. djane]
investor.msn.com
Jubak's Journal When to break the rules Knowing the basic principles of investing is key -- but it's the exceptions that produce profit and loss. Take earnings growth, for instance. By Jim Jubak
It's pretty easy to learn the rules of investing. It's figuring out the exceptions that's hard.
You know what I mean. A high price-to-earnings ratio is bad -- except when it signals a company's impending turnaround. Look for companies with high profit margins -- unless the high margins are about to attract bigger competitors. Avoid companies that show years of big losses -- except in industries where stocks are valued on cash flow and not earnings.
That makes the process of learning how to invest discouragingly hard -- and often dishearteningly unprofitable. Lots of investors begin by learning "the rules" from an expert or a book only to discover by experience that the exceptions can produce unexpected profits or losses. Experience is a great teacher if you're learning how to ride that first two-wheeler on a grassy suburban lawn that will cushion the tumbles. But for investors, the tuition can get pretty expensive very quickly. Exactly how many stocks can you afford to watch blow up on you?
I don't think an investor can escape all those costs and pain. But I think that by understanding how all the pieces of an investment strategy fit together -- from collecting raw data to drawing a conclusion -- an investor can avoid some of the tuition that experience charges. Truth is that in investing, even the exceptions have rules.
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Earnings Estimates
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Earnings Estimates
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Earnings Estimates
How do you go about developing that first rule and then the "rules of exception" that you need in order to produce profits rather than losses from your system? It's actually less daunting than it sounds. Let me show you what I mean by taking you through a very simple rule -- how to calculate a target price using projected earnings per share and a projected price-to-earnings ratio -- and its "rules of exception."
(Laying out the "rules of exception" in setting a target price will take me two columns. Today I'll deal with the rules for earnings; in the next column I'll tackle the rules for price-to-earnings ratios.)
The formula for calculating how much a stock should be worth in a year is pretty simple. Estimate earnings per share a year from now and then multiply that number by the stock's price-to-earnings ratio. To set a target price for Tellabs (TLAB), for example, just go to Investor's Quote Detail to get the current price-to-earnings ratio (48.7). Then click on the earnings estimates section under Analyst Info for next year's earnings per share ($1.87 after a little massaging to get the time periods in line). Next June, Tellabs should be worth $91.09, a tidy 36% gain from the current price.
I use that method for calculating a target price for a stock that I'm thinking about buying. The results seem to have a satisfying precision -- Tellabs, a Jubak's Picks selection, is worth $91.09 and not a penny more or less -- and it's easy to apply this system to stock after stock. I've put the crucial numbers in a table. (Those readers with Excel can download a simple spreadsheet to do the calculation). I've included data on two other Jubak's Picks, Ascend Communications (ASND) and Texas Instruments (TXN). The numbers tell me that Ascend should trade at $55.51 a year from now -- a gain of 29%. Texas Instruments, on the other hand, will reward an investor with a 26% gain after a year. It should sell next June for $67.01. Any doubt about how to rank these three stocks? Tellabs is clearly the best buy and Texas Instruments the laggard.
Basic target-price estimate Company Current Price (5/27/98) Current P/E Projected EPS year from now Target Price Ascend (ASND) 42.94 98.00 $0.57 55.86 Tellabs (TLAB) 66.75 48.70 $1.87 91.07 Texas Instruments (TXN) 53.19 12.70 $5.28 67.06
Really? How much do I really trust these numbers? On the face of it, they don't make much sense. Why, for example, is Texas Instruments trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 12.7 and Ascend at a price-to-earnings ratio of 98 when the growth rates and the potential returns on the stocks are so different?
Time to apply the rules of exception to the earnings part of the formula. (I'll include tables and spreadsheets along the way to illustrate each step.)
Financial Statements
Ascend
Tellabs
Texas Instruments 1) Scrub the data: Is it accurate for your purposes? As is true with most investment measures, there are a number of equally "correct" ways to state earnings. Only one format, however, works well in the formula you're using now. Since you're interested in projecting the real growth of the company's business, you have to restate earnings to eliminate the effect of one-time events such as the sale of a division or a big write-down of inventory. (Investor states earnings "as reported" by the company. To restate those earnings to eliminate one-time gains, you'll have to look at the company's financial reports for the last four quarters. What to add back in or subtract is somewhat of a judgment call. If the company's basic business is showing a loss, I leave the figure alone, for example. But if that basic loss is increased by charges for laying off workers or writing off inventory, I add those amounts back in.)
Sometimes there's nothing to correct. Tellabs, for example, didn't report any one-time gains or charges in the last year. But for Ascend and Texas Instruments, the corrections are substantial. Ascend took big write-offs last year that reduced its as-reported earnings to just 48 cents over the last four quarters. Without the charges, the company earned $1.02 a share. Texas Instruments recorded a huge gain from the sale of some division -- without that, earnings were $2.12 a share instead of $4.29.
Once you've restated earnings, the stocks' current P/E ratio will change too. Ascend really trades at 45.6 times restated earnings -- not at a multiple of 98. Texas Instruments has a restated P/E ratio of 25.9, not 12.7. Both stocks, the first rule shows, trade more like the market as a whole than at first glance.
Growth Rates
Ascend
Tellabs
Texas Instruments 2) Check for historical consistency. Exactly how likely is it that the company will achieve the growth rate that analysts are projecting? Analysts look like they're actually being pretty conservative with both Tellabs and Texas Instruments if history counts for anything. Tellabs has grown earnings by 64% a year over the last five years -- but analysts are projecting just 29% growth in the next year. Texas Instruments racked up 44% earnings growth in the last five years -- the projection for next year is just 23%. (Ascend doesn't have a five-year earnings track record for comparison.)
I like to check for consistency going forward as well as backward. Analysts peg Ascend's growth for the next year at 18%, but at 39% annually over the next five years. [Want to bet that the next 5 years will be closer to 39% or 18%...] Tellabs and Texas Instruments show a remarkable consistency -- their projected five-year growth rates are within a point or two of next year's projected rate.
You can draw your own conclusions, of course, but here are mine: I think it likely that analysts are underestimating all three stocks' earnings growth. I doubt that growth at Tellabs is about to drop by half, or that Ascend will grind out just 18% for the next four quarters and then suddenly step on the gas. On the historical evidence alone, I'd up Ascend's growth for the next year by 2 percentage points to 20%, Tellabs by 5 percentage points to 34%, and Texas Instruments by 2 percentage points to 25%. You can see the resulting Target Prices in this table.
Target-price estimate with recalculated P/E and EPS Company Current Price (5/27/98) Recalculated P/E Recalculated EPS year from now Target Price Ascend (ASND) 42.94 45.60 $1.22 55.63 Tellabs (TLAB) 66.75 48.70 $1.94 94.47 Texas Instruments (TXN) 53.19 25.90 $2.65 68.64
3) Compare the variables in your formula to other data on the company. For example, it's hard to increase earnings when profit margins are falling, or when sales are flat. So I'd certainly feel more confident in my projections of earnings growth if sales and net profit margin were headed in compatible directions.
Profit Margins
Ascend
Tellabs
Texas Instruments The story looks decent at Texas Instruments -- sales have been pretty flat in the last year thanks to trouble in the personal-computer industry, the customer for the company's memory chips. But I like what the company's restructuring has done to the bottom line. Net profit climbed to 18% last year, up from the five-year average of just 8%. No reason to change my prior assessment of earnings growth for the company, I'd say.
At Tellabs, the picture is more positive. Sales growth did indeed taper off to 33% in the last year from 35% over the last five, but that's still well above the earnings growth rate I'm projecting. And margins are climbing, as they often do when sales grow and companies can spread fixed costs over a bigger revenue base. With margins climbing to 21% from 17% over the last five years, I'd tack another 2 percentage points onto the company's earnings growth rate.
Ascend doesn't have a meaningful five-year track record. But I don't see anything in the sales data for the last year to raise a flag. Sales grew by 51%, well above the earnings growth rate I'm projecting. The company's net profit margin of just 8% does concern me, but since the company is in recovery from a couple of grim quarters, I watch it carefully rather than downgrade my projections. All in all, I'll just leave my projected earnings growth rate alone.[Note: ASND operating model has profit margin in mid-20% range]
So what's the end result of applying these three "rules of exception"? The relative merits of the three stocks as investments haven't shifted much. They've each gotten a little more attractive, in fact, with the projected return on Tellabs, for example, shooting up to 44% from 36%.
Target-price estimate with further-refined EPS Estimate Company Current Price (5/27/98) Recalculated P/E Further Refined EPS Estimate Target Price Ascend (ASND) 42.94 45.60 $1.22 55.63 Tellabs (TLAB) 66.75 48.70 $1.97 95.93 Texas Instruments (TXN) 53.19 25.90 $2.65 68.64
Users with an Excel-compatible spreadsheet program can do their own calculations using the spreadsheet that was used in the calculation of these prices. (4k .xls file)
But it's too soon to draw final conclusions. We're just halfway home. I've given you some good rules for how to look at earnings and earnings growth, I hope. Next column, it's time to tackle an even thornier subject -- projecting a price-to-earnings ratio. |