Showing posts with label Balance sheet research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Balance sheet research. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Benjamin Graham Balance sheet research part 2

Lesson 9 Balance sheet part 2

Current ratio was the most important figure for Graham, at least when he published the book Security Analysis. It measures the liquidity and financial buffers. He thought this ratio was a reasonably accurate view of how much money could the owners get by liquidating the company. There are three possible reasons and their combinations why the market cap is less than the possible liquidating value:

  1. The price that market offers is too low
  2. The company´s directors have made serious mistakes.
  3. The owners have a wrong attitude toward there assets.

You should remember that debts are real and the value of assets has to be disputed. You also have to remember that there is no possibility to define the exact liquidation value. This value needs to be compared with the price the market is offering. If your valuation is close to the market price, you can´t make any conclusions. The liquidation is in the best use in the situation where the company or some of it´s parts need to be liquidated. When the company has economic difficulties, the most productive parts of the company will be sold in fraction of their real value. When there is no such need, the liquidation values are much higher.

Graham had some simple ways of valuing the company assets:

  • Cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities 100% of book value
  • Receivables 75-90%, approximately 80% on average
  • Inventories 50-75%, approximately 2/3 on average
  • Others like real estate, intangible assets, and machinery, 1-50%, 15% on average

Of course, these are just approximate numbers, but it is better to be roughly right than completely wrong. Getting these numbers is more an art than science, except the cash and marketable securities part of valuation. These numbers also depend on the industry. The values of Inventories in the electronics industry become obsolete very fast compared to some other industries. And the inventories of the oil refineries can become more expensive, when oil prices increases. Machinery can also become worthless before all the depreciation has affected the assets in the assets. Intangible assets are hard to evaluate. Sometimes brands are much more valuable than what is their worth in the assets. You can find more exact information from the Graham´s book Security Analysis.

It is hard to find businesses that has undervalued assets in modern days. Most undervaluations come from intangible assets and their values are hard to define. Most often, companies with undervalued assets are found after a longer decline of the market prices. Graham thought you should sell the business, if the price in the markets has been a lot more lower than the liquidation value. In this case, you should ask yourself that is there any basis for keeping a company public or what should the directors do to correct the undervaluation. This can happen in three ways of a combination of them:

  1. Improving the earnings power. It can happen through the improvement of the business conditions of the industry or changing the business into more productive by having new directors or trusting the current ones. It is most probable that new directors can achieve this change.
  2. Through mergers or acquisitions. Directors of the other company might have better chances to change the business into better direction. There can also have some synergies by having a bigger business.
  3. A public offer for the company or for its parts

Stock price that is well below the liquidation value of the company doesn´t automatically mean that you should buy the stock of an individual company. Instead of buying individuals stocks, Graham recommended to buy a diversified portfolio in which all the stocks are bought below liquidation values. It is clear that not all these kind of stocks are worth buying. They won´t fulfill all the expectations. As an investor, you are still pretty much in the safe place, because you shouldn´t be too worried about losing all your money. Graham also mentioned that you should still be sure to do your homework before buying. These companies should have shown so much earnings power in the past compared to market price today that they are not destroying the assets in the balance sheet. For some reason Graham had an image that these companies were the most successful, when the market prices weren´t in their highs or lows.

I hope you can find some time to think about Graham´s simple ways of valuing the company assets. Do you find them applicable in today´s world?

-TT

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Benjamin Graham Lesson 8 Balance sheet research

The balance sheet tells you about the assets and liabilities of the company at some point of time. It can also show how it has changed over a period of time. You should evaluate it critically. Graham says you should accept the company´s figures about liabilities. The real value of the assets can be different than company has announced. The value of some fixed assets, such as inventories are not always the same as found from the balance sheet. Some of them can have the same value company paid for them even though they are worthless. Intangible assets such as, mental capital of the employees and brand value are hard to evaluate. They can be either much undervalued or overvalued. Most often they are overvalued. You have to use your own judgment about the worth of such assets.

As an analyst, you will benefit at least in four ways. First, you can define the character and the amount of the resources that are used in a business. These resources are the basis of the earnings in the economically survivable business. A business without proper resources cannot have any significant earnings in a competitive industry. You can also use the balance sheet to find out how much an owner of a business can get from the liquidation of the company´s assets, when the business is not survivable.

Second, you can also use the resources in the balance sheet to figure out the character and stability of the company´s sources of income. Graham thought that the return of assets can only seldom create more income than the cost of capital. He believed that earnings estimates that are only supported by the balance sheet are realistic and accurate enough. The earnings of the business are short-lived unless the balance sheet support them. Graham believed that bigger profit margins were tempting for new competitors without a need for a strong balance sheet.

Third, the liabilities tell an analyst about the sources of financing and economical situation. The large amount of recurring debt or nonrecurring debt that needs to be paid in few years refers to coming financial problems. Even small variations can lead to a significant losses of enterprise value. Fourth, the changes in the balance sheet tells you about the quality of the earnings.
Cash flows should reflect on the changes in economic situations in the companies. You have to remember that balance sheet tells you the situation about the assets and liabilities right now. Without following the changes in the balance sheet, you cannot evaluate the development of the business and how it should happen in the future.

You can make an estimation about the value of the balance sheet in many ways. Graham had three different ways of doing it. He used a book value, a quick ratio, and current ratio. Graham defined a book value by adding all the fixed assets together and subtracts them with all the liabilities, preferred stocks, and their liabilities. Quick ratio adds up the cash and cash equivalents, and divide them with all the liabilities and preferred stocks. Cash includes all the marketable securities, etc. Current ratio adds up all the current assets and divides them with current liabilities.

Graham had mixed attitudes toward the book value during his investment career. He first ignored the book value in a book Security Analysis, because he thought that companies reported flawed estimated about the values of the assets in the balance sheet. On the other hand, he uses book values later in his career, when he was trying to find right securities for his diversified portfolio. He also believed that you should check the book value if you are interested about the stock of a company and want to make an estimation how much you should pay for it. You should never take a company´s valuation by itself. You have to know Quick ratio for a stock is seldom larger than how much you have to pay for it in the markets. These situations can be valuable for the investor, unless a company has large losses.

I hope you will find time to search through a balance sheet of a company for the last business cycle. You should find out how assets and liabilities have progressed through the cycle. Then make your own conclusions about them. For example find out if they have any discontinuities? If so, why?

-TT