Wednesday, 26 July 2017

How to find Quality Companies? (Checklist)

Here is a useful checklist you can use when you are searching for quality companies:

1.   Company's sales record.

  • You want to see high and growing sales, year after year.
  • A ten-year period of increasing sales and profits is a good sign.


2.  Company's profits.

  • You want to see high and growing profits, as measured by normalised EBIT, year after year.
  • A ten-year period of increasing sales and profits is a good sign.


3. EBIT and normalised EBIT 

  • Check that these are roughly the same in most of the last ten years.


4.  EBIT margin.  

  • The EBIT margin must be of at least 10% almost every year for the last ten years.


5,  ROCE

  • The company must have a ROCE that is consistently above 15% over the last ten years.
  • ROCE = (EBIT / average capital employed ) x 100%


6.  DuPont analysis

  • Carry out a DuPont analysis to find out what is driving a company's ROCE.
  • ROCE = EBIT/Capital Employed = (EBIT/Sales) x (Sales/Capital Employed)
  • ROCE = {Profit margin x Capital turnover)


7.  Annual report

  • Read a company's annual report to provide context for the numbers.


8.  FCFF and FCF

  • Look for a growing free cash flow to the firm (FCFF) and free cash flow for shareholders (FCF), over a period of ten years.
  • FCFF and FCF should also be roughly the same in most years.
  • That is, little debt.


9.  Operating cash conversion ratio 

  • Look for companies that turn all of their operating profits (EBIT) into operating cash flow, as represented by an operating cash conversion ratio of 100% or higher.
  • Operating cash conversion ratio = (operating cash flow / operating profit) x 100%
  • That is, high quality earnings


10.  Capex ratio

  • Look for capex ratio less than 30% almost every year over the last ten years.
  • That is, low capex requirements.
  • Capex ratio = Capex / Operating Cash Fow


11.  Compare Capex to its depreciation and amortisation expenses.

  • If the company is spending more on capex than its depreciation and amortisation expenses, it is a sign that it is spending enough but you need to be sure it isn't spending too much.


12.  FCFF/Capital Employed or CROCI

  • Check for free cash flow to firm return on capital invested that is higher than 10% almost every year over the last ten years.
  • This is also known as cash-flow return on capital invested (CROCI)
  • CROCI = adjusted free cash flow tot he firm (FCFF)/average capitl employed


13.  Compare FCFps to EPS

  • Look for free cash flow per share to be close to earnings per share in most of the last ten years.
  • That is, high quality earnings.


14.  Free cash flow dividend cover

  • Free cash flow per share should be a larger number than dividend per share in most years.
  • That is, the free cash flow dividend cover should be greater than 1.
  • Free cash flow dividend cover = FCFps / DPS
  • Occasional years when this is not the case are fine.


15.  Consistent Growth

  • Prefer more consistent growth in turnover and profit to more volatile growth.





Comments:


Don't worry if you cannot find a company that meets ALL of the criteria above.

There are some exceptional companies that do.

Typically you will not find hundreds of them.

Companies can improve and the ones that might not have been good ten years ago can be good companies now.

If you can find companies that have a high and improving ROCE and have been good at converting profits into free cash flow over the last five years, you should consider them as well.


Quality companies turn most of their profits into free cash flow on a regular basis.

The stock market is littered with companies that seemed to be profitable but turned out to be anything but.

By studying how effectively a company converts profits into free cash flow,  you can save yourself a lot of heartache and painful losses.

One of the simplest and best ways to test the quality of a company's profits (high quality earnings) and whether you think they are believable or not is to compare a company's underlying or normalised earnings per share (EPS) with its free cash flow per share (FCFps).

The free cash flow per share will show you how much surplus cash the company has left over to pay shareholders.

It can often be very different from EPS, even though it is supposed to tell you the same thing.

For many years, you want to see that free cash flow per share has been close to EPS.

Tuesday, 25 July 2017

Checking the Safety of Dividend Payments using Free Cash Flow Dividend Cover

A quick way to check whether cash flow is sufficient to pay dividends is by using the free cash flow dividend cover ratio.

This is calculated as follows:

Free cash flow dividend cover 
=  free cash flow per share / dividend per share

If free cash flow is sufficient to pay dividends then the ratio will be more than 1.

It is a goo idea to compare free cash flow per share with dividends per share over a period of 10 years.



Interpreting free cash flow dividend cover

1.  A great business generates consistent and growing free cash flows.

2.  During a company's period of heavy investment, the free cash flow may not cover its dividend.

3.  Usually, this maybe for that period and its free cash flow will soon be more than sufficient to cover dividends.

4.  When free cash flow per share exceeds the dividend per share by a big margin, it can be a sign that the company may be capable of paying a much bigger dividend in the future.

How to calculate the Free Cash Flow to Firm and Free Cash Flow to Shareholders

There are two definitions of free cash flow, both of which are useful for investors:

1.  Free cash flow to the firm (FCFF)
2.  Free cash flow for shareholders (FCF).

Free cash flow for shareholders is also referred to as free cash flow for equity.

These can be calculated very easily from a company's cash flow statement.


FCFF

To calculate FCFF, take a company's cash flows from operating activities, add dividends received from joint ventures and subtract tax paid to get the net cash flow from operations.  The subtract capex.

Net cash from operations
less Capital expenditure
add Dividends from joint ventures
= FCFF



FCF

To calculate the FCF, take the FCFF number and subtract net interest (interest received less interest paid), any preference share dividends, and dividends to minority shareholders.


FCFF
less dividends paid to minorities
less interest paid
add interest received
=FCF




When FCFF is not much different from FCF

A company with very little debt and thus, a tiny interest payment, virtually all of the free cash flow produced by the business (FCFF) becomes free cash for the shareholders (FCF).

In such a company, there is not much difference between FCFF and FCF.

This is a positive sign for investors and investors should look for this sort of situation in companies they are analysing.


When FCFF is consistently different from FCF

A company with a lot of borrowings has high interest bills to pay.

In this company, the FCFF and FCF can be consistently different for many years.

This is because the interest payments eat up a big chunk of the company's FCFF, leaving less FCF for shareholders.




Avoid companies with lots of debt

In general, it is a good idea to avoid companies with lots of debt.

  • Too much of their free cash flow to the firm can end up being paid in interest to lenders instead of to shareholders.


The one possible exception to this rule is when companies are using their free cash flows to repay debt and lower their future interest bills.

  • This can see FCF to shareholders increasing significantly in the future, which can sometimes make the shares of companies repaying debt good ones to own.



Additional notes

Free cash flow to the firm (FCFF)

The amount of cash left over to pay lenders and shareholders.

Operating cash flow less tax and capex.


Free cash flow (FCF)

The amount of cash left over after a company has paid all its non-discretionary costs.

It is the amount of cash that the company is free to pay to shareholders in a year.

Operating cash flow less tax and capex, interest paid and preference dividends.
















Sunday, 23 July 2017

Can quality be more important than price?

"It is better to pay a little too much for something that is a very good business than it is to buy some bargain but really a company without much of a future."  
- Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway.


Paying too much for a share can result in disappointing returns.

No company, no matter how good, is a buy at any price.

Share valuation is not an exact science.

Your valuation will never be exactly right.

By setting yourself some limits, you can reduce the risks that come from overpaying for shares.



Paying for a quality business can still pay off in the long run.

There is some evidence to suggest that paying what might seem to be a moderately expensive price (slightly more than the suggested maximum) for a quality business can still pay off in the long run.

The caveat here is that you have to be prepared to own shares for a very long time.  Perhaps, forever.



The way people invest is changing.

Many people are not building a portfolio of shares during their working lives to cash in when they retire.

An increasing number will have a portfolio that may remain invested for the rest of their lives.

  • For them a portfolio of high-quality shares of durable companies may help provide them with a comfortable standard of living, with the initial price paid for the shares not being too big a consideration.



Are investors under-valuing the long term value of high quality businesses?

Remember, the shares of high quality businesses are scarce.

This scarcity has a value and might mean that investors undervalue the long term value of them.

The ability of high-quality companies to earn high returns on capital for a long time can create fabulous wealth for their shareholders.

This is essentially how investors have built their fortune (such as Warren Buffett).



Challenge your thinking by answering these questions

1.   Can you list some examples of high-quality companies with high and stable returns on capital that have created substantial wealth over the last decade?

2.   Look at them carefully.  Do you agree that few, if any, of these shares could have been bought for really cheap prices?

3.   In many of these cases, do you concur that the enduring quality and continued growth of the companies could be seen to have been more important than the initial price paid for them?




How to value shares (checklist)

Here is a checklist to remind me of the process when valuing shares:

1.  Value the companies using an estimate of their cash profits.
  • What is the cash yield a company is offering at the current share price?
  • Is it high enough?
2.  Calculate the company's earnings power value (EPV).
  • How much of a company's share price is explained by its current profits?
  • How much is dependent on future profits growth
  • If more than half of the current share price is dependent on future profits growth, do not buy these shares.
3.  What is the maximum price you will pay for a share.
  • You should try and buy shares for less than this value.  
  • Apply a discount of at least 15%.
  • The interest rate applied to calculate the maximum price should be at least 3% more than the rate of inflation.
4.  To pay a price at or beyond the valuations above, you must be confident in the company's ability of continuing future profits growth (quality growth companies).
  • The higher the price paid for profits/turnover/growth, the more risk you are taking with your investment.
  • If profits stop growing, then paying an expensive price for a share can lead to substantial losses.




Additional notes:

Investing using checklists is a very powerful method.

It focuses your thinking and guides you in the investing process.

If you are to be a successful investor in shares, you need to pay particular attention to the price you for for them.

  • The biggest risk you face is paying too much.
  • It is important to remember that no matter how good a company is, its shares are not a buy at any price.

Paying the right price is just as important as finding a high quality and safe company.

  • Overpaying for a share makes your investment less safe and exposes you to the risk of losing money.

Also, do not be too mean with the price you are prepared to pay for a share.

  • Obviously you want to buy a share as cheaply as possible, but you should also realise that you usually have to pay up for quality.
  • Waiting to buy quality shares for very cheap prices may mean that you end up missing out on some very good investments.
  • Some shares can take years to become cheap and many never do.

Friday, 21 July 2017

Comparing average capex spending with depreciation and amortization.

1.   Where depreciation and amortization <<< capex

In some cases, the annual depreciation and amortization expense is a lot less than the average five- or  ten-year capex.#

This is the case in asset intensive companies.

When you see this, you have two good reasons against investing in them.  It should not be surprising that these companies

  • have very poor free cash flow track records and 
  • modest ROCE performances.

Avoid these companies, unless they have been able to produce a good ROCE whilst investing heavily.


2.  Where depreciation and amortization >>> capex.

Normally, you should be suspicious of companies with this kind of behaviour.

Is this a company that has been under-investing?

If yes, this could hurt its ability to make more money in the future.

However, you need to study the company's history on this issue to make sure that it is not under-investing.

Some companies have to spread the cost of things over their useful lives, (for example the costs of a TV channel such as licences, customer contracts, software and programme libraries), which don't need to be matched by outflows of cash every year.   



# As a rough rule of thumb, if the five-year capex figure is higher than the ten-year average, you should use the higher figure.

Charlie Munger's opinion of Benjamin Graham's deep Value Investing

Why Charlie Munger Hates Value Investing


When Charlie Munger ( Trades , Portfolio ) came to Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK.A)(NYSE:BRK.B) in the late '60s, Warren Buffett (Trades, Portfolio) was still running the business and investing how his teacher, Benjamin Graham, had taught him to - by buying a selection of cigar butt type companies and holding for many years.


Unlike Buffett, who had essentially grown up under Graham's wing, Munger had no such attachment to the godfather of value investing. Instead, Munger seems actually to dislike deep value investing:
"I don't love Ben Graham and his ideas the way Warren does. You have to understand, to Warren - who discovered him at such a young age and then went to work for him - Ben Graham's insights changed his whole life, and he spent much of his early years worshiping the master at close range. But I have to say, Ben Graham had a lot to learn as an investor. 
"I think Ben Graham wasn't nearly as good an investor as Warren Buffett is or even as good as I am. Buying those cheap, cigar-butt stocks was a snare and a delusion, and it would never work with the kinds of sums of money we have. You can't do it with billions of dollars or even many millions of dollars. But he was a very good writer and a very good teacher and a brilliant man, one of the only intellectuals - probably the only intellectual - in the investing business at the time." - Charlie Munger, The Wall Street Journal September 2014
When he arrived at Berkshire, Munger actively tried to push Buffett away from deep value toward quality at a reasonable price, which he did with much success.

All you need to do is to look at Buffett's acquisition of See's Candies in the late 1960s to realize that without Munger's quality over value influence on Buffett, Berkshire wouldn't have become the American corporate giant it is today.



A love of high quality

Munger always had a fascination with buying high-quality businesses, and in the early days, his style differed greatly from that of Buffett. He always placed a premium on the intangible assets of a company, those assets that had no financial value to other companies but were worth billions in the right hands.
"Munger bought cigar butts, did arbitrage, even acquired small businesses. He said to Ed Anderson, 'I just like the great businesses.' He told Anderson to write up companies like Allergan ( AGN ), the contact-lens-solution maker. Anderson misunderstood and wrote a Grahamian report emphasizing the company's balance sheet. Munger dressed him down for it; he wanted to hear about the intangible qualities of Allergan: the strength of its management, the durability of its brand, what it would take for someone else to compete with it. 
" Munger had invested in a Caterpillar ( CAT ) tractor dealership and saw how it gobbled up money, which sat in the yard in the form of slow-selling tractors. Munger wanted to own a business that did not require continual investment and spat out more cash than it consumed. Munger was always asking people, 'What's the best business you've ever heard of?'" - "The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life" by Alice Schroeder
Munger understood that it's these businesses where big money is made as the high returns on capital, and a nonexistent need for capital investment ensures shareholders are well rewarded over the long term.

For example, in his 1995 speech, "A Lesson on Elementary, Worldly Wisdom As It Relates to Investment Management & Business," Munger said:
"We've really made the money out of high-quality businesses. In some cases, we bought the whole business. And in some cases, we just bought a big block of stock. But when you analyze what happened, the big money's been made in the high quality businesses. And most of the other people who've made a lot of money have done so in high quality businesses. 
" Over the long term, it's hard for a stock to earn a much better return than the business which underlies it earns. If the business earns 6% on capital over 40 years and you hold it for that 40 years, you're not going to make much different than a 6% return -even if you originally buy it at a huge discount. Conversely, if a business earns 18% on capital over 20 or 30 years, even if you pay an expensive-looking price, you'll end up with a fine result. 
" So the trick is getting into better businesses. And that involves all of these advantages of scale that you could consider momentum effects."
Buffett added some meat to this statement at the 2003 Berkshire Hathaway meeting:
"The ideal business is one that generates very high returns on capital and can invest that capital back into the business at equally high rates. Imagine a $100 million business that earns 20% in one year, reinvests the $20 million profit and in the next year earns 20% of $120 million and so forth. But there are very very few businesses like this. Coke ( KO ) has high returns on capital, but incremental capital doesn't earn anything like its current returns. We love businesses that can earn high rates on even more capital than it earns. Most of our businesses generate lots of money but can't generate high returns on incremental capital - for example, See's and Buffalo News. We look for them [areas to wisely reinvest capital], but they don't exist."
These quotes do a great job of summing up Munger and Buffett's investment strategy. Even though there are thousands of pages of investment commentary from both of these billionaires, their investment style can be summed up with the simple description of quality at a reasonable price, and the above quotes show exactly why they've both decided this style is best.



By: GuruFocus

http://www.nasdaq.com/aspx/stockmarketnewsstoryprint.aspx?storyid=why-charlie-munger-hates-value-investing-cm774232

Calculating Owner Earnings of Buffett or the Company's Cash Profits

Buffett in his 1986 letter to shareholders described how he worked out what he called the "owner earnings".   

This is also referred to as the cash profits of a business.

Buffett believed the reported profits of a business were not a conservative estimate of the amount of money that really belonged to the shareholders of a business.



How to calculate owner earnings or cash profits of a business?

Owner earnings are calculated as follows:

Owner earnings =   net income
                               + depreciation & amortisation
                               + other non cash item
                               - maintainance capital expenditure.


Buffett's view was that the amount of money a company needed to spend to maintain its competitive position (known as maintainance, or stay in business, capex) often exceeded the depreciation and amortisation expense, and therefore profits were overstated.

Also, if a business needed extra working capital (more stocks, or more generous credit terms to customers), this should be added to the maintainance capex figure.



The difference between Owner Earning of Buffett and FCF

Generally speaking, in the owner earnings of Buffett or cash profits of a business, the calculation ignores changes in working capital that are included in free cash flow.



Hardest part of calculating owner earnings is estimating maintainance or stay in capex

The hardest part of this calculation is trying to estimate what maintainance or stay in business capex is.

As a company outsider without intimate knowledge of its assets and their condition it is virtually impossible for you to be exactly right on this.

But the good thing is, you don't need to.

The whole purpose is to get a figure for the amount of cash needed to keep fixed assets in good working order so that you can then have a conservative estimate of cash profits to value a company

Basing your valuation on a conservative figure is more prudent and lowers your changes of paying too much for a share, which in turn lowers your investment risk.

(Additional notes below)



What to do when the owner earnings or cash profits of a business are negative?

If you come across a company that looks as if it is losing money when estimating its cash profits you need to either
  • do some more research to see if you have missed something - such as the company investing in lots of new assets rather than replacing them - or 
  • look for another share to buy.


Summary:

In summary, here is what you need to do in calculating owner earnings or company's cash profits:

1.  Take the company's most recent annual underlying or normalised net income/profit.

2.  Add back depreciation and amortization.

3.  Take away an estimate of stay in business capex.

4.  Divide by the weighted average number of shares in issue for the latest financial year to get an estimate of cash profit per share.


Knowing a company's cash profits, we can use these to value shares.  




Additional Notes:

How do you get an estimate of stay in or maintainance business capex?

There are 3 reasonable methods:

1.  The company tells you.

Some companies are very good at simply stating what the figure is.  They give this figure in their annual reports.

2.  Use a multiple of the current depreciation or amortization expense.

Use a figure that is bigger than this, such as 120%.  This can be a reasonable estimate, sometimes.

For some companies, it can be way off if the cost of replacing assets is falling.

3.  Use a five or ten-year average of capital expenditure or capex.

This is likely to include money spent to grow a business but these assets will need to be replaced in the future and so this could provide a good proxy for cash needed to stay in business.

This is a good approach to use if the company does not state the figure outright.





Thursday, 20 July 2017

Do you always avoid all companies with large amounts of debt?

In an ideal world, you will select to invest in companies that produce consistently high returns and have low levels of debt.

This is the essence of quality and safe investing.

Do you always avoid all companies with large amounts of debt?

Not necessarily.



When larger debts are not a problem

There are some companies which can cope with higher levels of debt and still potentially make good investments.

These are companies with very stable and predictable profits and cash flows.

They have consistently high debt to total asset ratio and quite low levels of interest cover, and yet, they have many of the hallmarks of a quality company.

They have

  • grown their sales, profits (EBIT) and free cash flows, 
  • whilst maintaining high profit margins (EBIT margins) and 
  • very good levels of ROCE.


The general point is:  if a company shows it can continue to increase turnover and EBIT - sales and profit - year after year, whilst holding high levels of debt, this can still be regarded as a quality company and potentially a good investment.


Tuesday, 18 July 2017

Is negative free cash flow always bad?


The best companies to buy are ones that have large and growing amounts of free cash flow.

One possible drawback of this approach:  you will ignore companies with small or even negative free cash flows because they are investing heavily in new assets to grow their future sales, profits and operating cash flows.




Should you ignore companies like this?

Ideally, you will try to find companies that don't need to spend a lot of capex to grow.

However, if you come across what appears to be a quality company that is spending a lot of money, then you need to make sure the company is getting a good return on that investment.

You need to look at the trend in ROCE at the same time as you are looking at free cash flow.

If ROCE is high and rising whilst a company is spending heavily then the company could start generating lots of free cash flow when its spending settles down - if it ever does.

The main issue is how much money the company needs to spend to maintain its assets in a steady state.

The point here is that you might be making a mistake by ignoring companies with low or negative free cash flow.

There could be a great cash flow business waiting to blossom.




Four simple rules

Four simple rules when comparing FCF per share with EPS when looking for possible investment candidates:

1.  FCFps is 80% or more of EPS = definite candidate

2.  FCFps is less than 80% of EPS and ROCE is increasing = possible candidate

3.  FCFps is less than 80% of EPS but ROCE is falling = avoid

4.  FCFps is consistently negative = avoid


The free cash flow per share figure is all-revealing:  you want to see quality companies with a consistently similar EPS and FCFps, not companies where these numbers are markedly different.




Sunday, 16 July 2017

Sell the losers and let the winners keep riding


For long term investing success it is important to ride a winner. 

Ever so often, investors make profits by selling their appreciated online stocks, but hold onto stocks that have declined in hopes of a rebound. 

If an investor doesn't know when it's time to let go of hopeless stocks, he or she can, in the worst-case scenario, see the stock sink to the point where it is almost worthless. 

Of course, the idea of holding onto high-quality investments while selling the poor ones is great in theory, but hard to put into practice.

If you have a personal preference to sell after a stock has increased by a certain multiple - say three, for instance - you may never fully ride out a winner. 

No one in the history of investing with a "sell-after-I-have-tripled-my-money" mentality has ever succeeded.

Don't underestimate a stock that is performing well by sticking to some rigid personal rule - if you don't have a good understanding of the potential of your investments, your personal rules may end up being arbitrary and too limiting.

The Basics of Share Valuation

You can only make money from investing in shares of good quality companies if you pay the right price for the shares.

A common mistake by investors is to think that buying quality companies is all that matters and the price paid for the shares is irrelevant.

Paying too high a price for a share is one of the biggest risks that you can take as an investor.

It is just as bad as investing in a poor-quality company in the first place.

The key to successful long-term investing is buying good companies at good prices.



Valuation

The price of a share is crucial to your long-term investing success.

You will need to learn how to value the shares of companies and set target prices for buying and selling them.

The valuation of shares can become a very complicated exercise.

There are lots of books out there on this subject and many make the process seem difficult to understand.

The good news is that it doesn't have to be this way.

Valuing shares is not a precise science: you only need to be roughly right and err on the side of caution.

The place to start is looking at the fair value of a share.



The fair value of a share

Professional analysts and investors spend lots of time trying to work out how much a share of a company is really worth.

To do this they need to estimate how much free cash flow the company will produce for its shareholders for the rest of its life and put a value on that in today's money, which is known as a present value.

This approach is known as a discounted cash flow (DCF) valuation.

There are three steps to doing a DCF valuation:

1.  Estimate free cash flow per share for a period of future years.
Most analysts would probably try to forecast 10 years of future free cash flows.

2.  Choose what interest rate you want to receive in order to invest in the shares.
Shares are risky investments - more risky than savings accounts and most bonds - and so people demand to receive a higher interest rate in order to invest in them.

3.  Estimate what the value of the shares might be in 10 years' time and give that a value in today's money.
This is the terminal value and it stops you having to estimate free cash flows forever.  

Measuring a company's debt

There are lots of ratios which can be used to explain a company's debt position.

For most investors the following four will tell what they need to know:

  1. Debt to free cash flow.
  2. Debt to net operating cash flow.
  3. Debt to assets.
  4. Interest cover.
These ratios only deal with debt shown on a company's balance sheet.

Investors must also be aware and be able to deal with hidden, or off-balance sheet, debts too.


1.  Debt to free cash flow

Debt to free cash flow tells you how many years it would take to repay all a company's debt with the current rate of free cash flow it is producing.

The lower the number, the better, as a lower number means that a company can repay its debt quickly.

You should rarely look at a company with a debt to free cash flow ratio that has been consistently more than 10.

Debt to free cash flow is calculated as follows:  

debt to free cash flow = total borrowings / free cash flow

This ratio can give a high number for two reasons:
  • high debt or
  • low free cash flow.

It will give a negative number if a company has negative free cash flow.

Like all ratios, it is best looked at over a number of years to see if it is normal for a company to have a high value or it it is a recent trend.

Companies with low debt to free cash flow have enough free cash flow to pay off all their borrowings in a matter of months.

Property, pubs and utility companies normally have high levels of debt as they are deemed to have sufficiently stable cash flows to support it.

Example:  

Company X would take 200 years to repay its debts based on its current free cash flows.

Debt to free cash flow = 200.

This is not normal given its recent history.

This would suggest that you need to investigate what is going on.
  • Has debt surged?
  • Has free cash flow plummeted?
  • Does the management have a plan to reduced debt and increase free cash flow?



2.  Debt to net operating cash flow

Net operating cash flow is the amount of cash a company has from trading after it has paid its taxes.

By comparing this number with the total amount of debt, you can see how long it would take the company to pay back the debt if it stopped investing in its assets.

The lower the number, the better.

It is calculated as follows:

debt to net operating cash flow = total borrowings / net operating cash flow

This is the worst-case scenario test.

This ratio assumes the company spends nothing at all on maintaining its assets for a period of time.

This only happen for a couple of years for most companies before their assets become worn out and lose their ability to make money.

Therefore, with most companies, you want to see a debt to net operating cash flow ratio of less than 3.

Value for this ratio of over 5, indicates companies with significant amounts of debt relative to their cash flows.

Companies with poor profits and cash flows have high debt to net operating cash flow and have increased financial risk.


3.  Debt to assets

Debt to assets tells what percentage of a company's assets is taken up by debt.

The higher the percentage, the more risky a company generally is.

It is calculated as follows:

debt to assets = total borrowings / total assets

Generally speaking, avoid companies where the debt to total assets ratio is more than 50%.

This is one of the reasons why shares of banks can be extremely risky, as debt to assets ratios are over 90% in 2016.

Company with a very low percentage of debt to its total assets is a good sign.  


4.  Interest cover

Interest cover is not a measure of debt, but a measure of how many times a company's annual trading profits (EBIT) can pay the interest on its debt.  

The higher the number, the safer the company is.

Interest cover is calculated as follows:

interest cover = EBIT / interest payable

Look for a figure of at least five times, however, prefer to invest in companies where the ratio is 10 or more.

Danger zone is when the interest cover falls to 3 or less.

Excluding utility companies and property companies which have high levels of debt - and therefore low interest cover - a figure of 5 means that profits can fall by at least 40% before the ratio starts getting into the danger zone of interest cover of 3 or less.




Summary:

For most investors the following four will tell what they need to know:

1.  Debt to free cash flow.
Avoid if Ratio > 10
Good if Ratio < 10
Lower the better

2.  Debt to net operating cash flow.
Avoid if Ratio > 5
Good if Ratio < 3
Lower the better

3.  Debt to assets.
Avoid if Ratio > 50%
Good if Ratio < 50%
Lower the better

4.  Interest cover.
Avoid if <3:1 div="">
Good if > 5:1
Higher the better





Using debt ratios to analyse companies

The debt measure ratios for five companies.

Name   Debt to OPCF   Debt/FCF   Interest Cover   Debt/Total Asset
A          7.8                     22.9                 1.8                 162.0%
B           0.2                      0.2             213.9                     6.7%
C           6.5                    47.9                 2.1                   43.3%
D           2.5                      4.1                 6.8                   44.3%
E           6.4                     39.1                 2.5                   58.1%


Company A
This company's debt would take nearly 23 years to pay back.  Debt/FCF = 22.9
Its profits cover its interest payments less than twice.  Interest cover = 1.8x.
This kind of situation represents a risk of going bankrupt if profits were to deteriorate.
This would be enough to put investors off buying its shares.

Company B
This company operates a chain of fast food pizza chain.
It has very low levels of debt on its balance sheet.  Debt/Total Asset = 6.7%.
It could repay all its borrowings in less than three months based on its current free cash flow - Debt/FCF = 0.2.
It has no problems paying the interest on it.  Interest cover is 213.9x.
This is a kind of company investors might want to own shares in.

Company C
This company is in the pub business.
Pub companies are frequently financed with high levels of debt.
These companies can also tend to be quite poor at producing lots of free cash flow, as they have to keep spending money to keep their pubs in good conditions. (Heavy capital expenditure).
This makes them quite risky investments for shareholders when times get tough and profits fall.
These companies are often forced to sell their assets - pubs - to repay debts.

Company E
This is a water company (utility company).
Water companies are financed with lots of debt.  Debt/Total Asset = 58.1%.
This is not usually a problem given that they have very stable and predictable profits and cash flows.
Water is not the kind of product that tends to see demand change if the economy changes.
However, if investors are building a portfolio of quality companies with high free cash flows and ROCE, then it is unlikely that they will own shares of water companies.
This is because the returns they can earn are capped by industry regulators, which means they have very low ROCE.

Company D 
This is a hotel chain company.
Its business is conservatively financed and meets investors' target debt criteria.




How to avoid bad investments?

Picking winning shares is something every investor naturally wants to do.

However, success in investing is just as much about avoiding bad investments and minimising the risks that you take with your money.

Investors spend too much time thinking about how much money they can potentially make from owning a share and not enough time thinking about how much money they could lose if things go wrong.

Avoiding bad investments is important because they are hard to recover from.  If you lose 50% of your money invested, you need to find an investment that will double in value just to get the value of your portfolio back to where it started.

The more bad investment you can avoid, the better your long-term investment performance is likely to be.



How do you stay away from bad investments?


1.   The first thing to do is to focus your investments on quality companies with the following characteristics:

  • A consistent track record of increasing sales and profits.
  • High returns on capital employed (ROCE).
  • An ability to turn a high proportion of profits into free cash flow.

2.  Arguably, the biggest danger that shareholders face when investing in a business is the company's debt.  

The investor must learn how to analyse a company's debts and to distinguish between safe and dangerous companies.  

This will help the investor to stay away from risky investments that have the potential to damage his/her wealth.

Saturday, 15 July 2017

Don't use the PE ratio

The price to earnings ratio (PE) s the most commonly used valuation yardstick by investors.

It is very easy to calculate.

PE ratio = share price / earnings per share (EPS)


In simple terms, shares with high PE ratios are seen as being expensive whilst those with low ones are seen as being cheaper.

Despite its simplicity, PE ratio has many pitfalls that can give investors a misleading view of how cheap or expensive some share really are.

The PE ratio's drawbacks are all to do with the "E" or EPS, part of the calculation


1.  EPS is easy to manipulate.

Companies can boost EPS by changing accounting policies.

For example, they can extend the useful lives of fixed assets such as plant and machinery, which lowers the depreciation expense and boosts profits.

2.  EPS says nothing about the quality of profits.

It doesn't take into account whether profits have changed due to sales of existing products or services - the best source of profits growth - or whether the company has invested heavily in new assets or bought another company (acquisition).

Share buybacks boost EPS by shrinking the number of shares outstanding, even if profits are static or shrinking.  Buyback can be done when the shares are expensive.  By paying too much, a large chunk of shareholder value is destroyed; the cash spent is wasted.

3.  EPS may not resemble true cash profits.

Quite often a company's true cash profits are significantly more or less than its EPS (more often less).

4.  EPS may be based on profits that are unsustainably high or temporarily low.

This means that the PE ratio could be misleadingly low or high.  

This is a particular problem for cyclical companies.



Summary:

For the above reasons, EPS can be unreliable and you should not rely on PE alone.

Once again, PE has may pitfalls that can give investors a misleading view of how cheap or expensive some shares really are.

Friday, 14 July 2017

Forget Profit, Cash Flow is King


Forget About Profit,
Cash Flow Is King
In the second quarter of 2011, nonfinancial companies in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index generated $158 billion in cash flow from their operations after accounting for capital spending, a 13.6% increase from a year earlier, according to data gathered by S&P Capital IQ.
The figure also represents a 60.4% increase from the first quarter of 2009, a recent low, as companies navigated the depths of the recession.
That improvement is a testament to the pains U.S. companies have been taking to ensure their cash is coming in more quickly than it's going out.
The ability to generate cash may be the most important measure of a business's health.
Plenty of companies with paper profits have failed because they lacked the cash to keep operating.
At the most basic level, companies improve cash flow by collecting receivables more quickly and paying bills more slowly. If money is going out faster than it's coming in, a company must find a way to fund operations for those days in between.
The choices include cash on hand, bank financing or funds raised in the capital markets. The recent credit crunch threatened to stall even profitable companies because it left the latter two options so badly impaired.
One advantage to tracking cash flow from operations is that it has a clear accounting definition. That means it can be compared on an apples-to-apples basis from company to company.
Cash flow can also serve as the basis for calculating the corporate equivalent of disposable income. Subtracting capital expenditures—or critical investments in things like plants and machinery—from a company's cash flow shows how much of its resources are left available for such purposes as paying dividends, financing buybacks, making acquisition or funding other investments. 

Wednesday, 12 July 2017

Good Investing - Buy great companies at reasonable prices and holding them for the long term

Being able to think independently is the best way to invest successfully.

There are two ways to value investing.

1.  Graham type value investing (Classic Value Investing).

One approach involves buying shares in beaten-up companies whose share prices had become depressed and looked cheap.

Occasionally, some investments would pay off, but more often than not they didn't.

These shares can be cheap for a reason; they are shares of bad or mediocre companies.

You are unlikely to get a great tasting wine when you buy a cheap bottle of wine.

2.  Buying growing high quality companies at reasonable prices  (Growth Investing)

The better investing is about investing in great companies buy buying their shares at reasonable prices and holding on to them for a long time.

Great companies generate high levels of profits or cash flows on the money they invest.

The investor's job is to buy the shares of these companies when their share prices offer you an acceptable return on your investment.

Combining quality companies and a reasonable purchase price, and adding in the factor of time, put one well on the way to a successful investing career.


Portfolio Management

You do not need to know everything about a company to be a successful investor.

In fact, too much information can be bad for you.

If you have a company's latest annual report and its current share price you have all the information you need to invest profitably.

From this information, you can work out
  • whether the company is good or bad, (Is it a quality business?)
  • whether it is safe or dangerous,  (Is it a safe business? ) and 
  • whether its shares are cheap or expensive. (Are its shares cheap enough - are they good value?)
The investor armed with annual reports and a thorough approach, can gain an advantage over many analysts.

Doing in-depth analysis for companies you are considering as investments will empower you with knowledge and understanding about a company which less diligent investors will not be aware of.

Investors do not need to own lots of companies.

A portfolio of 10 to 15 companies spread across different industries is sufficient to get good, diversified investment results.

You must be confident in trusting your own judgement whilst ignoring the huge amount of noise and chatter that goes on in the investing world.


Tuesday, 11 July 2017

Paying the right price is just as important as finding a high-quality and safe company. Don't be too mean either lest you miss out on some very good investments.

Most people lose money in the stock market because:

  1. they buy stocks that are of poor quality, and,
  2. they overpay for these stocks.



Paying the right price is just as important as finding a high-quality and safe company

If you are to be a successful investor in shares, you need to pay particular attention to the price you pay for them.

The biggest risk you face is paying too much.

It is important to remember that no matter how good a company is, its shares are not a buy at any price.

Paying the right price is just as important as finding a high-quality and safe company.  

Overpaying for a share makes your investment less safe and exposes you to the risk of losing money.



Be careful, don't be too mean with the price

Be careful not to be too mean with the price you are prepared to  pay for a share.

Obviously you want to buy a share as cheaply as possible, but bear in mind that you usually have to pay up for quality.

Waiting to buy quality shares for very cheap prices may mean that you end up missing out on some very good investments.

Some shares can take years to become cheap and many never do.



Additional notes:

Can quality be more important than price?

1.  Paying too much for a share can result in disappointing returns.  No company, no matter how good, is a buy at any price.

2.   You need to know how to work out how much to pay for the shares of quality companies.  Bear in mind share valuation is not an exact science.  Your valuation will never be exactly right, but by setting yourself some limits, you can reduce the risks that come from overpaying for shares.

3.  There is some evidence to suggest that paying what might seem to be a moderately expensive price (slightly more than the suggested maximum) for a quality business can still pay off in the long run.  The caveat here is that you have to be prepared to own shares for a very long time.  Perhaps, forever.


 How is the way people invest changing?

1.  Many people are not building a portfolio of shares during their working lives  to cash in when they retire.  An increasing number will have a portfolio that may remain invested for the rest of their lives.

2.  For them, a portfolio of high-quality shares of durable companies may help provide them with a comfortable standard of living, with the initial price paid for the shares not being too big a consideration.

3.  Despite trying to put a precise value on a share, we have to remember that the shares of high-quality businesses are scarce.  This scarcity has a value and might men that investors undervalue the long-term value of them.

4.  The ability of high-quality companies to earn high returns on capital for a long time can create fabulous wealth for their shareholders.  This is essentially how investors such as Warren Buffett have built their fortune.