In the first quarter of 2014, S&P 500 companies repurchased
about $160 billion of their own shares. Companies may be motivated to
repurchase shares because of slow domestic growth, which can make share
repurchases an attractive alternative for corporations. Another
motivation mentioned in the article is that share repurchases may be
used to readjust a company's capital structure. In the past several
years, the stock market has increased in value, which has likely
increased the equity weight of a company's capital structure. As a
result, a company's capital structure may be too heavily tilted toward
equity. A share repurchase can reduce the equity, thus restoring the
capital structure to the optimal level.
A point about share repurchases addressed in the article that is particularly near and dear to us is research that finds companies are not particularly good investors.
In fact, companies tend to undertake repurchases when company stock
valuation is at a peak instead of when company stock is undervalued. One
reason for this contradiction may be that as company performance
increases, cash held by the company increases, as well as the stock
price. As a result, companies have cash available when its stock price
is high, which is the worst time to buy stock.
Thursday, July 31, 2014
The Value Of Stock Splits
In the textbook, we argued that stock splits appear to have no value
to either shareholders or corporations. However, it appears that our
analysis may be incorrect and there could well be an important advantage
from stock splits that accrues to management.
Monday, July 28, 2014
Ratio Valuation Of The Clippers
Steve Ballmer's $2 billion bid for the Los Angeles Clippers shocked many people. Leaked court documents
show why. Ballmer's bid was 12.1 times revenues (Price/sales ratio).
For the last 25 NBA teams that were sold, only four have sold at a ratio
above 4.0, and none had a ratio above 5.0. Similarly, the $2 billion
bid price implies an EBITDA multiple of 12.1 times, while the league
average has been 6.0 to 6.4 times EBITDA. All in all, it appears that
Ballmer is willing to pay a high price for the Clippers, at least
relative to revenue and EBITDA.
Another Big Mac
Even though we discussed the most recent Big Mac Index yesterday, this article caught our eye. As you will see, the article discusses how the valuation of
the dollar has changed over the past several years based on the price
of Big Macs. For example, the average value of a basket of foreign
currencies against the U.S dollar was about neutral in 2009. Based on
the recent Big Mac Index, foreign currencies are about 15 percent
undervalued against the dollar now. Several currencies have had wild
fluctuations, including the euro, which was as much as 50 percent
overvalued in 2008 and is now about fair value, and the yen, which has
gone from fair value to 24 percent undervalued.
Saturday, July 26, 2014
The Big Mac Index
The 2014 Big Mac Index at The Economist
is out and the average price of a Big Mac in the U.S. is $4.80. Norway
has the most expensive Big Mac at $7.76 and the Ukraine has the cheapest
Big Mac at $1.63. According to the Big Mac Index, five currencies are
overvalued relative to the U.S. dollar by ay least 10 percent and 29
currencies are undervalued by at least 10 percent. Remember, the Big Mac
Index is based off absolute purchasing power, which may not hold. For a
video explanation of purchasing power parity, check out this video at Yahoo! Finance.
Friday, July 25, 2014
2014 Working Capital Survey
CFO just published the 2014 working capital survey
by REL Consulting. The report indicates that the average days working
capital decreased only .2 days over the past year. REL's analysis
indicates that the 1,000 large U.S. companies included in the survey
could reduce payables and receivables by $266 billion and $331 billion,
respectively. While efficiency in short-term financial operations will
help profitability, the lack of improvement in working capital
management in recent years is likely due to the low interest rate
environment. Some of the better performers in day's working capital outstanding
include Murphy Oil (negative 60 days), Linn Energy (negative 50 days),
Anadarko Petroleum (negative 45 days), and Dell (negative 23 days).
Friday, July 18, 2014
AbbVie Acquires Shire
U.S. pharmacuetical company AbbVie announced
that Shire Plc has agreed to be acquired for about $54.7 billion. For
AbbVie, the acquisition gives the company Shire's portfolio of expensive
medicines, which is needed since AbbVie's Humira, the world's
best-selling prescription, loses patent protection in 2016. With any
acquisition, you would expect synergies, however, the most important
synergy for AbbVie may be that the acquisition will allow the company to
relocate to Ireland, which could reduce its tax bill from 22 percent to
13 percent.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Capital Expenditures Slow
Capital expenditures fell by three percent
in the first quarter of 2014, to an annualized value of $1.8 trillion.
With the lower capital expenditures, the financing gap (think external
financing needed) was a negative $77.4 billion, the 21st consecutive
negative quarter. U.S. nonfinancial companies issued $4.873 trillion in
new debt during the quarter and spent about one-half of that
repurchasing equity.
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Creating Charts In Excel
While you have done a great job with your data analysis, a chart or
graph is often the best way to convey the information. And while we
think Excel Master does a good job introducing you to Excel's charting
capabilities, for more on creating charts and graphs in Excel, check out
this article from PCWorld.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Junk Bond Issuance Grows
The Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global High Yield Index began in 1997
and 12 years later, the value of junk bonds in the index reached $1
trillion. In the last four years, another $1 trillion has been added.
During 2013, a record $477 billion in junk bonds were issued, and, so
far this year, $338 billion in junk bonds have been issued. A major
factor that is causing the rapid increase in junk bond issuance is the
"reach-for-yield," that is, investors are looking for a yield on debt in
the near zero government bond environment. Additionally, Moody's measure of the the strength of junk bond covenants is the weakest since the company began tracking covenants in 2011.
Big Projects, Big Problems
A recent article in CFO
states that schedules on capital budgeting projects are missed by an
average of 55 percent and budgets are missed by 33 percent. One
potential problem for capital budgeting is that most projects are
evaluated by project advocates within the company, who are often biased
in favor of the project. For example, a financial services company found
that the initial cost projections for its projects were off by a factor
of 2.37, meaning that for every dollar originally projected to begin
the project, it actually cost $2.37. A second problem is that small and
large projects are evaluated the same way, especially in regards to
timing. For example, consider you and three friends are going to dinner
together, each from a different starting location. Each of you has a 50
percent probability of arriving on time. What is the probability that
you will all arrive on time for dinner? While you might think that it is
50 percent, it is actually 6.25 percent (.50 × .50 × .50 × .50)!
In a large project, with intermediate tasks that are dependent on
preceding tasks, it is easy to get behind schedule very quickly.
That's The Way The Cupcake Crumbles
Cupcake company Crumbs announced that it would file a Chapter 7 liquidation.
Crumbs, which was founded in 2003 and went public in 2011, had 65
stores in 12 states. The company sold cupcakes in flavors such as Cookie
Dough and Girl Scout Thin Mint. For the first quarter of 2014, the
company lost $3.8 million, a sharp increase from the 2013 first quarter
loss of $2 million.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)