GM's Rolling, but Road to $10 EPS Won't Be Smooth
General Motors
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Demi Moore
First, disclosure. Last week, GM execs aimed to boost financial disclosure by making a special filing that contained extra detail on things like off-balance-sheet financing structures. This decision was viewed as a smart move in the post-Enron environment. However, the filing contained nothing that could fill in the many gaps that exist in GMAC's quarterly financial statements. Though a subsidiary, GMAC's numbers are critical because the unit's loans drive many GM sales. Perhaps most striking is the lack of credit quality data at GMAC. One of the most important parts of analyzing a finance company is checking the strength of loan loss reserve, which is the capital cushion lenders keep to protect against bad loans. If the cushion is too small, additions have to be made to the reserve. The additions, also called provisions, are an expense in the income statement. Since 1994, GMAC has just about doubled the size of its on-balance-sheet loan book to $95 billion, most of which are auto loans. At that size, even the smallest addition to the provision can have a huge impact on earnings. A provision equivalent to 1% of the loans could cost nearly $1 billion. And in the first nine months of 2001, GMAC provisions cost the company $816 million, equivalent to 40% of pretax income in the period.| Hit the
Pedal GM expects to make $10 a share by 2005 |
| *All years till 2001 are actual
earnings.
Earnings
for 2002 and 2003 are analyst forecasts. 2005's $10
per share is the
company's forecast.
Source: Detox. |
Call In the Reserves
Normally, the dollar losses would be compared with the dollar size of the reserve, $1.6 billion in the third quarter at GMAC. But because no dollar number for losses is given in quarterly statements, this is impossible. Also, one can't be backed out by taking 0.69% of "average serviced automotive receivables," as no dollar number is given for that. A number for something called total finance receivables is provided quarterly, and auto loans make up about 85% of that. But what are the other 15%, and what sort of quality are they? As for past-due loans, or delinquencies, GMAC doesn't provide those quarterly either. This is an incredibly anomalous shortcoming. Nearly all stand-alone publicly traded finance companies do so. Delinquencies give guidance of what losses will be. If they spike, losses normally do later, and provisions have to be jacked up. GM spokeswoman Toni Simonetti responds: "We have more than adequate disclosure for all aspects of the company." And Bill Muir, GMAC's finance chief, asserts that the lack of delinquency data isn't a big deal. "I don't see what the need is on a quarterly basis," he says. "The adequacy of our disclosure is in the eye of the beholder." Muir also insists that GMAC's reserve is strong enough. "There is no basis in history or in current expectations to say that we aren't adequately reserved." And he firmly rejects the argument that the recent loan growth, achieved mostly by offering attractive terms, will have brought on less creditworthy borrowers. "The credit quality of the 0% loans is absolutely cream of the crop," says Muir. Also, it'd be very useful to know how much gains from selling mortgages have added to profits. Like many other mortgage lenders, GMAC sells the mortgages by bundling them into bonds. The loans are no longer on GM's balance sheet, but when they are sold, a specially calculated gain is booked to income partly based on estimates about the future profitability of these loans. This method is called "gain-on-sale" accounting. In times of fast growth, the gains can stack up and make lenders look more profitable than they really are. Later, if the loans don't do as well as expected, losses have to be booked. In its annual report, GMAC does say that it recognized $682 million of pretax gains from selling mortgages in 2000, though it's not clear whether those gains are synonymous with gain-on-sale profits. By comparison, the mortgage business made net income of $327 million in 2000.Payment Streams
And no analysis of GM is complete without a close look at how GM itself contributes to GMAC's revenue and earnings. Investors particularly have to watch the large amount of internal payments GM makes to GMAC for a range of services. These are broken out only in the annual report and amounted to more than $2 billion in 2000. The cynical view is that these payments make GMAC look more profitable than it really is to ensure that its rating, one notch higher than GM's, is maintained and keeps the cost of its borrowing down. Do the transfer payments matter? At first blush, it would seem not. If GM didn't make the payments, its expenses would be lower and it'd be more profitable. Also, GM can always be relied on to shore up GMAC's rating. However, there are potential snags to these arguments. GM needs GMAC to sell cars. Without it, sales would almost certainly be a lot lower. A good chunk of transfer payments is the result of GM making GMAC whole for seemingly uneconomic deals. In 2000, GM made a payment of $739 million to GMAC for leases that were priced too low. GM execs see these sorts of payments as marketing costs. That may be so, but how long can they continue? At some point, investors are going to want to see that GM can sell cars with less assistance from GMAC's incentivized financing. There are two ways in which that financing would have to slow sharply: first, if GMAC profits are hurt by higher interest rates -- lower rates have been a massive boost to recent earnings -- or by a spike in credit losses; and, second, if GM's car sales deteriorate even with the low-cost financing. GM's got a long drive ahead if it wants to get to $10 a share.- Loading Comments...
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