Learning How to Bottom-Fish, Part 1: Tracking the Cash Flow
Bottom-fishers have cast their nets far and wide, but how do they avoid bringing up old boots?
Experienced investors who have ridden the stock market's many ups and downs have a range of methods for catching beaten-up stocks while avoiding toxic junk. Now, as an economic slowdown clobbers profits across a range of sectors, they're licking their chops. For some, bear markets can provide more attractive investment opportunities than the rip-roaring rallies of recent history. (OFAFX Quote)Olstein Financial Alert fund. He's scooped up Cypress Semiconductor (CY Quote), LSI Logic (LSI Quote) and National Semiconductor (NSM Quote), all of which have recently reduced their expectations for near-term earnings. Olstein is looking beyond these problems, however. Olstein does this by using an analysis that is based around a discounted cash flow model. In the right hands, this method, explained in a minute, can yield helpful results. In the wrong ones, it can be manipulated to justify absurdly high stock prices, as happened during the boom in tech-stock investing. Discounted cash flow starts with predictions of future earnings or cash generation. Over five years, Olstein's projecting that the chipmakers can notch up 10% to 15% average annual growth in free cash flow, which is most commonly described as cash flow from operations minus capital expenditures. It's just as easy to use forecast net income or cash earnings (net income excluding noncash expenses). Next the discounting: This is when future earnings are reduced annually at a rate that is supposed to reflect the risk of investing in a given stock. Usually, this discount rate incorporates a government bond yield, since that's the risk-free, no-brainer return available to all investors. Olstein simply doubles the yield on Treasury bills. Others use the company's cost of capital, which requires a fairly complex equation to calculate.The Best Disinfectant
What follows is a theoretical example of how a discounted cash flow model can work. Made-up company Sunshine Semiconductor makes free cash flow now of $50 million, or $5 per share, in year one. It warns that earnings growth is going to slow in the following year, causing its stock to slide from $50, or 10 times year-one cash flow, to $40, a multiple of eight.| Discounting Sunshine's Earnings | |
| Step 1 | Estimate average earnings or cash flow growth rate. In the case of Sunshine Semi, 15%. |
| Step 2 | Multiply earnings at this rate over five years. Take starting earnings of $50 million, or $5 per share. |
| Excel formula: =(50,000,000)*1.15^5 | |
| Fifth-year earnings = $101 million | |
| Step 3 | Apply discount rate, in this case 9.46%. Over five years, 9.46% discounts $101 million to $64 million. |
| Excel formula: =(101,000,000)*((1/1.0946)^5) | |
| Step 4 | Divide $64 million by shares outstanding. For Sunshine, this makes $6.40. |
| Step 5 | Compare discounted per-share earnings with most recent earnings per share. If discounted number is higher, the stock is at least worth a closer look. |
| Step 6 | Choose appropriate price-to-earnings multiple to get the target stock price. If Sunshine were to trade at 1.3 times its growth rate, its P/E would be 20. Twenty times $6.40 equals a target price of $128. Compare with current price to gauge potential upside. |
| Step 7 | Play around with inputs to check one's assumptions. |
| For example, with Sunshine, a five-year growth rate of 10% can make the investment moot. | |
| (50,000,000)*1.1^5 equals $81 million. Discounted, that equals $5.10 per share. | |
| Similarly, increasing the discount rate to 15% makes for an investment that won't pay off. | |
| Source: Detox | |
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