
Cramer: You Can Ride With YRC Worldwide
This post appeared yesterday on RealMoney. Click here for a free trial, and enjoy incisive commentary all day, every day.
You see stocks like
YRC Worldwide
(YRCW) - Get Report
run, you know that it's been
up pretty much every day
since September began, and you say to yourself, did I miss it? Am I too late?
If the recent history of plays like this pans out, you still have a lot of points to run. Here's why. In the last month, the old Yellow Freight, the largest trucking company, has been able to undo some viciously bad labor agreements and credit agreements. In doing so, it avoided bankruptcy. Just by a hair, but it avoided it.
Until it got those agreements, which occurred at the beginning of the month, YRCW's survival wasn't assured. In fact it was pretty much of a given that it wouldn't make it. Which is why one-third of the company's stocks have been sold short.
But these stocks are binary. They are fabulous shorts if they don't solve their problems. They are the world's worst shorts if they do.
YRCW's solved theirs. So it is now a nightmare short.
Mind you, we have no idea what the normative earnings power of YRCW is. In the old days in a solid economy, I would have said it could earn $5 a share in a boom and $1 coming out of a slowdown. But that's when it had labor agreements that were about $1 billion more costly than they are now. So maybe you could argue it could earn $2 a share coming out of a recession.
Now, you start thinking, hmm, $2 a share, sells at $5. Who knows what kind of multiple you should give a company that was losing money hand over fist that can now survive? You can't give it the multiple, say, of
Con-Way
(CNW)
, which is 30 times earnings!
But surely it is worth more than 3 times earnings.
So why stop here?
Of course, you could say, wait a second, the balance sheet is still terrible.
But I would counter with the following observation: If the company were to sell 20 million shares right here, it would be able to pay down even more debt and be even more valuable. We are in virtuous-circle mode.
My conclusion: You missed the bottom. You haven't missed the top. And the higher it goes, bizarrely, because of the ability to re-liquefy, the more valuable it becomes!
At the time of publication, Cramer had no positions in stocks mentioned.
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