Posted by anticonman > May 17, 2015 10:06 AM | Report Abuse kcchong please read below article. Do you have the qualification for people to follow you? This forum does not belong to you only. http://klse.i3investor.com/blogs/kianweiaritcles/76689.jsp
Are you from Bank Negara or SC wanting to check my FAR or CMSRL licenses? Or from the education department who wants to check my CFP, postgraduate degree in business administration, and Master in Finance Certificate?
Well I can tell you the above are not much use in real life investing.
Or do you want to find out the above so that you can consult me? Well I don't think you can afford it.
Do I ask people to follow me? Or I ask people to give me tips instead as in the post so that I can follow them?
This forum doesn't belong to me? Of course not! When did I say it belongs to me? Or does it belong to you?
Well do you have anything wrong to point out from my posts? I would love that as I learn a lot in that way along the years.
you got nothing to contribute but why are you feeling so uneasy to see other people sharing their idea of valuation of stock.
what's wrong with mr kccchong sharing his view using CY to invest, I myself feel it is very viable and good metric , a wonderful idea.
honestly speaking , I do not join Mr KCChong online course, I DO NOT pay Mr KCChong a sen, not a single sen, but these 2 years , I made a few lorries of cash using his recommended valuation techniques.
please know his techniques well before you open your dirty mouth
please do not use any qualification to judge a people work, there are so many so called professional expert, they talk so much that we doubt whether they themselves know what they are talking about or not.
share market works in different way, NOT with the qualification you sure win big
KC, would fcf/ev be a better metric ? Since free cashflow is derived from cashflow from operations, we should deduct the excess cash as it doesnt earn anything.
Posted by NOBY > May 17, 2015 04:07 PM | Report Abuse KC, would fcf/ev be a better metric ? Since free cashflow is derived from cashflow from operations, we should deduct the excess cash as it doesnt earn anything.
If you look at most cash flow statements to obtain net CFFO, interest earned has been taken off from it (a few may not), and hence the net CFFO and hence FCF belongs to common shareholder only. So the denominator in the cash yield formula must be consistent, i.e. it should be market cap, rather than EV.
You can of course convert that net CFFO belonged to common shareholders to the CFFO for the firm, then you use EV as the denominator to be consistent. But conversion of net CFFO to CFFO for the firm involves some tricks as you know, it would be a little complex for normal investor. Do not forget that EV calculation can also confuse them.
So keep it simple, CY as computed in the article, in my opinion, is good enough, and it is easy to compute. That is more important.
The average FCF for the last three years is 21.5m, with the last year FCF at 27.9m. We take the average of last three years' FCF.
At RM1.21 closed last week, and no. of shares 200m, CY = 21.5/200=8.9%. This CY is twice you can get from bank FD. Moreover, it has clean balance sheet with a lot of cash in the balance sheet and with zero debt. It also has high cash return on invested capital CROIC of 50% lat year. Looks like a NBI to me.
Price 1.21 No. of shares 200000 Market cap 242000 Av FCF 21487 CY 8.9%
The average FCF for the last three years is 31.2m with the last year FCF at 36.76m. We take the average of last three years' FCF.
At RM3.40 closed today, and no. of shares 108.5m, CY = 31.2/108.5*3.40=8.46%. This CY is twice you can get from bank FD. Moreover, it has clean balance sheet with a lot of cash in the balance sheet and with zero debt. Looks like a NBI to me.
Price 3.40 No. of shares 108488 Market cap 368859 Av FCF 31199 CY 8.46%
The average FCF for the last three years is 74.7m, with the last year FCF at 78.49m. We take the average of last three years' FCF.
At RM2.40 closed today, and no. of shares 242.5m, CY = 74.7/242.5*2.40=12.84%. This CY is thrice you can get from bank FD. Moreover, it has clean balance sheet with a lot of cash in the balance sheet and with little debt. Looks like a NBI to me.
Price 2.40 No. of shares 242455 Market cap 581892 Av FCF 74718 CY 12.84%
Posted by coolio > May 18, 2015 11:50 PM | Report Abuse How about Magni-Tech? Below shows the FCF for the last 3 years Year ended 31/3/11 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 CFFO 43169 29235 36197 Capex -6408 -4322 -4273 FCF 36761 24913 31924 FCF/Revenue 5.6% 4.4% 6.0% CFFO/NI 103% 82% 118% The average FCF for the last three years is 31.2m with the last year FCF at 36.76m. We take the average of last three years' FCF. At RM3.40 closed today, and no. of shares 108.5m, CY = 31.2/108.5*3.40=8.46%. This CY is twice you can get from bank FD. Moreover, it has clean balance sheet with a lot of cash in the balance sheet and with zero debt. Looks like a NBI to me. Price 3.40 No. of shares 108488 Market cap 368859 Av FCF 31199 CY 8.46%
coolio,
Remember we talked about Magni-tech here a year ago:
Magni's share price was just RM2.69. Its FCF in 2013 was 23m. With the no. of shares at 108m, its CY was 12.3%! At that time, it was a NBI. One year later now, it is RM3.41, or a gain of 27% against almost a flat KLCI.
Now although its share price has risen its FCF also has improved a lot to RM36.8m. At the present price and the average 3-years FCF, your computation of CY of 8.5% is still very high.
Magni's share price was just RM2.69. Its FCF in 2013 was 23m. With the no. of shares at 108m, its CY was 12.3%! At that time, it was a NBI. One year later now, it is RM3.41, or a gain of 27% against almost a flat KLCI.
Now although its share price has risen its FCF also has improved a lot to RM36.8m. At the present price and the average 3-years FCF, your computation of CY of 8.5% is still very high.
Yes, I think it is still a NBI.
KC,
Yes, still fresh in my mind. Glad that Im still holding Magni. I believe good to have Magni in my long term portfolio
MFCB was one of the stocks in my portfolio set up on 1st August 2013, less than 2 years ago. http://klse.i3investor.com/servlets/pfs/19386.jsp At RM1.71, or market cap of RM414.5m then, and FCF of 2012 at 103m, the CY was 25%. With that CY, how could it go wrong? How can it not be a NBI?
MFCB's share price has risen to RM2.42, or a gain of 42% in less than 2 years, against the rise of KLCI of about 10% during the same period.
Now although its share price has risen, its FCF has dropped to RM55m. At the present price CY is 12.8% as computed by you is still very high.
Posted by bintang21 > May 20, 2015 03:10 AM | Report Abuse
Mr Kcchong, Can you please kindly do one on GADANG.it might be a super nbi. Thank you
If you read the article, a NBI should be a company with consistent FCF and CY of double, triple or more than bank fixed deposit rate.
Gadang has negative FCF the most recent year, so it may appear that it is not a NBI.
But cash flow is volatile every year for most companies, you may like to see the average FCF for a few years.
Just looking at the last two years, Gadang may be good in terms of cash flow with CY of 10%, and you shouldn't rule it out as a good investment if other metrics are good.
Posted by paperplane2 > May 20, 2015 06:49 AM | Report Abuse Kc, I found it hard to determine fcf year by year. Simply capexhard to calculate. Can share how to calculate free cash flow, how capes calculated
FCF = Net CFFO - net capital expenses
Net CFFO is obtained as the last line in the "Cash flow from operating activities"
For capex, look at "purchase of property plant and equipment", and less off the disposal of PPE, that is the net capex. This can be obtained from the "Cash flow from investing activities"
For some companies, other stuff like biological assets for plantation companies are also capex, development costs for property companies are also their capex.
I appreciate you effort in making thing clear and simple for us to learn. thank you very much
regard the calculation free cash flow isn't it sufficient to reflect the company cash position by just subtracting the net cash from investment from the net cash from operation?
I also have the feeling Quick ratio is also a good metric to measure a company cash flow
thank a lot your willingness to share your knowledge
Posted by bintang21 > May 20, 2015 09:40 AM | Report Abuse
Mr Kcchong,
I appreciate you effort in making thing clear and simple for us to learn. thank you very much
regard the calculation free cash flow isn't it sufficient to reflect the company cash position by just subtracting the net cash from investment from the net cash from operation?
I also have the feeling Quick ratio is also a good metric to measure a company cash flow
Some people do that by subtracting CFFO from CFFI. It is not wrong. However, cash flow is about the ordinary or core business of the company, whereas CFFI often contains investment not in the core business. So may not be appropriate.
quick ratio measures the ability of the company to pay short-term debt, after ignoring inventories. It has nothing to do with the cash flow of the company.
Posted by paperplane2 > May 20, 2015 09:13 AM | Report Abuse but capex vary year by year, don't you think hard to determine a stable amount?
So look at the FCF for a number of years, for example 5 years. Take for example, if the average FCF for the last 5 years is 100m, and there is a clear trend of increasing FCF, and if the market cap is RM1b now. Then av FCF/MC = 10%
Posted by jeremiah1983 > Mar 17, 2016 11:03 PM | Report Abuse Hi kc, thanks for your guidance on NBI.... can u help and guide me about Karex and FLBhd?> thanks a million
I used to do this last time in i3investor a lot. However, it is very time consuming. If you want, you can learn this thing from my online investment course for a small fee and then you can actually do this on any stock all by your own.
It is good to learn how to fish rather than grabbing any fish thrown at you. I am sure many people like you would have bad experience recently with all the peddling of stocks, especially those export stocks which had gone up in price hugely before retreating by 30% recently.
The average FCF for the last three years is 21.5m, with the last year FCF at 27.9m. We take the average of last three years' FCF.
At RM1.21 closed last week, and no. of shares 200m, CY = 21.5/200=8.9%. This CY is twice you can get from bank FD. Moreover, it has clean balance sheet with a lot of cash in the balance sheet and with zero debt. It also has high cash return on invested capital CROIC of 50% lat year. Looks like a NBI to me.
KC : What does NI mean here? is it Net income? pls help. thanks
The average FCF for the last three years is 21.5m, with the last year FCF at 27.9m. We take the average of last three years' FCF.
At RM1.21 closed last week, and no. of shares 200m, CY = 21.5/200=8.9%. This CY is twice you can get from bank FD. Moreover, it has clean balance sheet with a lot of cash in the balance sheet and with zero debt. It also has high cash return on invested capital CROIC of 50% lat year. Looks like a NBI to me.
KC : What does NI mean here? is it Net income? pls help. thanks
Also, i observed that the examples of Homeritz and Magni given above, the CFFO is very different from the ones i obtained from the annula report.... May i know how do u derive the CFFO? can i take the real CFFO from the annual report to calculate CY? pls advice. thanks
Posted by jeremiah1983 > Mar 18, 2016 08:06 AM | Report Abuse
Also, i observed that the examples of Homeritz and Magni given above, the CFFO is very different from the ones i obtained from the annula report.... May i know how do u derive the CFFO? can i take the real CFFO from the annual report to calculate CY? pls advice. thanks
FCF = CFFO – Net Capex
CY = Free cash flow (FCF) / Price,
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This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
anticonman
533 posts
Posted by anticonman > 2015-05-17 10:06 |
Post removed.Why?