Every year at the beginning of the year, investment banks would recommend some stocks which they think would out-perform the market. Maybank, Public Bank, CIMB, TM, Tenaga, Digi, Axiata, Sime, AirAsia etc, the same ones are always on the lists. Nothing wrong with the recommendations as most of them would do well I believe. But the problems of these recommendations are:
1. Almost every investment bank is recommending the same companies, is there any chance that they would earn extra-ordinary return as everyone is chasing the same stocks?
2. Nearly all funds, local or foreign own them because of the liquidity which is good. But if every fund has to own them, won’t the price been chased up long ago to its intrinsic value?
3. Is there any conflict of interest with the investment banks who have funds holding these stocks, or have business dealing with the companies recommending these stocks?
4. Most companies recommended are big capitalized companies. What is the potential of high growth in order to achieve high return in the future?
5. These stocks are well known by everybody in the market, the institutions and retail players. What is the chance that they are selling at bargain price, and hence the chance of high return?
Do you have any hidden gem which is tucked in some where undiscovered, unloved and institutional investors have no mandate or interest to buy them for the time being, and selling at bargain price. The chance to earn 50% return a year, a double bagger, five baggers or even ten baggers. An ugly duckling which would turn to a beautiful swan in the near future? Which one and why?
Invested capital means capital you have invested in the business.
You need money to buy land for property development for property companies. so yes.
Intangible asset? arguable, I ignore.
Investment in subsidiaries, other investments. this is investing in another company. Its result doesn't appear in the operating business of the company. It is not "consolidated" in the financial statement. No
I have seen financial statements where the 'Group' makes money but the 'Company' were at a huge amount of loss. Same goes to its cash flow.
Does the 'Company' side of balance sheet, cash flow and income statement has any concern with our evaluation? Or should we only look at 'Group' statements?
A company's business is the aggregate of all its businesses of the company and in all its subsidiaries. It's performance is shown in its financial statement of the "group". This is what as an investor, should concern with.
Pros. 1. Profit margin is extremely high. 2. Revenue, Net income, FCF improving every year since 2009 3. High payout ratio 4. ROE ROA improvement 5. Piotroski scored average 7.3 for FY2010, 11, 12 5. Cheap share price.
Notes. 1. ROIC off the chart for FY2012 & FY2011.
2. In FY2010, there was a Fixed Deposit of 175M, which I included into Invested Capital. 'Cash & Bank Balance' 800K.
3. FY2012 & FY2011, no Fixed Deposit, but Cash and Bank Balance shot up to 180M. Question. Do we need include 'Cash and Bank Balance' into Invested Capital? Cause we usually dont right?
Any comments?
YTLE RM0.7 Year 2012 2011 2010 2009 Revenue 86,054 74,246 44,067 36,508 Cost of sales 5,517 11,391 17,424 16,116 Gross margin 94% 85% 60% 56% Margin 66% 68% 29% 8% Net Income 57091 50533 12860 3092 Net profit to common share 34490 35706 8831 4151 No. of shares 1345328 1345328 1345328 1345377 EPS 0.026 0.027 0.007 0.003 Dividend 0.019999584 0.019999584 0.01 0.00 Payout ratio 78% 75% 124% 73% Net asset per share 0.15 0.13 0.13 0.12 Operating cash flows, CFFO 56,350 44,681 28,552 6,813 Capex -520 -592 -629 -37608 Free Cash Flow, FCF 55830 44089 27923 -30795 CFFO/NI 99% 88% 222% 220%
Total Equity 227,756 198,901 192,436 184,779 Total Common Equity 202,553 181,393 170,923 164,512 Common Stock 135,000 135,000 135,000 135,000 ROE 17% 20% 5% 3%
Sorry to disturb your wonderful & peaceful weekends, I m currently learning to find out the intrinic value of Engtex but i dont have any accounting background so need to consult u & hope u dont mind. My questions are as below:-
1) In financal Report, Engtex belongs to "Group" or "Company"? 2) Group if i use common sense, should mean all subsidaries, am i right? 3) So now i want to calculate the EPSGR of Engtex, then which report i have to look at' "Group" or "Company"?
TQ if u can engligthen me & below is your posting which i checked the Cash Flow Statement but i couldnt get the same figure 190m & 200m as yours, so i wondered if i was actually on your same page & again, pls enlighten me.
In additions, TQ for your continuous postings & honestly i didnt pay attention to your previous postings, my apology as i didnt believe in value-investing & not even bothered what the hack the companies do until recently that i had the same wavelength with Ooi that TA + FA = Success.
From the cash flow statement under the "Cash flows from operations", you see that the 2012 results shows that the cash flow from operating activities (CFFO) is 190m. This is the net cash the company received during 2012; eg cash payment from house buyers less the operating costs in cash payout. From the "cash flow from investing activities", you see that the company spends about 200m in acquisition of property, plant and equipment and "Land and Development costs". That 200m is the capital expenses for Hua Yang
1) In financal Report, Engtex belongs to "Group" or "Company"?
ALWAYS USE GROUP RESULTS. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THE COMPANY PLUS ALL SUBSIDIARIES. IT IS THE GROUP WHICH IS LISTED AND YOU INVEST IN. COMPANY IS JUST PART OF IT. COULD BE JUST A MANAGEMENT OUTFIT.
2) Group if i use common sense, should mean all subsidaries, am i right?
ANSWERED ABOVE.
3) So now i want to calculate the EPSGR of Engtex, then which report i have to look at' "Group" or "Company"?
IS IT CLEAR NOW?
TQ if u can engligthen me & below is your posting which i checked the Cash Flow Statement but i couldnt get the same figure 190m & 200m as yours, so i wondered if i was actually on your same page & again, pls enlighten me.
HUA YANG'S LAST ANNUAL FINANCIAL RESULTS? FIGURES ARE ROUNDED OFF. NO NEED TO BE TOO PRECISE AS INVESTMENT IS AN ART MORE THAN A SCIENCE OR MATHS. 190 IS THE NET CASH FLOW FROM OPERATIONS FROM THE "STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS". 200M IS THE SUM OF "PURCHASE OF PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT" PLUS THE "LAND AND AND DEVELOPMENT COSTS'. THIS FIGURES ARE UNDER THE "CASH FLOW FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES". FOR MOST COMPANIES WHICH ARE NOT PROPERTY COMPANIES, USUALLY JUST PPE, UNLESS IT IS A PALM OIL COMPANY, THEN ADD THE BIOLOGICAL ASSETS. OR IF IT IS TECH COMPANY, "SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT COST' ETC
In additions, TQ for your continuous postings & honestly i didnt pay attention to your previous postings, my apology as i didnt believe in value-investing & not even bothered what the hack the companies do until recently that i had the same wavelength with Ooi that TA + FA = Success.
GOOD ON YOU. ALWAYS REMEMBER, WHEN YOU INVEST (NOT TRADING OR GAMBLING), YOU MUST KNOW THERE IS A COMPANY BEHIND THE STOCK. SO KNOWING THE BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY IS ESSENTIAL.
From the cash flow statement under the "Cash flows from operations", you see that the 2012 results shows that the cash flow from operating activities (CFFO) is 190m. This is the net cash the company received during 2012; eg cash payment from house buyers less the operating costs in cash payout. From the "cash flow from investing activities", you see that the company spends about 200m in acquisition of property, plant and equipment and "Land and Development costs". That 200m is the capital expenses for Hua Yang
TQ for clearing my doubts. Below is the teckchuan's posting & if i use the formula i jst learned today; ESP=NI/oustanding shares=57091/1345328=0.042 & the eps listed below is different? Does it mean that ytle has paid lower eps?
If we use the same pe given by sephiroth 27.3, then price=pe*eps=27.3*.042=1.14. Can i say that the current price is below the fair value if we based on the financial reports?
Appreciate your advice. TQ
Net Income 57091 50533 12860 3092 Net profit to common share 34490 35706 8831 4151 No. of shares 1345328 1345328 1345328 1345377 EPS 0.026 0.027 0.007 0.003
CSC Steel, wah good man, high dividend woh! Posted by mlg123 > Jul 21, 2013 12:05 PM | Report Abuse kcchongnz, can you please share your opinion on CSC steel?
I invested in this stock some time in 2009 as I was attracted by the high dividend yield of 8% at that time. Little did I know that I made another mistake again, thinking that it is a good strategy to invest in high dividend yield stock.
CSC Steel 1.33 20/07/2013 Period 2-week 6-month 1 year 2-year 3 year 4 year 5 year Price 1.28 1.19 1.24 1.63 1.65 1.01 1.30 Return of stock 3.9% 11.8% 7.3% -18.4% -19.4% 31.7% 2.3% CAR 171% 24.9% 7.3% -9.7% -6.9% 7.1% 0.5% Dividend 0 6.3% 5.6% 8.0% 12.1% 6.4% 9.2% Stock appreciation 171% 18.6% 1.6% -17.6% -19.1% 0.7% -8.8%
As shown in the above stock price of CSC from 5 years ago. The total return of the stock was terrible as compared to the market. For example, investors who bought CSC three years ago would have lost a total of 19.4%, or negative 6.9% in compounded annual rate, while the market gained a CAR of about 10%. Another classic example of high dividend yield not necessary a good investment.
CSC’s revenue has been stagnant at about 1.1-1.2 b for the last 8 years, no growth. Its net income in fact has been deteriorating progressively since 2009, from 116.5m to just 37.5m last year. Not good at all. So I will straightaway rule CSC out as a good company. So the only thing I can do is to assess if CSC is a value stock using the 5 yardsticks of ColdEye. We must always stand behind the shoulders of giants mah!
5 yardstick of investing by Cold Eye CSC STEEL HOLDINGS BERHAD 1.33 1 ROE 3.6% No <10% Net profit 28006 Equity 773097 2 Cash flows CFFO 63129 Yes CFFO/NI 225% FCF 24054 Neutral FCF/IC 4.2% 3 PE ratio 17.7 No >15 Price 1.33 EPS 0.0751 4 Dividend yield Dividend , sen 7.0 Dividend yield 5.3% Yes >3.5% 5 Price/NTA 1.04 OK NTA 1.281
CSC failed miserably in ROE with a very low ROE of just 3.6%. It has substantial amount of cash sitting in its balance sheet doing noting useful. Its ROIC is not fantastic too at 9%. Last year cash flows is ok, but not the year before. The best part is its dividend of 7 sen, or a yield of 5.3%. However don’t fall into this trap of high dividend yield strategy again as explained before.
Valuation wise, CSC is not that cheap at a PE ratio of 17.7 and a P/B of 1.0. So for me there is no attraction to invest in CSC. Its earnings yield (ebit/EV) of 11% is also not an inducement to shout buy, buy, buy too.
CSC’s first quarter 2012 results improved substantially, but to me it is still too early to pass another judgement.
TQ guys for yr clarification. read a book but it diesnt state clearly that net profit to "common stock". a layman like me definately will come out wrong figure which leads me to holland..
May i know where did u get this figure 1345328 which is the number of shares? I cant find so need to consult u. TQ in advance for yr kind advice.
===================================
To find the total number of common stocks issued, one can always refer to the Notes section in an annual report whereby they show clearly how EPS is being calculated. Try looking for the Notes reference number when reading the Income Statement. :)
Posted by TeckChuan Lee > Jul 21, 2013 03:09 PM | Report Abuse
YTL E-Solution BHD. RM0.70
3. FY2012 & FY2011, no Fixed Deposit, but Cash and Bank Balance shot up to 180M. Question. Do we need include 'Cash and Bank Balance' into Invested Capital? Cause we usually dont right?
==================================
No. I don't think we should include Cash and Bank Balances or even Cash & Cash Equivalents as invested capitals. Please correct me if i'm wrong. :)
Hi. Need some help here. I have been looking at whitehorse for sometime. I wonder if Whitehorse is a good share for investing? If yes, is the current price suitable for collecting? Thanks.
Invested capital means the capital invested in the ordinary or normal business of the company. It does not include excess cash which is not required for the operations. It also doesn't include capital used for investment in associate and jv companies which the their financial statements are not "consolidated" into that of the company. Other investments such as investment in quoted or unquoted shares, investment properties (for company which rental income is not its ordinary business) also should be excluded.
Thank you keanpoh. Thanks kc. I have no accounting basics. At all. Most of the figures I took blindly following kc s formula in his templates. I need to start picking up accounting basics
Posted by Jaack1 > Jul 20, 2013 03:31 PM | Report Abuse Dear Mr KC Chong, MFCB (MEGA FIRST) MFCB has always been profitable, Net Cash, pays good dividend, sustainable industry, etc., The only concern is they have huge exposure investing in the market. What is you view on MFCB (Mega First)? Tks/Rgds Jaack
Mega First Corporation Berhad (MFCB) is principally engaged in the provision of management services. It operates in five divisions: Power, Property, Limestone, Engineering and Investment Holding. The Power segment builds, owns and operates power plants.
The main earner is the power division which owns two power plants, one in China and the other in Sabah which provide steady income for MFCB of more than 70% of the total profit of the company. It operates one of the largest limestone hill reserves of more than 100 acres in Perak. It is also one of the country’s largest producers of lime products.
MFCB’s revenue and net profit averages about 620m and 100m respectively for the last two years. There is not much growth in the company. Hence MFCB is best evaluated with ColdEye’s 5 yardsticks of value investing to see if it is a reasonable company offering at an attractive price.
MFCB has a reasonable ROE of 12% which meets my minimum requirement of return. However, as MFCB is cash rich company with 126m cash sitting in its balance sheet, and 240m other investments in investment properties and associates, it is best evaluate its operating efficiencies in term of ROIC; and its ROIC is fantastic at 20%, much higher than the cost of capital.
MFCB’s quality of earnings is good with CFFO 124% of net income. It also produces huge amount of free cash flow, 15% and 23% of revenue and invested capital respectively, which is way above my bench marks. Hence MFCB is able to increase its annual dividend payment yearly, now to 8 sen a share. This gives a good dividend yield of 4.6%.
With these nice metrics, it is a surprise that the valuation of MFCB is undemanding. PE ratio is only 6.8, and Price-to-NTA only at 0.7. If you look at the valuation of the firm, it is much more attractive with enterprise value less than its ebit, or an earnings yield (ebit/EV) of 100%!
So is MFCB a hidden gem?
5 yardstick of investing by Cold Eye Mega First 1.730 22/07/2013 1 ROE 12.5% >12% Yes Net profit 92818 Equity 744657 2 Cash flows CFFO 114683 124% Yes FCF/Revenue 15% >5% Yes FCF/IC 23% >10% Yes 3 PE ratio 6.8 <10 Yes Price 1.730 EPS 0.256 4 Dividend yield Dividend , sen 8.0 Dividend yield 4.6% >3% Yes 5 Price/NTA 0.70 <0.8 Yes NTA 2.47
I copy & paste below teckchuan's posting (sorry teckchuan as i need kcchong to clarify my doubts as i dont have financial knowledge & hope u dont mind) as below;-
Return on Equity = Net Income/Shareholder's Equity
why do some ppl say the correct way is ROE=57,091/227,756=25% but teckchuan uses 34490/202,553=17%.
Since the difference is quite big, i need to seek yr clarification.
TQ
YTLE RM0.7 Net Income 57091 50533 12860 3092 Net profit to common share 34490 35706 8831 4151 No. of shares 1345328 1345328 13Return on Equity = Net Income/Shareholder's Equity
45328 1345377
Total Equity 227,756 198,901 192,436 184,779 Total Common Equity 202,553 181,393 170,923 164,512 Common Stock 135,000 135,000 135,000 135,000 ROE 17% 20% 5% 3%
Company (MFCB) also does seem to be quite active buying back its shares. A large amount of its cash (CFFO) is used for this purpose. I m not sure if the rate of buy back is normal... could someone advise ?It could mean that management believes the price is undervalued.
Posted by CityTrader > Jul 22, 2013 08:43 PM | Report Abuse Hi kcchongnz Return on Equity = Net Income/Shareholder's Equity why do some ppl say the correct way is ROE=57,091/227,756=25% but teckchuan uses 34490/202,553=17%. Since the difference is quite big, i need to seek yr clarification.
Citytrader, damn good question! You know what? I need help too. I ain't an accountant. Any accountants or others knowledgeable to help?
My novice view is you see the financial statement is a consolidated one with a subsidiary's (or subsidiaries) financial statement "consolidated" into YTLE's. Hence there is this minority interest which is subtracted to obtain the net income attributed to the common shareholders of YTLE.
As you are looking at the angle of the common shareholder of YTLE, the right ROE, I think, should be (NI attributed to common shareholders/common shareholder equity), or 17%.
The higher 25% for ROE for (Total NI/total equity) could be due to the higher operating numbers of that subsidiary.
Posted by CityTrader > Jul 22, 2013 09:06 PM | Report Abuse Hi kcchonhgnz i vetted the finanacial statements of MFCB fy ended 31 dec 2012 & the fig i saw is not tallied with u eg below:- net profit= 93,662 profit attributes to owner of the co=57,927 so which one did u use? Your CFFO also different from the report; 115,207 Can u pls enlighten me? TQ
CityTrader, you got me again. I hope certain character won't start calling me names again. You know lah, si-roti-canai-pusing etc.
But I check again the figures from Bursa website, and I found the same figures. Did you use the Annual report which could be different from mine because mine is the financial statements (unaudited) when first published in March 2013? If so then your is the more accurate one.
However, again there is not much difference. Remember what I just said? Finance and investment is not an exact science. But watch out, some companies have the habit of amending their financial report, that the audited report could be very much different from when the results were first announced.
Which profit to use, the net profit or the profit attributed to the common share holders, and the ROE? I have just explained above.
I have noticed that figures might change slightly every year. For example Net profit is 15000 in FY 2011, but Net Profit of 2011 changed slightly to 15200 in report 2012. Same goes to CFFO and the rest.
Use the updated figures in the latest report perhaps?
Why does a company buys back its own shares? Posted by houseofordos > Jul 23, 2013 12:26 AM | Report Abuse Company (MFCB) also does seem to be quite active buying back its shares. A large amount of its cash (CFFO) is used for this purpose. I m not sure if the rate of buy back is normal... could someone advise ?It could mean that management believes the price is undervalued.
Does it necessary mean that company buys back its share that its share price is definitely undervalued?
I know of a company named KNM which used to buy back its shares from borrowing money from the banks or from money from right issues. I did not see the share price was undervalued as its operating efficiencies were deteriorating, very poor cash flow and no free cash flow. Why did they do that?
They did that because the major shareholders wanted to send a signal (but a misleading one) to the public that the share price was undervalue and they could sell their own personal shares at a high price to others.
But you are right, most of the time the company buys back its own shares because they themselves know the company very well and that the share price is undervalued in relation to its value. They should only do that if they have nothing better to do with the free cash flows, and definitely a no no from borrowed money.
Buying back its own shares in the market reduces the number of shares outstanding in the market. The same amount of earnings are shared by lesser amount of shares, and hence higher EPS. Any dividend to be declared also shared by lesser number of shares and hence higher DY. Hence generally the share price rises with lesser shares outstanding.
Having the ability to buy back share is a good way of returning some cash to the shareholders.
So is share buyback good for MFCB shareholders. The answer should be obvious.
Posted by CityTrader > Jul 23, 2013 09:49 AM | Report Abuse
Hi kcchongnz
I happened to come across this formula before & at that times, i was not interested of FA & formula is as below:-
(ROE/expected return in %) x (total equity/equity to common shares). This formula is used to predict the share price. What is your opinion?
Not very sure of what your formula is, but definitely is not a formula to predict share price. Predicting share price is not an easy thing. Very very few people in the world can predict share price correctly and consistently. Paul the octopus had already died.
But I do know of an intuitive formula, which looks similar but not, to gauge the value of a stock, ie
Value of a stock=ROE/Expected return * net asset backing per share
Or V=ROE/[E]R * common shareholder equity/no. of shares
Posted by CityTrader > Jul 23, 2013 12:10 PM | Report Abuse Hi kcchongnz When we calculate the capex, we add the "purchase of assets, plants, consession assets" - "proceeds from disposal of property plant etc"?
Or we just ignore the line of "proceeds from disposal of property"
In most financial statements, it is 'purchase of property, plant and equipment", or PPE. You could deduct the "proceeds from disposal of PPE" from capex. Normally I don't and it is usually a small figure.
Again finance and investment is not an exact science.
Sep, A cyber friend of mine described SCGM and asked me whether it is good to invest as below.
Friend: [About SCGM's business. This is another one of those companies making plastic products and packaging. But I m looking at it more in terms of value stock. Based on their latest numbers, it does seem like they are turning around their business with some good numbers in 2013 especially growth in cashflows. They are almost debt free with a strong balance sheet.
Growth rate Revenue 18% Operating income 32% Net profit 28% Equity 9% Cash flows 178%
ROIC 12.2% EV/Ebit 7.5 EV/Ebitda 5.4 FCF/Sales 9%
I know you dont use TA much, but I see some sign of strength from technical standpoint as director was accumulating when stock dipped to around RM 0.955, so this would be a good support level.]
My reply was as follow: [Looking at your numbers, SCGM appears to be great in term of its last growth in revenue and earnings. Its operating efficiencies in terms of ROE, ROIC are ok lah for last year, but there were very poor before that. Cash flows was excellent but that was only for last year. So it has not shown the consistency yet. Valuation wise is also ok lah but not screaming buy, buy, buy. Those are the past. May be you know more about its near future. Of course having the information that insiders are buying, and technical buy signals do help. May be you should also compare with its peers such as Daibochi, Tommypack, Cenbond etc to see which plastic packaging company is most efficient and which offer the best value for money in terms of PE ratio, earnings yield etc.]
My further comments; You see investing and trading stocks are two different things. Share price changes all the time and often the share price doesn’t reflect the true value of a company. One can certainly make a lot of money trading, using some technical skills, or short-term insider information. But more people lose money gambling with insiders and manipulators. Agree?
thanks kcchongnz, scgm dividend use to be 3 sen for many yrs when the share price stuck at 40 sen level for a long time. now dividend of 5 sen is great, hopefully they can maintain the 5 sen dividend
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Posted by kcchongnz > 2013-01-04 07:26 | Report Abuse
Every year at the beginning of the year, investment banks would recommend some stocks which they think would out-perform the market. Maybank, Public Bank, CIMB, TM, Tenaga, Digi, Axiata, Sime, AirAsia etc, the same ones are always on the lists. Nothing wrong with the recommendations as most of them would do well I believe. But the problems of these recommendations are: 1. Almost every investment bank is recommending the same companies, is there any chance that they would earn extra-ordinary return as everyone is chasing the same stocks? 2. Nearly all funds, local or foreign own them because of the liquidity which is good. But if every fund has to own them, won’t the price been chased up long ago to its intrinsic value? 3. Is there any conflict of interest with the investment banks who have funds holding these stocks, or have business dealing with the companies recommending these stocks? 4. Most companies recommended are big capitalized companies. What is the potential of high growth in order to achieve high return in the future? 5. These stocks are well known by everybody in the market, the institutions and retail players. What is the chance that they are selling at bargain price, and hence the chance of high return? Do you have any hidden gem which is tucked in some where undiscovered, unloved and institutional investors have no mandate or interest to buy them for the time being, and selling at bargain price. The chance to earn 50% return a year, a double bagger, five baggers or even ten baggers. An ugly duckling which would turn to a beautiful swan in the near future? Which one and why?