Sears’ bankruptcy came as no surprise to me (see my article to this end). Due to reckless
stock buybacks, Sears’ management depleted cash, working capital, and equity to
the point where Sears did not have adequate capital to reinvent itself to
compete in the hyper-competitive retail sales marketplace. When
analyzing a publicly traded company’s financial statement, I do so heeding the
wisdom of Benjamin Graham and David L. Dodd as expressed in their classic
book Security Analysis. A key concept, to be found in
this book, pertains to “margin of safety:”
…in
the selection of primary or leading common stocks for conventional investment,
such a margin between value and price has not typically been present. In these
instances the margin of safety is contributed to by such qualitative factors as
the firm’s dominant position in its industry and product markets and expected
growth in earnings. Thus in valuing common stocks, the analyst will need to
consider carefully qualitative factors as well as quantitative. Other factors
that contribute to a margin of safety include assets carried in land and
property accounts at amounts substantially below their current market value
(e.g., timberland or mineral reserves) and cash flows that provide a degree of
financial flexibility and therefore allow a business to withstand adversity, to
add to or change product lines, and to take other action that will improve the
competitive position of the company. (pg. 129, Fifth Edition)
When taken too far, stock buybacks
can deplete a company’s balance sheet to the point where there is no margin of
safety to adapt to adverse changes in the economy, to changes in the
competitive landscape, and to changes in consumer tastes. Having analyzed J.C.
Penney’s financial statements, going back to 2001, I see them on the same path
that took Sears into bankruptcy.
Security Analysis: Six...Benjamin
Graham, David...Best Price: $25.99Buy New $29.47(as
of 10:20 EDT - Details)
As a quick aside, it was during the seven years, of 2005 through 2011,
where Sears’ management strip-mined the company’s balance sheet via stock
buybacks. Over this period, stock buybacks amounted to $6.011 billion. Fast
forward to Sears’ bankruptcy filingwhere this retailer listed
$6.9 billion in assets and $11.3 billion in liabilities; which is a deficit
equity position of $4.4 billion. Wouldn’t Sears’ management love to have that
$6.011 billion of cash back? I think so.
From
fiscal years 2001 through 2017, J.C. Penney’s total revenues amounted to nearly
$276 billion. Over these 17 years, J.C. Penney lost money in the seven years
ending 2003, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2017. When adding up the net
profits and losses, over this 17-year period, J.C. Penney eked out a combined
total net income of only $810 million. Talk about being in a tough, competitive
industry.
Just like Sears, J.C. Penney’s
management strip-mined this retailer’s balance sheet via stock buybacks. Over
the five fiscal years of 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2011, stock buybacks
amounted to $6.203 billion. This means that cash outlays, for stock buybacks,
were nearly 7.7 times higher than J.C. Penney’s total net income over the past
17 years. Any margin-of-safety considerations in the picture here?
For
the aforementioned period, J.C. Penney’s corporate net worth hit its high-water
mark in 2002. At fiscal year-end 2002, Penney’s net worth was $6.37 billion.
Moreover, cash stood at $2.474 billion, working capital was $3.195 billion, and
the total-liabilities-to-equity ratio was acceptable at 1.8 to 1 (I consider
anything above 3 to 1 to be uncomfortably high). Once upon a time, this
retailer was in good financial shape.
Jumping
forward to August 4, 2018, J.C. Penney continues to have a rough go of it.
Through the first six months, of fiscal-year 2018, this retailer lost $179
million on $5.5 billion of sales. Penney’s balance sheet looks emaciated with
cash at a paltry $182 million, working capital at $1.243 billion, net worth at
$1.216 billion and a total-liabilities-to-equity ratio of 5.6 to 1 (which is
alarmingly high leverage). Not a pretty picture.
If J.C. Penney was
able to take back the $6.203 billion it squandered on stock buybacks, its
balance sheet would be rock solid. Well, so much for sound financial
management.
Unlike the perfect-knowledge
assumption commonly used in mathematical economics, those familiar with
Austrian economics understand the future is uncertain; after all, this is
common sense. Accordingly, let’s bring in the wisdom of Austrian economist
Murray Rothbard as conveyed in his magnum opus Man, Economy, & State:
Indeed,
any actor, when employing means, estimates that he will thus arrive at his desired
goal. But he never has certain knowledge of the future. All his actions are of
necessity speculations based on his judgment of the course of future events.
The omnipresence of uncertainty introduces the ever-present possibility of
error in human action. The actor may find, after he has completed his action,
that the means have been inappropriate to the attainment of his end. (pg. 7,
Scholar’s Edition)
A key
claim, in support of stock buybacks, is that they enhance shareholder value. So
let’s go back to the go-go days of 2007 when both Sears and J.C. Penney engaged
in significant share buybacks. In April of 2007, both Sears’ and J.C. Penney’s
shares looked richly valued; with Sears clocking in at $145.67/share and J.C.
Penney priced at $81.82/share (both prices are as of April 17, 2007). Today,
Sears’ common stock is priced at 37 cents/share and Penney’s stock is
$1.45/share. Share buybacks, ultimately, have proven to be devastating for both
Sears’ and J.C. Penney’s balance sheets. Gross financial-management errors, to
be sure, were made by the managements of both retailers; thus resulting in the
destruction—instead of the enhancement—of shareholder value.
With the future being uncertain, sound
balance sheet management matters. Cash is king and is a key component in a
company’s margin of safety. With J.C. Penney having spent over $6 billion for
stock buybacks, and continuously hemorrhaging red ink, very little stands
between it and insolvency. When management treats cash like trash, the results
can be ugly for the company and its shareholders. J.C. Penney certainly appears
to have followed Sears’ stock-buyback formula for failure and bankruptcy. I
believe it is only a matter of time.
Eric
Englund [send him
mail], who has an MBA from Boise State University, lives in the
state of Oregon. He is the publisher of The Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr.
Gerald Swanson. He is also a member of The National Society, Sons of the
American Revolution. You are invited to visit his website.