How to Read Financial Statements w/ Brian Feroldi (TIP752)
Summary
Financial Statements Analysis: Brian Feroldi emphasizes the importance of understanding financial statements as a critical component of the investment process, likening it to a musician needing to read music.
Master Accounting Equation: The fundamental equation assets = liabilities + shareholders' equity is crucial for understanding a company's net worth and is the basis for the balance sheet.
Key Financial Statements: The balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement provide different insights into a company's financial health and should be analyzed together for a comprehensive view.
Intangible vs. Tangible Assets: Modern companies often invest in intangible assets like brand and human capital, which can be challenging to value but are crucial for long-term success.
GAAP vs. Non-GAAP Accounting: While GAAP provides a standardized framework, non-GAAP measures can offer additional insights but require careful scrutiny to ensure they aren't misleading.
Stock-Based Compensation: This is a contentious issue, with some viewing it as a real expense that can dilute shareholder value, while others see it as a tool to align employee interests with company success.
Investment Strategies: Different investment styles range from venture capitalists focusing on potential upside to value investors prioritizing valuation, with GARP investors seeking growth at a reasonable price.
Red Flags in Financials: Key indicators like sudden revenue changes, declining gross margins, and high goodwill or stock dilution rates can signal potential issues that warrant further investigation.
Transcript
(00:00) Another number that I look for on the balance sheet is something called goodwill. Goodwill is the premium that companies have paid in the past to make acquisitions and it shows how much management teams overspent on the companies on acquired companies assets in order to make the transaction happen. Now goodwill by itself is not necessarily a bad thing but goodwill is a very there's no liquidity to the asset. (00:29) You can't turn goodwill back into cash unless you sell the company that you acquired. So, I like to make sure that a company's goodwill is less than 10% of the company's total assets. [Music] Before we dive into the video, if you've been enjoying the show, be sure to click the subscribe button below so you never miss an episode. (00:51) It's a free and easy way to support us, and we'd really appreciate it. Thank you so much. Welcome to the Investors Podcast. I'm your host, Clayfink, and today we welcome back longtime guest Brian Faldi. Brian, so great to have you back. Clay, awesome to be back. Thank you for the invite. So, I've long wanted to do an episode touching on accounting and financial statements, but as you know, it can be so difficult to do just in a podcast format. (01:18) So, I thought there's no better person to bring onto the show to explain these concepts as simply as possible. So to kick us off, how about we just start with um talking about the role that analyzing financial statements plays in your investing process. To me, it's a critical component. I like to think of financial statements as a company's report card to judge how well the business is executing against the story or the promise that the business inherently has. (01:49) So if you don't know how to read financial statements, I liken that calling yourself a musician but not knowing how to read music. It is that important and that fundamental. So for me, I would never make any investment into any stock without analyzing its financial statements deeply. So I think the next place to go here is to talk about the uh master accounting equation. I love the name of that. (02:13) I'm not sure if you came up with it or not. Um what is the master accounting equation and why is that important? The master accounting equation is assets equals liabilities plus shareholders equity. Now that is the accounting way of saying what is a company's net worth. Clay if I asked you what's your net worth? You'd do a very simple math equation in your head. (02:36) You'd say what do I own minus what do I owe equals my net worth. That is the master accounting equation except for it's in accounting speak. So what you own is a company's assets. What you owe to others is a company's liabilities. And a company's net worth is just called shareholders equity or owner's equity. But that is the master accounting equation and it rules the company's financial statements. (03:03) Mhm. And that naturally brings us uh to the three financial statements. Talk to us about you know each of these statements and how all of these tie together as well. The three most important financial statements to know are the balance sheet, the income statement, and the cash flow statement. (03:22) Let's take them one at a time. The balance sheet is a snapshot picture of a company's net worth on paper at a point in time. And the balance sheet follows the master accounting equation. So on one side of the balance sheet is the company's assets. On the other side are the company's liabilities and shareholders equity. (03:41) Now the balance sheet is called the balance sheet because those two numbers assets and liabilities plus owner's equity must always exactly equal each other or balance. Hence the term balance sheet. Now that is the company's balance sheet. Then there's the company's income statement. And the income statement tracks a company's revenue and expenses over a set period of time. (04:06) Now the period of time can be is typically a quarter or a year. And think of a income statement kind of like a movie. So there's a start to it and there's an end to it. And the income statement records all revenue and expenses incurred during that period of time. And the income statement is used to tell whether a company is profitable or unprofitable at least on paper. (04:29) The third financial statement is called the cash flow statement. And this financial statement's purpose is to just track cash movement in and out of a business. So, think of this kind of like your personal checking account. It just measures did cash come in or did cash come out. Having all three of these statements is incredibly important because they each give you a different window into a company's financial situation. (04:58) And it's by analyzing all three of them together that you can get a true picture of a company's financials. Mhm. So, going back to uh my accounting 101 days, one of the things that, you know, always sort of tripped me up and sort of confused me was this concept of um double entry bookkeeping, right? So, for every um debit, there's a credit. (05:20) So, you know, a company raises money, they get cash on the balance sheet, you know, it's offset by um some sort of liability, whether they raise that money through debt, whether they raise it through equity and whatnot. So, how about you talk more about this concept of double entry bookkeeping of how for every um transaction there's a credit and a debit. (05:37) Yeah, this is recorded on the balance sheet and it is the method that keeps the balance sheet in balance. To your point, every time there is a transaction that affects something on the balance sheet, by definition, it also has to affect another ledger to ensure that the balance sheet remains in perfect balance with each other. (05:57) For example, if a company goes out to the market or goes out to the private markets and raises capital from investors, that's when an investor injects cash into a business in order to fund operations. That would have two transactions that appear on the balance sheet. First, the company is receiving cash from investors. So therefore, the company's cash balance would go up. (06:23) Now cash is an asset so that affects the left side of the balance sheet. And because the left side of the balance sheet is going up, there must be something on the right side of the balance sheet that also increases in order to make sure that the balance sheet is perfectly imbalanced. Now in the case of a company selling stock to other investors that would affect the shareholders equity portion of the income statement and particularly two numbers, one is common stock and the second is called additional paid in capital. So if a company raises a (06:51) million dollars from selling to investors, cash balance would go up by a million dollars and then common stock and additional paying capital would combined go up by $1 million as well. That would ensure that the balance sheet remains in balance. And this is true for every single transaction that can possibly occur um in in in a company. (07:13) So when revenue comes in, when sales come in, those would increase the company's retained earnings and it would uh increase the company's cash balance. When an expense is paid uh so like employees salaries are paid or rent is paid if that was paid in cash that would decrease the company's cash balance simultaneously decreasing a company's retained earnings. (07:33) So it's an incredibly important concept the concept of double entry accounting to ensure that the master account equation is always perfectly in balance. Um, as you know, I recently interviewed uh David Gardner and our episode will be going out next week. And one of the things we discussed uh during that conversation was just how so many of a company's assets you won't even find on the balance sheet. (07:58) For example, uh Amazon, their most important asset over the years was uh having Jeff Bezos as a CEO for for such a long time. So you know many successful companies today are making these investments into intangible assets which is becoming more and more prominent with all these technology names uh rising up. (08:16) Intangible assets you can think of things like brand uh patents proprietary technology or human capital whereas decades ago often times companies were investing in these tangible assets such as uh plant property equipment and inventory. So, how about you talk about uh the differences and how these intangible versus tangible investments flow through the financial statements? Sure, great question. (08:38) And that that simple concept is worth exploring more. Tangible versus intangible. To me, the word tangible, the easiest way to think about it is tangible means something you can physically touch. Intangible means something that you can't physically touch. So, a tangible asset would be a store, a retail store that a business uh operates out of. (08:58) You can go down and touch a Home Depot. A Home Depot stores are a tangible asset. But if I was to say touch the brand name or the copyright for Home Depot, that's something that uh exists uh in in a ledger somewhere. So you can't physically touch the brand name of Home Depot. So that would be an example of an intangible asset. (09:18) Companies derive value from both sources. And both are really important to know. But the tricky thing about intangible assets is they're often incredibly incredibly difficult to value. If I said to you, "What's the value, the dollar value of the word Coca-Cola?" What would you say? And how could you possibly come up with a figure? You could go anywhere on the planet and talk to almost any human and if you said the word CocaCola, they would understand what you're talking about and know exactly what you mean, even if they didn't speak English. So (09:49) what is the dollar value that we should assign to that name? It's really hard to do and accountants do attempt to put a dollar value behind it and they do often to make sure the financial statements work but it's very challenging to do. It's so much easier to say what's the dollar value of the manufacturing building where we create the Coca-Cola. (10:08) You can go in and say well how much did it cost to make it? How much is the equipment uh uh cost? And what are the operating expenses of it? And how can we depreciate that over time? that is a much easier thing to come up with. But David Gardner, I have learned so much from him and he has taught me the value of intangible assets. (10:26) One that um you didn't touch on is just something called mind share. Do your customers know and think of your product? And if I said to you uh uh Clay, uh name a store that you would go to to get uh groceries, what would you say? Uh I'd go the closest to down the street would be Target and Costco. There you go. So two brand names. (10:45) So I I said you need something and you immediately thought of Target and Costco. Is there value in that? Are there millions of people just like you who uh named say a toothpaste or name a computer uh company or name a phone company? They would instantly have something in mind. I would argue that there's tremendous value to that to having your name implanted in the customer's mind. (11:06) But how can you how can you express that on a financial statement? It's really hard to do. This is why marrying both the the details of accounting with the soft art of analyzing companies at a high level is so important. Yeah. I mean to pull the thread on that a little bit, a company like Coca-Cola is investing in marketing each year. (11:25) So um you know on the one side I could see where these marketing expenses are flowing through the the income statement and they're just like expenses or the cost of doing business. But then there's also the case of you know maybe part of this spend should be flowing through uh to the brand value in these intangible assets. (11:43) So how does this end up manifesting in the accounting statements for uh something like a marketing budget? Yeah. So that that is one way of doing it. You can say how much dollars have we put behind advertising campaigns or in the case of creating um intellectual property or or materials like think about uh Disney. (12:00) Uh Disney made the movie Snow White like what 80 90 years ago or something like that, but we still know the name Snow White. And think of all the ways that Disney has monetized the movie Snow White over the last hundred years. That is the the monetization that they've got out of that movie is enormous when compared to the resources that they put into uh uh creating that. (12:22) So to your point, one way that you can account for the value of a company's brand is to look at the spend that the company has put into sales and marketing over that brand's lifetime. And that is one way of valuing an an intangible asset. It's an imprecise way, but it's kind of the best that accountants have um at at any given time. (12:43) This is why one trick that I know that David Gardner uses when he's looking at financial statements is he looks at a company's intangible value and then he asks himself is the actual value that the company derives from the intangible that it has far higher than what's recorded on the the financial statements. That's one way that you can look for a mismatch between what a company is worth um in in reality and what it's worth on paper. (13:04) And uh I guess we'll jump here to um GAP accounting. So, financial statements for companies uh that are listed here in the US are constructed based on GAAP accounting. And our longtime listeners are going to likely know what this means, but for those who might be newer to the show, uh they might have no idea what this means. (13:24) So, how about you just talk a little bit about what GAP accounting is and uh you know why it's used here in the US. When it comes to creating financial statements, it's important that there are a set of rules and procedures that all companies follow to make sure that the reports that they're issuing to investors are are accurate. (13:43) In the United States, the accounting uh procedures that we use are called GAAP or generally accepted accounting principles, GAAP. And all companies that are publicly traded in the United States are required by law to report their financial statements using GAAP accounting. Now, for some businesses, uh, because of the black and white nature of of of GAAP accounting and the role that a GAP accounting uses when valuing things like intangible assets, sometimes the rules that companies have to follow are too rigid and too black and white. So, some (14:15) companies, especially modern-day tech companies, choose to report in addition to GAAP accounting, non-GAAP accounting, which is the financials that do not comply with GAAP accounting because they give the company more wiggle room uh to report information that they think is more valid. (14:34) Here's a simple way to think about GAAP versus non-GAAP accounting. I played golf with my with my son and my my son and I played golf uh the other night and uh I I took a drive um and and duffed it and I said I'm gonna take a mulligan and I hit a second shot and then I duffed my third shot out of the sand. (14:51) It took me two tries and I got up onto the green and then I I puted and I was within like you know six feet and I said it's a gimme. Well, according to gap accounting that's like a nine in in in the in the golf scorecard. But if you use non-GAAP accounting I would say that's a five. I I'm going to forget all those things that that don't account. (15:08) So, GAAP accounting, rigid following of rules and they're standardized and all companies must report them. Non-GAAP accounting is massaging the rules and often leaving out certain items to make your financial statements look better. Yeah. I mean, that's such an important uh point because you see so many companies, you know, report these these non-GAAP measures. (15:32) You know, I can imagine in some cases it it makes a lot of sense, but then uh you know, I can't help but think there's going to be some bad actors out there that try and make the company look better than it actually is, you know, which can lead people to investing in the company and you know, they can finance their operations through issuing equity and whatnot um and get some investors into trouble. (15:53) So, how reliable do you think the non-GAAP measures are? like how do we know if we can really, you know, trust them and trust, you know, what management's trying to tell us with these numbers? Well, it's important to that uh whenever a company reports non-GAAP numbers, it tells you precisely the adjustments that it's making to the gap figures in order to come up with them. (16:12) The most common adjustment that we see that most investors have a problem in or that there's a big debate about is the treatment of stockbased compensation. Stockbased compensation is a non-cash expense that according to GAP accounting must be accounted for on the company's financial statements. So if a company pays hundreds of millions of dollars in stockbased compensation that reduces their GAP earnings by hundreds of millions of dollars even though it did not have a cash cost to the business. (16:40) This is why many companies that pay huge amounts of stock-based compensation also report non-GAAP numbers and say, "Well, if we exclude stockbased compensation uh from our reporting, here's how much of a profit we would have uh recorded." That is probably the most common thing that is adjusted for with with non-GAAP accounting. (17:00) But there's lots of other things that are adjusted for. Some companies choose to exclude one-time events or one-time anomalies from their uh financial statements. For example, if they close down a factory and they had big severance payments, in theory, that is a one-time expense, one-time thing that they have to do. Now, with GAAP accounting, they have to record that one-time expense in their financial statements. (17:24) But from an operating perspective, it does make sense for a company to say, "Here's what it is with that expense excluded and here's what the numbers would be without that expense uh included." This is why some companies find it helpful to report both GAAP and non-GAAP numbers. Now, it's up to the individual investor that's analyzing the financial statements to look at the adjustments and see if they agree with the adjustments that are being made. (17:48) When I'm looking at a financial statements, if I find a company that touts its adjusted IBITa, a very non-GAAP number, I automatically deduct points in my head for that company's management team because I think they're focused on the wrong metric. But if a company is touting its GAP earnings per share or that's the number that they report uh to the markets, I immediately give that management team points and credit because that that's a much harder number to manipulate. (18:14) So, like always, it's always on the individual investor or the investor that's analyzing the financial statements to do the work to see, do is this management team trustworthy. Yeah, I'm happy you mentioned uh stockbased compensation there because I feel like uh Warren Buffett has almost trained a lot of us to, you know, dislike this metric and it's something that's been used uh more and more here in the US, especially within technology companies. (18:40) Um, on the one hand, you know, stockbased compensation many people view as a real expense. Um, you know, there's no free lunch as they say. But, uh, one thing I do appreciate about stockbased compensation is, you know, um, based on my understanding, employees that work at the company, part of their benefit is receiving stock uh, as a part of their total compensation. (19:02) And um I can appreciate this because it can really give um create this culture of ownership, right? Where the employees actually, you know, own shares in the company and now they're vested in that that company's success um you know, especially as you know, employees work there over a long period of time, but then a substantial portion of their net worth might uh be in those shares, especially if the shares appreciate. (19:25) So yeah, maybe uh I don't know if you have any follow-ups to that on, you know, of course stockbased compensation is a real expense, but um there could be some benefit for some companies that have that ownership culture. Yeah, I see both sides of it and stockbased compensation makes a ton of sense for startup and early stage businesses. (19:46) Oftent times they do not have the cash resources to go out and pay executives their market rate. So if an executive they want to pay them $500,000 per year and they the company might not have that operating income to support that kind of executive payment. So it makes a lot of sense for them to say we're going to pay you $100,000 in cash and $400,000 in stock which might be attractive to the executive if they think that the company could be worth far more um into the future. (20:12) But I I've come I I while I do see both sides of the stockbased compensation perspective, I am firmly I've become firmly in the camp uh of of Warren Buffett that I I would vastly prefer bonuses to be paid for with cash because I think that cash is actually a better motivation tool for the employee than I do stockbased compensation. (20:33) The reason I now think that is if you are anything other than the CEO, you do not have full control over what the company does. Imagine that you're a mid-level executive in the sales department. You have control over the sales and the actions in your specific region, but you have no control over the research and development department or the manufacturing department or the legal department or acquisitions that are made. (20:56) Yet those other actions will directly impact the stock price. So therefore, by owning just stock in the company, you have no control over what the company uh does. Only the CEO does. So I think that executive every executive except for the CEO uh should not have stockbased compensation in their package. I would prefer them to be paid for with cash. (21:16) Now the CEO who does have control over all operations should absolutely be paid in stock-based compensation because they actually have the control over what happens at the company level. But I've become much less of a fan of it at any other level of the organization. Jim Ran once said that you're the average of the five people you spend the most time with. (21:37) and I really could not agree with him more. And one of my favorite things about being a host of this show is having the opportunity to connect with high quality like-minded people in the value investing community. Each year we host live in-person events in Omaha and New York City for our tip mastermind community, giving our members that exact opportunity. (21:59) Back in May during the Bergkshire weekend, we gathered for a couple of dinners and social hours and also hosted a bus tour to give our members the full Omaha experience. And in the second weekend of October 2025, we'll be getting together in New York City for two dinners and socials as well as exploring the city and gathering at the Vanderbilt 1 Observatory. (22:23) Our mastermind community has around 120 members and we're capping the group at 150 and many of these members are entrepreneurs, private investors, or investment professionals. And like myself, they're eager to connect with kindered spirits. It's an excellent opportunity to connect with like-minded people on a deeper level. So, if you'd like to check out what the community has to offer and meet with around 30 or 40 of us in New York City in October, be sure to head to the investorspodcast. (22:52) com/mastermind to apply to join the community. That's the investorspodcast.com/mastermind or simply click the link in the description below. If you enjoy excellent breakdowns on individual stocks, then you need to check out the intrinsic value podcast hosted by Shaun Ali and Daniel Mona. Each week, Shawn and Daniel do in-depth analysis on a company's business model and competitive advantages. (23:19) And in real time, they build out the intrinsic value portfolio for you to follow along as they search for value in the market. So far, they've done analysis on great businesses like John Deere, Ulta Beauty, AutoZone, and Airbnb. And I recommend starting with the episode on Nintendo, the global powerhouse in gaming. (23:38) It's rare to find a show that consistently publishes highquality, comprehensive deep dives that cover all the aspects of a business from an investment perspective. Go follow the Intrinsic Value Podcast on your favorite podcasting app and discover the next stock to add to your portfolio or watch list. So, some of the investors I've talked to uh here on the show have mentioned that the US is an attractive place to invest uh for several reasons. (24:07) One of which is related to the regulatory environment and how much information public companies are required to publish for investors. You know, I've never purchased a stock in China or India, but I've heard that investing in stocks in those countries can be tricky because, you know, you tend to find uh a number of fraudulent uh names there. (24:25) And that isn't to say that all companies in the US are perfect by any means at all. But I think that it just gets to the point that often times you can trust the numbers at least a little bit more. So, how about you talk a little bit about some of the protections that are in place here in the US that seem to hold public companies that are listed here to a higher standard? Well, the United States is blessed with a few hundredyear operating history of public markets and be because of that, the US is is a highly regulated market and and uh (24:53) thanks to the actions of like the SEC, there are far more investor protections in place today than there have been uh historically and oftentimes it's often a tragedy or big high-flying um disaster that causes regulations to be put into place. As an example, I think most listeners are familiar with the name Enron and the Enron scandal that happened in the in the late uh 1990s, early 2000s where companies like Enron and Authur Anderson and WorldCom were essentially cooking their books. (25:21) They were making their financial statements look much better than the underlying performance of the company was. Well, thanks to the outfall of the Enron debacle, companies are now required to include a cash flow statement. they're required to report a cash flow statement with their um with the when they file uh with the SEC. (25:41) Prior to Enron, they were not required to issue a cash flow statement, which made it really hard for investors to track the true earnings performance um that a company has. Uh in addition, executives are also now required to sign their name uh on all of their financial statements, putting themselves personally liable for the reliability and the accuracy of those financial statements. (26:03) I'm not an expert in international markets um by any means, but I don't think that those same regulations are in place that would give investors protection. So, one one reason why it makes a lot of sense to me to invest mostly in the United States is that companies are required to follow GAP accounting, which is the accounting that I I I know best. (26:20) Um and there are some basic shareholder protections in place. Not to say that there aren't fabulous companies and great exchanges elsewhere, but for my money, I am perfectly comfortable and happy to invest in the US. Mhm. And one of the funny things about, you know, accounting and financial statements is that people tend to think of accountants as very rational, very logical thinkers that, you know, follow a very strict set of rules. (26:45) So, you know, once people pull up a financial statement, they tend to, you know, just take the numbers for what they're worth, right? Kind of just accept them as the truth. But I think, um, it's important to mention that there's actually some subjectivity when it comes to creating financial statements. So to use just a simple example I think uh everyone can understand let's say a manufacturing company buys machines for its plants and the life of those machines is expected to be 10 years. (27:11) Well you know if the company depreciates those machines over 20 years then they're likely to be overstating earnings. So if an investor takes you know those earnings at face value then they might not necessarily make the right investment decision based on what's happening in reality. And um here at TIP, I'm reminded that, you know, we have an advertising segment of our business and I could come up with a handful of ways that we could recognize revenue. (27:35) For example, we could recognize revenue when a deal's signed, uh when the ad starts running, when the advertiser actually pays us, if they do pay us, and whatnot. So, there's all this nuance that can go into it. And you know, all of these methods can paint a much different financial picture when you're looking at the statements. So um you know I just illustrate this to just show how subjective accounting can be at times and um it's not always that the economic earnings actually reflect economic reality and we might find ourselves in a case where you know the (28:07) analysis was spoton but our investment decision was incorrect based on you know our analysis of of the numbers that uh the company showed us. So, you know, this is also one reason I like to prioritize management in my analysis of a company. If I know I'm working with a highly ethical manager that I can trust, then, you know, it could be the case that they tend to understate earnings because they they care about investors and protecting investors. (28:36) So, um I think in these cases, it could be a a situation where they tend to surprise to the upside over the long term rather than, you know, uh disappointing investors. Yeah, to to your point, uh, you you just laid out a great example of how creative accountants can be when it comes to creating their financial statements. Revenue recognition is a huge area that CFOs or management teams have control over. (29:00) And to your point, when is revenue recorded? Is it when the item is actually shipped and leaves the factory? Uh, is it when you receive the cash uh from from from the customer? Those can be months apart. And when a company is publicly traded, there is huge financial pressure on the the management team to report numbers that exceed or beat Wall Street's estimates. (29:20) That controls their bonuses, that controls the stock price, that controls whether or not they get to keep their job. So, there are huge incentives in place for management teams to to fudge the numbers or do everything that they can to present the best story that they that they they can income time uh to to Wall Street. (29:36) So to your point, if you find a company that is very conservative with the accounting, that speaks volumes about the integrity of of the management team. And if you find the inverse, uh you should probably just stay away from that business. Yeah, that is an excellent point that you know so many companies just want to hit their their quarterly EPS and now in the short term that might be a great thing, but over the long term it it could end up hurting investors that um aren't investing in companies that use more conservative accounting. Another (30:04) point I'd like to mention is that uh this concept of fungeibility. So uh intuitively as humans we tend to think of money as fungeible. So Brian, if you and I walk into a Starbucks, we each go and buy an overpriced expensive latte. We're each going to pay $6 for that latte and essentially get the exact same product. (30:26) So your $6 have the exact same utility as my $6. And I think carrying this line of thinking can sometimes actually hurt us uh in investing who treat each dollar the same. So for example, a dollar's worth of earnings at a company like Costco might actually be worth considerably more than a dollars worth of earnings at another retailer that might be in decline or might have volatile earnings from year to year. (30:48) So how about you talk about uh this concept of you know understanding this there's more to just looking at the numbers. you you hit on a really important point when it comes to analyzing businesses and this really confused me when I first started investing because the thing that you read in investing books and value investing books is pay low PE ratios mean a company is cheap high PE ratios mean that a company is expensive so if you were looking at say an auto uh maker like Ford you might see that it's trading at eight times earnings six or (31:18) eight times earnings and your natural thing to say would be well that number is cheap for stock is cheap conversely you might Find a company like Costco or Visa or Mastercard trading at 30 times earnings and your natural inclination might be those stocks are expensive. Look how high their PE ratios are in comparison to the market or in comparison uh to Ford. (31:40) But you hit on an incredibly important point that not all profits and not all revenue is created equally. Um, a dollar in sales at one business is should be worth completely different than a dollar in sales at another business because not all revenue and not all profits are created equally. High quality revenue, really high quality revenue has some key characteristics. (32:03) Um, revenue that is recessionp proof that happens in good times and bad is far more valuable than revenue that is cyclical in nature and that a lot of it happens in good times and it disappears in in bad times. Revenue that becomes cash is is very is far more valuable than revenue that becomes accounts receivable. Revenue that is recurring in nature or where a customer makes continual payments say for a software license or utility is far more valuable than revenue that is related to a oneoff purchase or a one-off transaction that happens every 5 (32:36) to 10 years. Revenue that is very high margin has a gross margin of 80% is far more valuable than revenue that has a very low gross margin of say 10% or something. So to your point, if you were analyzing a dollar worth of sales at Ford, the market only might assign a six or eight multiple to that because the market believes that Ford's profits are not high highly uh valuable profits. (33:02) um those profits might disappear completely when when the when the the economy goes through a downturn. Uh Ford also issues credit so it becomes an accounts receivable for the business. You compare that to Costco. People shop at Costco in good times and in bad. And you could even argue that people shop at Costco more when the economy goes down. (33:22) So therefore, you can have a lot of confidence in the continual earnings power of a company like Costco when compared to a company like Ford. This is why when you're looking at companies that trade at wildly different PE ratios, that's the market's way of saying this profit is highly valuable and this profit is not nearly as valuable. (33:44) And uh I also wanted to touch on um the options a company has when they when they generate cash, what they can do with that cash. So generally they can do six different things uh when a company generates cash. it can, you know, keep that cash on the balance sheet, pay down debt, distribute dividends, repurchase its own shares, make an acquisition, or reinvest back into the business. (34:07) And I would say that those first five tend to be relatively easier to follow in the financial statements, but I think that the reinvestment piece, you know, can be a bit more elusive. What are some of the line items that we should look out for to better understand uh to what extent a business is reinvesting back into its own operations? Yeah, you can you can determine that when looking at the company's um income statement and what its operating expenses are doing as well as looking at its cash flow statement. (34:32) If a company, for example, is making is reinvesting into the business through capital expenditures, it's building new factories, it's building new stores, it's it's making new equipment, that would be reflected in the capital expenditures or purchase of property, plant, equipment line of the cash flow statement. (34:48) And you would also see a corresponding increase in a company's operating expenses uh on the income statement. But you just hit on a really important point that what you just described is something called capital allocation. And Warren Buffett has called a CEO's most important job capital allocation. There are six levers that a company can that a management team can pull at any time with the cash that it has available to them. (35:10) And the order and the magnitude of which those levers are pulled can have tremendous tremendous outputs um on the on the returns that shareholders receive when a company is in the early stages of its development. So when it's a startup or when it's in the hyperrowth mode or it's really starting to get growing, um a company often does not have excess capital. (35:31) All capital that's generated in the business goes right back into in into the company and is reinvested. This is when a company is hiring engineers to in research and development, hiring salespeople, opening up new um geographies, creating new products and launching those to market. When a company is in that stage of the business growth cycle, all capital should be reinvested back into the core business to drive future growth. (35:55) That's that's um unquestionable. Once the company runs out of internally generated projects in order to to um to continue growing itself, that's when those other five options become available to the business. And so many management teams screw this part up. they they have some excess capital to them and they don't have the training or discipline that they need to make the right application choices to maximize shareholder uh value. (36:21) For example, some companies buy back their stock because they think that's a good way to return capital to shareholders with no regard to the valuation or the market price uh that they're paying for that stock. And buying back a stock when it's overvalued is a horrible use of capital. Buying back that stock when it's dramatically undervalued can be a great use of capital. (36:42) The same can go for issuing and paying off debt. Paying off debt that's at a high rate can be a great use of capital. Paying off debt that's at a very low rate can be a poor uh use of capital. The same can be true of making acquisitions or or even uh paying dividends or just building the company's uh cash position. So capital allocation is something that investors should really pay attention to and and they can tell you a lot about the decision-making of the management team. (37:06) Financial statements also play a big role in how many investors are are viewing the company's valuation. So David Gardner, you know, he was talking about how um he's actually attracted to companies that uh financial commentators and analysts are saying are overvalued. Yet I think the irony with with many great businesses is that they often times appear more expensive than they really are when you're looking at these financial statements. (37:34) So, uh, one example I thought of was, um, looking at Netflix, for example, they've been investing in new content to try and boost their subscriber numbers over time. In theory, they could, um, stop investing in new content, and generate a ton of cash, a substantial amount of profit, and the stock might actually look cheap, but this would actually be detrimental to their business in the long term. (37:59) So there's this aspect of not, you know, looking at the numbers and understanding them, but not getting too bogged down in the numbers today. Um, and maybe focusing more on, you know, if it's a growth company like Netflix, focusing more on their management's ability to execute on their strategy and how successful they are in in painting that vision for where they want to be. (38:21) Yeah, you just highlighted probably one of the most confusing the the most confusing aspects of investing in valuation, especially if you're a new investor. Again, when I first started, I thought that the way that you valued a business was by looking at its PE ratio, its price toearnings ratio. And when I first understood what the PE ratio was, I would look at great companies like Apple, Netflix, Amazon, Intuitive Surgical, all of which had PE ratios that were 50, 80, 100, or even a thousand. (38:50) And my immediate next thought was too expensive. Can't buy that stock. It is just not for me. The problem is the PE ratio is a highly useful tool, but you have to use it at the right time. The price to earnings ratio is only a meaningful number when a company is fully optimized for generating profits. When a company is in growth mode, it is often not not optimized for generating profits. (39:18) it optimized for growth. Companies like Netflix or Amazon when they were in buildout mode were investing heavily in content in the case of of Netflix or investing heavily in distribution in the case of Amazon in order to increase their capacity in the anticipation of future growth that would come from future customers. (39:36) Those proved to be very smart savvy investments. But as a byproduct of that, it meant that their expenses were inflated when compared to the current size of the business. And since the expenses were inflated or overstated, that messy's profits, true profits were understated. And when profits are understated, that means the price toearnings ratio is inflated. (40:01) And that's why we saw companies like Amazon have a PE ratio of four or 500. and they were actually tremendous buys back then, even though they optically looked extremely expensive. So, a key thing I want listeners to do when you're analyzing a company's price to earnings ratio, ask yourself, is this company optimized for profits today? If the answer is no, don't use the PE ratio. (40:26) I'd also like to mention another item that you won't find on the balance sheet, which is uh optionality. So you know when you look at Netflix in 2015 they had zero advertising business and today Netflix has an advertising aspect to their business which as we know uh is extremely profitable for for many of these big tech platforms and this is same with Amazon you know it they might have had very little to no advertising 10 20 years ago and now advertising is a major you know segment of their business so that's why I'd also mention just how (40:59) well is management executing on what they they uh they're trying to do and what their strategy is and gaining market share and whatnot. Um because that optionality piece is is something that you need to consider if you're going to hold a stock for 5 10 plus years. Totally. And this is one of the most difficult things when it comes to analyzing a business. (41:18) So let me do give you my definition of optionality. I define optionality as the company's ability to launch new products and new services to its customers that generate needlemoving revenue and profits in the future. The best classic example that everyone can think of uh is Amazon. When Amazon first was a company, it sold books. (41:41) That was the business. It was selling books. What does Amazon sell today? Everything. like everything that you can possibly think of. So, Amazon by starting in books was developing a customer list and getting the operators in place to to to deliver books, but then it added on CDs and movies and electronics and now I think you can go as far as buying kayaks delivered straight to your home directly on Amazon. (42:08) So, Amazon is a tremendous example of a company that was able to launch new products and new services that opened up needlemoving revenue. When I look back at some of the best investments that I've ever made, many of them the reason for the upside that I have achieved is because of optionality uh as an example, Axon, which is formerly called Taser. (42:28) Uh they they made 100% of their revenue from from tasers that police use the police uh stun guns. If you look at the company today, that is still a major revenue driver for the company, but it also has Axon body cameras as well as a software solution that it developed internally that that ties all of its hardware components together. (42:48) So, if you were buying Axon stock 10 or 20 years ago, you were buying future optionality and these future products that you could not see at at at the time. And that is one reason why companies like Amazon, why companies like Apple, why companies like Marcato Libre have been such extreme outperformers over the last 10 and 20 years is because 10 and 20 years ago there there was hidden value in the company from future optionality. (43:15) I know that's something that David Gardner when he's investing looks for very closely. He asks, can this company launch new products and new services that open up new revenue opportunities? And if the answer is yes, the company might just be undervalued. Let's talk about red flags. So although accounting is the language of business, sometimes we can make the wrong interpretation of a company based on the numbers either because management is intentionally trying to show us what we want to see as investors or we aren't (43:43) looking in the right places within the financial statements. Uh how about we'll start with the income statement. What are some of the red flags that you look out for on the income statement? Yeah, there's there's a couple of them. I I define these more as yellow flags to to be perfectly honest. (43:57) I think when I think the word red flag, I think that means stop. Do not go any further. Do not invest. So I call the flags that we're about to go over yellow flags because when I see them tripped, I it just to me means investigate further. You need more information about this. So in the income statement in in particular, um I like to look at the revenue growth rate and I judge the revenue growth rate from year to year. (44:19) And if you see a sudden change in a company's revenue growth rate, that can be that that is a signal to Wall Street that the the thesis might be might be running out. And oftent times that can trigger a severe decline in the company's uh stock. So revenue growth rate from year to year is something that I do track. (44:39) And if a company is has a history of growing its revenue 30% per year and then suddenly it comes out with a report where revenue is growing 10% per year, that is a significant change in the company's revenue growth rate. And when that happens, it's often associated with a meaningful decline in the company's stock price. Another number that I track closely on the income statement is something called gross margin. (45:02) Gross margin is a company's gross profit divided by its revenue. and it tells you how profitable a product or service is on a unit basis. When the company's gross margin is declining over time, that to me is a big yellow flag that needs to be investigated because it either means the company is being forced to discount its product to consumers in order to drive it sales or its suppliers are increasing prices on its supplies and the company can't successfully pass those along to to consumers. (45:33) by both of which are are big yellow flags uh to me. The final one that I will look at is a company's shares outstanding or how many shares of stock uh exist. If this number is rapidly increasing over time, more than 3% per year, that to me is a yellow flag because it means the company doesn't respect their equity and is likely diluting shareholders through the issuing of too much stockbased compensation. (45:57) So those are three big yellow flags that I look for. A growth rate, gross margin, and a dilution rate. Yeah, I think delilution uh is definitely an important one to highlight because using that term I used earlier, it can be a bit more elusive where you know if if you see the stock price falling and management still needs to uh issue shares just to finance their business. (46:18) It's it's a bit in uh desperation mode if we can call it that. Uh how about we jump to the balance sheet? What are the red or yellow flags on the balance sheet? Sure. First thing I look at when I'm analyzing a balance sheet is the company's cash versus the company's debt. Uh, cash is king in a business. There's only one true sin and that it's running out of cash. (46:36) So, I like to compare how much cash or marketable securities, which is the same thing, essentially the same thing as cash a company has, and I compare that to its debt load, both short-term debt and long-term debt. Best case scenario is a company has millions or or billions of dollars in cash and zero debt, although that's pretty darn rare. (46:55) So, I at least like to check out the relationship between a company's cash balance and debt balance. as a general statement, it's okay that a company has debt, but I also want to see plenty of cash to be able to finance and support that debt um in into the future. So, that's the first thing that that I check. (47:09) Another number that I look for on the balance sheet is something called goodwill. Goodwill is the premium that companies have paid in the past to make acquisitions and it shows how much management teams overspent on the companies on the acquired companies assets in order to make the transaction uh happen. (47:30) Now, goodwill by itself is not necessarily a bad thing, but goodwill is a very there's no um there's no liquidity to the asset. You can't turn goodwill back into cash unless you sell the company that you acquired. So, I like to make sure that a company's goodwill is less than 10% of the company's total assets. A company can get into trouble if goodwill becomes the company's largest asset. (47:53) So if I see goodwill over 50% or or or even 60% that's when I raise that to me is a is a red flag. And the final thing that I look at are some current assets that are called accounts receivable um and and inventory. These are these are assets that the company has that will be converted into cash in in the future. But you don't want too much of a company's liquidity to be tied up in accounts receivable or inventory because the company might have trouble collecting on the accounts receivable that it has or the company might have (48:24) trouble selling inventory that it has and converting it into cash. So if a company has too much um uh working capital or too much accounts receivable or inventory and that number dwarfs its cash balance to me that's another red flag. Yeah. I love uh in one of your videos you highlighted goodwill right down by Teldoc. (48:46) So in 2021 they had a $14 billion in Goodwill and in 2022 you know that was written down to to1 billion. So um just a classic example of a company massively overpaying in an acquisition and uh you know paying for it in the end. That made me feel good as an investor because I've certainly bought lots of bad stocks that have cost me money but I've never bought a company that cost $13 billion. (49:10) So, uh, so management teams make plenty of mistakes, too. Yeah. How about red flags for the cash flow statement? Finally. Yeah. The cash flow statement is my favorite statement to to analyze because it shows you whether or not a company is producing or consuming cash. So, one of the first things that I look at on the cash flow statement is a company's net income. (49:29) And I compare that directly to a company's free cash flow. Now, free cash flow is not a number that's reported on most cash flow statements, but it's easy to calculate. You take operating cash flow and you subtract out capital expenditures. These numbers are right next to each other on on the cash flow statement. (49:45) And what you want to do as an investor is you compare net income to a company's free cash flow. In the best case scenario, a company is producing more free cash flow than it is net income. That would be a positive thing. And and the downside or the worst case scenario is a company is reporting lots of net income but its free cash flow is a negative number which means that the company is quote unquote profitable on paper but the company is not actually generating cash from operations. (50:16) And and there's a couple of big reasons why that could happen. They could be related to um to stockbased compensation expenses. They could be to big changes in in working uh capital. um or they could be to just huge capital expenditures to get the business off the ground. So that's not necessarily a red flag, but it definitely is worth a deeper dive as as an investor. (50:37) Another thing that I look at is stockbased compensation. I compare how much stockbased compensation is being issued and compare that to a company's net net income. As a general broad statement, I like it when less than 10% of a company's net income is issued as stockbased compensation. That's not always possible with high growth companies that are in the tech sector, but if a company is stock issuing stockbased compensation, I want to make sure it's a relatively small figure. (51:05) Excellent. Well, uh, I wanted to jump to one of the items you include in your investing checklist. Um, so one item you look for that would make a stock uninvestable is what you refer to as accounting irregularities. Uh, I don't know if I've had had anyone uh discuss this in depth, so I'd love for you to explain this for our listeners. (51:26) When a company says has to issue a press release saying we have some accounting irregularities, what they're telling you in plain English is our financial statements that we have issued in the past are not accurate. They are wrong. And they could be wrong for a bunch of reasons and they could be wrong in one direction and the other. (51:46) As a general statement, when a company does that, that means that they overstated their previous revenue or their or their profits and the auditors of their companies found significant problems with the way the company reports financial statements. To me, that is the only true red flag that exists when I'm making an investment that an inherent promise of that investment is that the numbers that I'm using to make a decision about the company and the valuation are accurate. (52:14) If all of a sudden I have to question the validity of the numbers that I use to make that decision, I just immediately sell that stock and write that company off as dead to me forever. There are thousands of companies out there that do not have to restate their financial statements. I don't think investors should bother at all with companies that accounting is a problem. (52:36) Yeah. Are there any examples in the past of this happening? Um maybe you've owned a company that is that has this published this this announcement. Yeah, there's lots of them that that happen. They they they they don't always happen to bign name companies, but the one that comes to mind immediately was Luck and Coffee, the uh the Chinese high- growth coffee company that in a matter of like three years or something like that had had as much uh as many locations as Starbucks did in its like 50-year history as a company. So when I (53:03) saw that, I was kind of scratching my head like, hm, that's interesting to see a company that in just a couple of years has matched Starbucks distribution scale and uh after being public for a couple of months, they did have to come out and say that we are restating our financial positions or we found some accounting irregularities. (53:19) When that happened, the stock dropped like 60% or something like that. I think peaked the trough, the stock went down like 90ish%. I believe in the case of Luck and Coffee, the company has since cleaned up its financial act and is back to being um in the good graces of Wall Street. I think the stock has appreciated meaningfully from when it declined. (53:37) But for me, the investor, I still would have zero faith in the accuracy of Luck and Coffey's financial statements at this point in time. And to me, I would never include that company in my portfolio. And is it the SEC that's sort of tapping him on the shoulder to to confirm that these numbers are correct and you know, they find that they're not? Is is it the SEC that does it? Is it shareholder push back or what leads to these regulations? It's a combination of of the SEC and the auditors of of the business. (54:02) So, companies that are publicly uh traded do have to get an outside auditing firm to go in and confirm that the numbers uh are correct. This is where the big four uh auditors uh come from and is one reason why if an investor does not see one of the big four auditors um on the company's financial statements. (54:19) They often time will have big questions in the place and saying u why are you bothering with this the outside auditor? We don't trust them. We do trust um the big four auditors uh in in the US. But typically it's a combination of the management team um the auditors uh the board of directors and the and the regulators that come up with these um that identify whether a company is has financial problems or not. (54:41) Excellent. We'll uh we've already mentioned David Gardner a couple of times during this conversation and uh I mentioned uh I had just interviewed him and that episode will go live a week after this one and I must say that it's one of my favorite conversations to date and uh you worked at the Mly Fool for a number of years and I know that Gardner was highly influential for you and your investment strategy and whatnot and uh as I was reading through the book I know that I see plenty of parallels between how both of you think about the world of (55:10) investing and Um, I'll also mention that Gardner amazingly I read in his book that uh his portfolio has seven 100 baggers and Amazon's more than a 1,000 bagger in his portfolio. Um, so really excited for that episode to go out next week. But um, before I give you the final handoff, I was curious if you could just talk a little bit about the impact that David Gardner has had either on you as an investor or as a person. (55:36) uh he David is a tremendous human being on so on so many fronts and uh one thing that I really like about studying David's investing style is it's so backwards and so differs so greatly from what you hear from the investing greats like Warren Buffett and Charlie Mer and and and Seth Clarin who emphasize valuation first in everything that they do. (56:01) David is I view as almost a venture capitalist investor who just so happens to fish in in public markets and he has his six signs of a of a rule breaker uh have been instrumental in helping me um as an investor in particular the thing that he has changed my mind about the most is is valuation and how to think about companies and that that that are valued. I am a natural value investor. (56:24) When I first started investing, I looked for big dividend yields and low PE ratios, and those were the stocks that I wanted to own. So, when I heard him say things like, "It's okay to pay 100 plus PE ratios for businesses." And I when I saw him recommending Amazon and Netflix early on in their growth phase, I thought he was nuts. (56:44) I just thought he was absolutely backwards and he was violating so many of the sound um investing principles. But when I look back at my biggest winners of all time, the things that have the biggest network uh impact on my personal net worth, they are almost exclusively companies that David Gardner uh picked out. Companies like um Netflix, Amazon, Intuitive, Surgical, uh Axon. (57:07) These are companies that I never would have put into my portfolio if he hadn't um recommended them and convinced me to. And in many cases, I was holding my nose about the valuation and buying. and looking back they were some of the best purchases I ever made. So he's had a tremendous impact on on on my financial life. Are there any ways in which you feel that your approach uh differs from his certain things you look for that he might not or or certain things you emphasize? Yeah, if you look at my checklist and compare it to his. Uh I have more (57:36) components on my checklist, but I am more of a quality investor at this time. I am okay with giving up the upside potential of a business. I try to I tend to invest later at later stages than he does because I want to see more that the thesis has been proven out. One thing that I like about his style is despite picking stock publicly for like 20 plus years, he is perfectly okay with with striking out uh on an investment going up and and being the champion for a company um uh like like Pelaton early on and saying yes, I I like this company. (58:08) that stock went on to fall like 70 plus uh percent and he is willing to shake it off, step up to the plate and still pick another stock that he thinks has upside potential. And what he showed me is that it is perfectly okay to lose and it's perfectly okay to have um a portfolio filled with losers. (58:28) You just need to get one Amazon or one Nvidia or one Apple into your portfolio and the gains that you get from that mega winner will pay for all of your losers combined. And um since valuation is is such an important piece of of looking at the financial statements, you mentioned, you know, initially uh you got attracted to to juicy dividend yields to low PE ratios. (58:55) And I remember very vividly back in college like I saw AT&T had a dividend deal to 5 6% and I was like man why am I not just putting a bunch of money into this but getting these these what I viewed as sort of guaranteed dividends you know of course they probably cut the dividend uh since then and um highly indebted company and whatnot. (59:14) Um so yeah I think it I don't know if you have anything else that you feel is um really important for your journey uh as an investor and you know looking at the numbers and understanding the numbers but also understanding how they fit into the bigger picture of understanding you know a company's value where that value might be in the future and just uh yeah viewing that from an investor standpoint. (59:37) Good investing is all about marrying the left side of your brain with the right side of your brain. And and I've learned that good investing is part art and part science. And you need both working in tandem with each other in order to do well. You need to have the financial knowledge to be able to analyze a company's financial statements and ask what's happening with revenue, what's happening with margins, can the company's balance sheet allow it to survive or will it have to raise capital and um dilute investors into oblivion? That's an very important skill (1:00:04) that you need to know. uh and to look at equally important is to be able to see the company where it is today and have the vision in your mind to say what can happen if this company does what it says it can do or is the future of this company even brighter than the most bullish analyst that's covering this stock today uh believes it's oftent time those companies the one that's outperform even the most wildly optimistic um expectations that that are out there that truly go on to deliver life-changing returns for for for (1:00:35) investors. This is one of the most important things that everybody listening this needs to know. What kind of investor are you? Where on the riskreward spectrum do you lie? Are you going after a 100 bagger stocks? If so, you need to really emphasize the story of the business and really deemphasize the current financials of the business. (1:00:53) If you're a value investor or dividend investor or a quality investor, you need to really emphasize the the financials of a business and deemphasize the um the story of the business. But it's really important to know yourself and to know what you're looking for so you can make the right investing decisions for you. (1:01:11) And lastly, uh how much emphasis do you put on, you know, building a DCF, building a model to determine whether you're going to, you know, invest in a stock or not? Personally, I put zero emphasis on DCF models. I don't use DCF models. I know many valuation gurus say that they're the only way to value business. (1:01:31) I I I don't agree with that um at all. Uh, I think the most useful DCF model is called the reverse DCF model where you solve for the company's implied growth rate by using the current stock price. That makes a lot of sense to me because you're not making estimates about what the company's going to do. (1:01:47) You're going to see you're seeing what does the market estimate that this company is going to do and do I think the company can outperform or underperform that. Valuation is one of the most tricky things to do, but I think the simpler you can keep it with valuation, the better you would do as an investor. So when I'm valuing companies, I'm looking at typically reverse discounted cash flow um uh analysis or um or simple multiples to determine uh a valuation. (1:02:10) I think while that is a very broad stroke, um I think that's all you need to do well as an investor. Excellent. Well, Brian, uh this was fantastic. A great uh conversation for many in our audience to become more familiar with financial statements and understanding, you know, how this all fits together and how understanding financial statements can help us as investors. (1:02:31) Um, I'd like to give you the final handoff here. Please let the audience know where they can get in touch with you and maybe even learn more about uh these these concepts. Yeah. So, financial statements are a really hard thing to express over a a a podcast. So, um I if anybody follows me on social media, I create a lot of visuals that kind of explain the nuance of accounting. (1:02:50) So, if you go to if your listeners go to financialstatements.school, financialstatements.school, school. Uh there I have an ebook that has 10 of my most popular accounting infographics all time and you can download them and then they'll make a lot of the concepts we talked about on today's episode make a whole lot more sense. Excellent. (1:03:09) Well, Brian, I really can't thank you enough and uh look forward to our next conversation in the future. Thank you for the invite, Clay. It's a pleasure to be here. On one extreme end of the valuation mindset spectrum, you have venture capitalists and growth investors. Those type of investors deemphasize valuation. The only thing that they are focused on is the upside potential of the business. (1:03:29) On the other extreme end is the Ben Graham, Michael Bur type of thinking where valuation is first and foremost the most important filter to put investments through and anything has a value if you buy it a cheap enough. In between those two extreme styles is what's called GARP investors, which is more growth at a reasonable price. (1:03:50) Those type investors are willing to pay a premium to own companies that have superior growth prospects, but companies that have lower growth prospects, they're not willing to pay as much of a premium uh for. So valuation is an important part of that process.
How to Read Financial Statements w/ Brian Feroldi (TIP752)
Summary
Transcript
(00:00) Another number that I look for on the balance sheet is something called goodwill. Goodwill is the premium that companies have paid in the past to make acquisitions and it shows how much management teams overspent on the companies on acquired companies assets in order to make the transaction happen. Now goodwill by itself is not necessarily a bad thing but goodwill is a very there's no liquidity to the asset. (00:29) You can't turn goodwill back into cash unless you sell the company that you acquired. So, I like to make sure that a company's goodwill is less than 10% of the company's total assets. [Music] Before we dive into the video, if you've been enjoying the show, be sure to click the subscribe button below so you never miss an episode. (00:51) It's a free and easy way to support us, and we'd really appreciate it. Thank you so much. Welcome to the Investors Podcast. I'm your host, Clayfink, and today we welcome back longtime guest Brian Faldi. Brian, so great to have you back. Clay, awesome to be back. Thank you for the invite. So, I've long wanted to do an episode touching on accounting and financial statements, but as you know, it can be so difficult to do just in a podcast format. (01:18) So, I thought there's no better person to bring onto the show to explain these concepts as simply as possible. So to kick us off, how about we just start with um talking about the role that analyzing financial statements plays in your investing process. To me, it's a critical component. I like to think of financial statements as a company's report card to judge how well the business is executing against the story or the promise that the business inherently has. (01:49) So if you don't know how to read financial statements, I liken that calling yourself a musician but not knowing how to read music. It is that important and that fundamental. So for me, I would never make any investment into any stock without analyzing its financial statements deeply. So I think the next place to go here is to talk about the uh master accounting equation. I love the name of that. (02:13) I'm not sure if you came up with it or not. Um what is the master accounting equation and why is that important? The master accounting equation is assets equals liabilities plus shareholders equity. Now that is the accounting way of saying what is a company's net worth. Clay if I asked you what's your net worth? You'd do a very simple math equation in your head. (02:36) You'd say what do I own minus what do I owe equals my net worth. That is the master accounting equation except for it's in accounting speak. So what you own is a company's assets. What you owe to others is a company's liabilities. And a company's net worth is just called shareholders equity or owner's equity. But that is the master accounting equation and it rules the company's financial statements. (03:03) Mhm. And that naturally brings us uh to the three financial statements. Talk to us about you know each of these statements and how all of these tie together as well. The three most important financial statements to know are the balance sheet, the income statement, and the cash flow statement. (03:22) Let's take them one at a time. The balance sheet is a snapshot picture of a company's net worth on paper at a point in time. And the balance sheet follows the master accounting equation. So on one side of the balance sheet is the company's assets. On the other side are the company's liabilities and shareholders equity. (03:41) Now the balance sheet is called the balance sheet because those two numbers assets and liabilities plus owner's equity must always exactly equal each other or balance. Hence the term balance sheet. Now that is the company's balance sheet. Then there's the company's income statement. And the income statement tracks a company's revenue and expenses over a set period of time. (04:06) Now the period of time can be is typically a quarter or a year. And think of a income statement kind of like a movie. So there's a start to it and there's an end to it. And the income statement records all revenue and expenses incurred during that period of time. And the income statement is used to tell whether a company is profitable or unprofitable at least on paper. (04:29) The third financial statement is called the cash flow statement. And this financial statement's purpose is to just track cash movement in and out of a business. So, think of this kind of like your personal checking account. It just measures did cash come in or did cash come out. Having all three of these statements is incredibly important because they each give you a different window into a company's financial situation. (04:58) And it's by analyzing all three of them together that you can get a true picture of a company's financials. Mhm. So, going back to uh my accounting 101 days, one of the things that, you know, always sort of tripped me up and sort of confused me was this concept of um double entry bookkeeping, right? So, for every um debit, there's a credit. (05:20) So, you know, a company raises money, they get cash on the balance sheet, you know, it's offset by um some sort of liability, whether they raise that money through debt, whether they raise it through equity and whatnot. So, how about you talk more about this concept of double entry bookkeeping of how for every um transaction there's a credit and a debit. (05:37) Yeah, this is recorded on the balance sheet and it is the method that keeps the balance sheet in balance. To your point, every time there is a transaction that affects something on the balance sheet, by definition, it also has to affect another ledger to ensure that the balance sheet remains in perfect balance with each other. (05:57) For example, if a company goes out to the market or goes out to the private markets and raises capital from investors, that's when an investor injects cash into a business in order to fund operations. That would have two transactions that appear on the balance sheet. First, the company is receiving cash from investors. So therefore, the company's cash balance would go up. (06:23) Now cash is an asset so that affects the left side of the balance sheet. And because the left side of the balance sheet is going up, there must be something on the right side of the balance sheet that also increases in order to make sure that the balance sheet is perfectly imbalanced. Now in the case of a company selling stock to other investors that would affect the shareholders equity portion of the income statement and particularly two numbers, one is common stock and the second is called additional paid in capital. So if a company raises a (06:51) million dollars from selling to investors, cash balance would go up by a million dollars and then common stock and additional paying capital would combined go up by $1 million as well. That would ensure that the balance sheet remains in balance. And this is true for every single transaction that can possibly occur um in in in a company. (07:13) So when revenue comes in, when sales come in, those would increase the company's retained earnings and it would uh increase the company's cash balance. When an expense is paid uh so like employees salaries are paid or rent is paid if that was paid in cash that would decrease the company's cash balance simultaneously decreasing a company's retained earnings. (07:33) So it's an incredibly important concept the concept of double entry accounting to ensure that the master account equation is always perfectly in balance. Um, as you know, I recently interviewed uh David Gardner and our episode will be going out next week. And one of the things we discussed uh during that conversation was just how so many of a company's assets you won't even find on the balance sheet. (07:58) For example, uh Amazon, their most important asset over the years was uh having Jeff Bezos as a CEO for for such a long time. So you know many successful companies today are making these investments into intangible assets which is becoming more and more prominent with all these technology names uh rising up. (08:16) Intangible assets you can think of things like brand uh patents proprietary technology or human capital whereas decades ago often times companies were investing in these tangible assets such as uh plant property equipment and inventory. So, how about you talk about uh the differences and how these intangible versus tangible investments flow through the financial statements? Sure, great question. (08:38) And that that simple concept is worth exploring more. Tangible versus intangible. To me, the word tangible, the easiest way to think about it is tangible means something you can physically touch. Intangible means something that you can't physically touch. So, a tangible asset would be a store, a retail store that a business uh operates out of. (08:58) You can go down and touch a Home Depot. A Home Depot stores are a tangible asset. But if I was to say touch the brand name or the copyright for Home Depot, that's something that uh exists uh in in a ledger somewhere. So you can't physically touch the brand name of Home Depot. So that would be an example of an intangible asset. (09:18) Companies derive value from both sources. And both are really important to know. But the tricky thing about intangible assets is they're often incredibly incredibly difficult to value. If I said to you, "What's the value, the dollar value of the word Coca-Cola?" What would you say? And how could you possibly come up with a figure? You could go anywhere on the planet and talk to almost any human and if you said the word CocaCola, they would understand what you're talking about and know exactly what you mean, even if they didn't speak English. So (09:49) what is the dollar value that we should assign to that name? It's really hard to do and accountants do attempt to put a dollar value behind it and they do often to make sure the financial statements work but it's very challenging to do. It's so much easier to say what's the dollar value of the manufacturing building where we create the Coca-Cola. (10:08) You can go in and say well how much did it cost to make it? How much is the equipment uh uh cost? And what are the operating expenses of it? And how can we depreciate that over time? that is a much easier thing to come up with. But David Gardner, I have learned so much from him and he has taught me the value of intangible assets. (10:26) One that um you didn't touch on is just something called mind share. Do your customers know and think of your product? And if I said to you uh uh Clay, uh name a store that you would go to to get uh groceries, what would you say? Uh I'd go the closest to down the street would be Target and Costco. There you go. So two brand names. (10:45) So I I said you need something and you immediately thought of Target and Costco. Is there value in that? Are there millions of people just like you who uh named say a toothpaste or name a computer uh company or name a phone company? They would instantly have something in mind. I would argue that there's tremendous value to that to having your name implanted in the customer's mind. (11:06) But how can you how can you express that on a financial statement? It's really hard to do. This is why marrying both the the details of accounting with the soft art of analyzing companies at a high level is so important. Yeah. I mean to pull the thread on that a little bit, a company like Coca-Cola is investing in marketing each year. (11:25) So um you know on the one side I could see where these marketing expenses are flowing through the the income statement and they're just like expenses or the cost of doing business. But then there's also the case of you know maybe part of this spend should be flowing through uh to the brand value in these intangible assets. (11:43) So how does this end up manifesting in the accounting statements for uh something like a marketing budget? Yeah. So that that is one way of doing it. You can say how much dollars have we put behind advertising campaigns or in the case of creating um intellectual property or or materials like think about uh Disney. (12:00) Uh Disney made the movie Snow White like what 80 90 years ago or something like that, but we still know the name Snow White. And think of all the ways that Disney has monetized the movie Snow White over the last hundred years. That is the the monetization that they've got out of that movie is enormous when compared to the resources that they put into uh uh creating that. (12:22) So to your point, one way that you can account for the value of a company's brand is to look at the spend that the company has put into sales and marketing over that brand's lifetime. And that is one way of valuing an an intangible asset. It's an imprecise way, but it's kind of the best that accountants have um at at any given time. (12:43) This is why one trick that I know that David Gardner uses when he's looking at financial statements is he looks at a company's intangible value and then he asks himself is the actual value that the company derives from the intangible that it has far higher than what's recorded on the the financial statements. That's one way that you can look for a mismatch between what a company is worth um in in reality and what it's worth on paper. (13:04) And uh I guess we'll jump here to um GAP accounting. So, financial statements for companies uh that are listed here in the US are constructed based on GAAP accounting. And our longtime listeners are going to likely know what this means, but for those who might be newer to the show, uh they might have no idea what this means. (13:24) So, how about you just talk a little bit about what GAP accounting is and uh you know why it's used here in the US. When it comes to creating financial statements, it's important that there are a set of rules and procedures that all companies follow to make sure that the reports that they're issuing to investors are are accurate. (13:43) In the United States, the accounting uh procedures that we use are called GAAP or generally accepted accounting principles, GAAP. And all companies that are publicly traded in the United States are required by law to report their financial statements using GAAP accounting. Now, for some businesses, uh, because of the black and white nature of of of GAAP accounting and the role that a GAP accounting uses when valuing things like intangible assets, sometimes the rules that companies have to follow are too rigid and too black and white. So, some (14:15) companies, especially modern-day tech companies, choose to report in addition to GAAP accounting, non-GAAP accounting, which is the financials that do not comply with GAAP accounting because they give the company more wiggle room uh to report information that they think is more valid. (14:34) Here's a simple way to think about GAAP versus non-GAAP accounting. I played golf with my with my son and my my son and I played golf uh the other night and uh I I took a drive um and and duffed it and I said I'm gonna take a mulligan and I hit a second shot and then I duffed my third shot out of the sand. (14:51) It took me two tries and I got up onto the green and then I I puted and I was within like you know six feet and I said it's a gimme. Well, according to gap accounting that's like a nine in in in the in the golf scorecard. But if you use non-GAAP accounting I would say that's a five. I I'm going to forget all those things that that don't account. (15:08) So, GAAP accounting, rigid following of rules and they're standardized and all companies must report them. Non-GAAP accounting is massaging the rules and often leaving out certain items to make your financial statements look better. Yeah. I mean, that's such an important uh point because you see so many companies, you know, report these these non-GAAP measures. (15:32) You know, I can imagine in some cases it it makes a lot of sense, but then uh you know, I can't help but think there's going to be some bad actors out there that try and make the company look better than it actually is, you know, which can lead people to investing in the company and you know, they can finance their operations through issuing equity and whatnot um and get some investors into trouble. (15:53) So, how reliable do you think the non-GAAP measures are? like how do we know if we can really, you know, trust them and trust, you know, what management's trying to tell us with these numbers? Well, it's important to that uh whenever a company reports non-GAAP numbers, it tells you precisely the adjustments that it's making to the gap figures in order to come up with them. (16:12) The most common adjustment that we see that most investors have a problem in or that there's a big debate about is the treatment of stockbased compensation. Stockbased compensation is a non-cash expense that according to GAP accounting must be accounted for on the company's financial statements. So if a company pays hundreds of millions of dollars in stockbased compensation that reduces their GAP earnings by hundreds of millions of dollars even though it did not have a cash cost to the business. (16:40) This is why many companies that pay huge amounts of stock-based compensation also report non-GAAP numbers and say, "Well, if we exclude stockbased compensation uh from our reporting, here's how much of a profit we would have uh recorded." That is probably the most common thing that is adjusted for with with non-GAAP accounting. (17:00) But there's lots of other things that are adjusted for. Some companies choose to exclude one-time events or one-time anomalies from their uh financial statements. For example, if they close down a factory and they had big severance payments, in theory, that is a one-time expense, one-time thing that they have to do. Now, with GAAP accounting, they have to record that one-time expense in their financial statements. (17:24) But from an operating perspective, it does make sense for a company to say, "Here's what it is with that expense excluded and here's what the numbers would be without that expense uh included." This is why some companies find it helpful to report both GAAP and non-GAAP numbers. Now, it's up to the individual investor that's analyzing the financial statements to look at the adjustments and see if they agree with the adjustments that are being made. (17:48) When I'm looking at a financial statements, if I find a company that touts its adjusted IBITa, a very non-GAAP number, I automatically deduct points in my head for that company's management team because I think they're focused on the wrong metric. But if a company is touting its GAP earnings per share or that's the number that they report uh to the markets, I immediately give that management team points and credit because that that's a much harder number to manipulate. (18:14) So, like always, it's always on the individual investor or the investor that's analyzing the financial statements to do the work to see, do is this management team trustworthy. Yeah, I'm happy you mentioned uh stockbased compensation there because I feel like uh Warren Buffett has almost trained a lot of us to, you know, dislike this metric and it's something that's been used uh more and more here in the US, especially within technology companies. (18:40) Um, on the one hand, you know, stockbased compensation many people view as a real expense. Um, you know, there's no free lunch as they say. But, uh, one thing I do appreciate about stockbased compensation is, you know, um, based on my understanding, employees that work at the company, part of their benefit is receiving stock uh, as a part of their total compensation. (19:02) And um I can appreciate this because it can really give um create this culture of ownership, right? Where the employees actually, you know, own shares in the company and now they're vested in that that company's success um you know, especially as you know, employees work there over a long period of time, but then a substantial portion of their net worth might uh be in those shares, especially if the shares appreciate. (19:25) So yeah, maybe uh I don't know if you have any follow-ups to that on, you know, of course stockbased compensation is a real expense, but um there could be some benefit for some companies that have that ownership culture. Yeah, I see both sides of it and stockbased compensation makes a ton of sense for startup and early stage businesses. (19:46) Oftent times they do not have the cash resources to go out and pay executives their market rate. So if an executive they want to pay them $500,000 per year and they the company might not have that operating income to support that kind of executive payment. So it makes a lot of sense for them to say we're going to pay you $100,000 in cash and $400,000 in stock which might be attractive to the executive if they think that the company could be worth far more um into the future. (20:12) But I I've come I I while I do see both sides of the stockbased compensation perspective, I am firmly I've become firmly in the camp uh of of Warren Buffett that I I would vastly prefer bonuses to be paid for with cash because I think that cash is actually a better motivation tool for the employee than I do stockbased compensation. (20:33) The reason I now think that is if you are anything other than the CEO, you do not have full control over what the company does. Imagine that you're a mid-level executive in the sales department. You have control over the sales and the actions in your specific region, but you have no control over the research and development department or the manufacturing department or the legal department or acquisitions that are made. (20:56) Yet those other actions will directly impact the stock price. So therefore, by owning just stock in the company, you have no control over what the company uh does. Only the CEO does. So I think that executive every executive except for the CEO uh should not have stockbased compensation in their package. I would prefer them to be paid for with cash. (21:16) Now the CEO who does have control over all operations should absolutely be paid in stock-based compensation because they actually have the control over what happens at the company level. But I've become much less of a fan of it at any other level of the organization. Jim Ran once said that you're the average of the five people you spend the most time with. (21:37) and I really could not agree with him more. And one of my favorite things about being a host of this show is having the opportunity to connect with high quality like-minded people in the value investing community. Each year we host live in-person events in Omaha and New York City for our tip mastermind community, giving our members that exact opportunity. (21:59) Back in May during the Bergkshire weekend, we gathered for a couple of dinners and social hours and also hosted a bus tour to give our members the full Omaha experience. And in the second weekend of October 2025, we'll be getting together in New York City for two dinners and socials as well as exploring the city and gathering at the Vanderbilt 1 Observatory. (22:23) Our mastermind community has around 120 members and we're capping the group at 150 and many of these members are entrepreneurs, private investors, or investment professionals. And like myself, they're eager to connect with kindered spirits. It's an excellent opportunity to connect with like-minded people on a deeper level. So, if you'd like to check out what the community has to offer and meet with around 30 or 40 of us in New York City in October, be sure to head to the investorspodcast. (22:52) com/mastermind to apply to join the community. That's the investorspodcast.com/mastermind or simply click the link in the description below. If you enjoy excellent breakdowns on individual stocks, then you need to check out the intrinsic value podcast hosted by Shaun Ali and Daniel Mona. Each week, Shawn and Daniel do in-depth analysis on a company's business model and competitive advantages. (23:19) And in real time, they build out the intrinsic value portfolio for you to follow along as they search for value in the market. So far, they've done analysis on great businesses like John Deere, Ulta Beauty, AutoZone, and Airbnb. And I recommend starting with the episode on Nintendo, the global powerhouse in gaming. (23:38) It's rare to find a show that consistently publishes highquality, comprehensive deep dives that cover all the aspects of a business from an investment perspective. Go follow the Intrinsic Value Podcast on your favorite podcasting app and discover the next stock to add to your portfolio or watch list. So, some of the investors I've talked to uh here on the show have mentioned that the US is an attractive place to invest uh for several reasons. (24:07) One of which is related to the regulatory environment and how much information public companies are required to publish for investors. You know, I've never purchased a stock in China or India, but I've heard that investing in stocks in those countries can be tricky because, you know, you tend to find uh a number of fraudulent uh names there. (24:25) And that isn't to say that all companies in the US are perfect by any means at all. But I think that it just gets to the point that often times you can trust the numbers at least a little bit more. So, how about you talk a little bit about some of the protections that are in place here in the US that seem to hold public companies that are listed here to a higher standard? Well, the United States is blessed with a few hundredyear operating history of public markets and be because of that, the US is is a highly regulated market and and uh (24:53) thanks to the actions of like the SEC, there are far more investor protections in place today than there have been uh historically and oftentimes it's often a tragedy or big high-flying um disaster that causes regulations to be put into place. As an example, I think most listeners are familiar with the name Enron and the Enron scandal that happened in the in the late uh 1990s, early 2000s where companies like Enron and Authur Anderson and WorldCom were essentially cooking their books. (25:21) They were making their financial statements look much better than the underlying performance of the company was. Well, thanks to the outfall of the Enron debacle, companies are now required to include a cash flow statement. they're required to report a cash flow statement with their um with the when they file uh with the SEC. (25:41) Prior to Enron, they were not required to issue a cash flow statement, which made it really hard for investors to track the true earnings performance um that a company has. Uh in addition, executives are also now required to sign their name uh on all of their financial statements, putting themselves personally liable for the reliability and the accuracy of those financial statements. (26:03) I'm not an expert in international markets um by any means, but I don't think that those same regulations are in place that would give investors protection. So, one one reason why it makes a lot of sense to me to invest mostly in the United States is that companies are required to follow GAP accounting, which is the accounting that I I I know best. (26:20) Um and there are some basic shareholder protections in place. Not to say that there aren't fabulous companies and great exchanges elsewhere, but for my money, I am perfectly comfortable and happy to invest in the US. Mhm. And one of the funny things about, you know, accounting and financial statements is that people tend to think of accountants as very rational, very logical thinkers that, you know, follow a very strict set of rules. (26:45) So, you know, once people pull up a financial statement, they tend to, you know, just take the numbers for what they're worth, right? Kind of just accept them as the truth. But I think, um, it's important to mention that there's actually some subjectivity when it comes to creating financial statements. So to use just a simple example I think uh everyone can understand let's say a manufacturing company buys machines for its plants and the life of those machines is expected to be 10 years. (27:11) Well you know if the company depreciates those machines over 20 years then they're likely to be overstating earnings. So if an investor takes you know those earnings at face value then they might not necessarily make the right investment decision based on what's happening in reality. And um here at TIP, I'm reminded that, you know, we have an advertising segment of our business and I could come up with a handful of ways that we could recognize revenue. (27:35) For example, we could recognize revenue when a deal's signed, uh when the ad starts running, when the advertiser actually pays us, if they do pay us, and whatnot. So, there's all this nuance that can go into it. And you know, all of these methods can paint a much different financial picture when you're looking at the statements. So um you know I just illustrate this to just show how subjective accounting can be at times and um it's not always that the economic earnings actually reflect economic reality and we might find ourselves in a case where you know the (28:07) analysis was spoton but our investment decision was incorrect based on you know our analysis of of the numbers that uh the company showed us. So, you know, this is also one reason I like to prioritize management in my analysis of a company. If I know I'm working with a highly ethical manager that I can trust, then, you know, it could be the case that they tend to understate earnings because they they care about investors and protecting investors. (28:36) So, um I think in these cases, it could be a a situation where they tend to surprise to the upside over the long term rather than, you know, uh disappointing investors. Yeah, to to your point, uh, you you just laid out a great example of how creative accountants can be when it comes to creating their financial statements. Revenue recognition is a huge area that CFOs or management teams have control over. (29:00) And to your point, when is revenue recorded? Is it when the item is actually shipped and leaves the factory? Uh, is it when you receive the cash uh from from from the customer? Those can be months apart. And when a company is publicly traded, there is huge financial pressure on the the management team to report numbers that exceed or beat Wall Street's estimates. (29:20) That controls their bonuses, that controls the stock price, that controls whether or not they get to keep their job. So, there are huge incentives in place for management teams to to fudge the numbers or do everything that they can to present the best story that they that they they can income time uh to to Wall Street. (29:36) So to your point, if you find a company that is very conservative with the accounting, that speaks volumes about the integrity of of the management team. And if you find the inverse, uh you should probably just stay away from that business. Yeah, that is an excellent point that you know so many companies just want to hit their their quarterly EPS and now in the short term that might be a great thing, but over the long term it it could end up hurting investors that um aren't investing in companies that use more conservative accounting. Another (30:04) point I'd like to mention is that uh this concept of fungeibility. So uh intuitively as humans we tend to think of money as fungeible. So Brian, if you and I walk into a Starbucks, we each go and buy an overpriced expensive latte. We're each going to pay $6 for that latte and essentially get the exact same product. (30:26) So your $6 have the exact same utility as my $6. And I think carrying this line of thinking can sometimes actually hurt us uh in investing who treat each dollar the same. So for example, a dollar's worth of earnings at a company like Costco might actually be worth considerably more than a dollars worth of earnings at another retailer that might be in decline or might have volatile earnings from year to year. (30:48) So how about you talk about uh this concept of you know understanding this there's more to just looking at the numbers. you you hit on a really important point when it comes to analyzing businesses and this really confused me when I first started investing because the thing that you read in investing books and value investing books is pay low PE ratios mean a company is cheap high PE ratios mean that a company is expensive so if you were looking at say an auto uh maker like Ford you might see that it's trading at eight times earnings six or (31:18) eight times earnings and your natural thing to say would be well that number is cheap for stock is cheap conversely you might Find a company like Costco or Visa or Mastercard trading at 30 times earnings and your natural inclination might be those stocks are expensive. Look how high their PE ratios are in comparison to the market or in comparison uh to Ford. (31:40) But you hit on an incredibly important point that not all profits and not all revenue is created equally. Um, a dollar in sales at one business is should be worth completely different than a dollar in sales at another business because not all revenue and not all profits are created equally. High quality revenue, really high quality revenue has some key characteristics. (32:03) Um, revenue that is recessionp proof that happens in good times and bad is far more valuable than revenue that is cyclical in nature and that a lot of it happens in good times and it disappears in in bad times. Revenue that becomes cash is is very is far more valuable than revenue that becomes accounts receivable. Revenue that is recurring in nature or where a customer makes continual payments say for a software license or utility is far more valuable than revenue that is related to a oneoff purchase or a one-off transaction that happens every 5 (32:36) to 10 years. Revenue that is very high margin has a gross margin of 80% is far more valuable than revenue that has a very low gross margin of say 10% or something. So to your point, if you were analyzing a dollar worth of sales at Ford, the market only might assign a six or eight multiple to that because the market believes that Ford's profits are not high highly uh valuable profits. (33:02) um those profits might disappear completely when when the when the the economy goes through a downturn. Uh Ford also issues credit so it becomes an accounts receivable for the business. You compare that to Costco. People shop at Costco in good times and in bad. And you could even argue that people shop at Costco more when the economy goes down. (33:22) So therefore, you can have a lot of confidence in the continual earnings power of a company like Costco when compared to a company like Ford. This is why when you're looking at companies that trade at wildly different PE ratios, that's the market's way of saying this profit is highly valuable and this profit is not nearly as valuable. (33:44) And uh I also wanted to touch on um the options a company has when they when they generate cash, what they can do with that cash. So generally they can do six different things uh when a company generates cash. it can, you know, keep that cash on the balance sheet, pay down debt, distribute dividends, repurchase its own shares, make an acquisition, or reinvest back into the business. (34:07) And I would say that those first five tend to be relatively easier to follow in the financial statements, but I think that the reinvestment piece, you know, can be a bit more elusive. What are some of the line items that we should look out for to better understand uh to what extent a business is reinvesting back into its own operations? Yeah, you can you can determine that when looking at the company's um income statement and what its operating expenses are doing as well as looking at its cash flow statement. (34:32) If a company, for example, is making is reinvesting into the business through capital expenditures, it's building new factories, it's building new stores, it's it's making new equipment, that would be reflected in the capital expenditures or purchase of property, plant, equipment line of the cash flow statement. (34:48) And you would also see a corresponding increase in a company's operating expenses uh on the income statement. But you just hit on a really important point that what you just described is something called capital allocation. And Warren Buffett has called a CEO's most important job capital allocation. There are six levers that a company can that a management team can pull at any time with the cash that it has available to them. (35:10) And the order and the magnitude of which those levers are pulled can have tremendous tremendous outputs um on the on the returns that shareholders receive when a company is in the early stages of its development. So when it's a startup or when it's in the hyperrowth mode or it's really starting to get growing, um a company often does not have excess capital. (35:31) All capital that's generated in the business goes right back into in into the company and is reinvested. This is when a company is hiring engineers to in research and development, hiring salespeople, opening up new um geographies, creating new products and launching those to market. When a company is in that stage of the business growth cycle, all capital should be reinvested back into the core business to drive future growth. (35:55) That's that's um unquestionable. Once the company runs out of internally generated projects in order to to um to continue growing itself, that's when those other five options become available to the business. And so many management teams screw this part up. they they have some excess capital to them and they don't have the training or discipline that they need to make the right application choices to maximize shareholder uh value. (36:21) For example, some companies buy back their stock because they think that's a good way to return capital to shareholders with no regard to the valuation or the market price uh that they're paying for that stock. And buying back a stock when it's overvalued is a horrible use of capital. Buying back that stock when it's dramatically undervalued can be a great use of capital. (36:42) The same can go for issuing and paying off debt. Paying off debt that's at a high rate can be a great use of capital. Paying off debt that's at a very low rate can be a poor uh use of capital. The same can be true of making acquisitions or or even uh paying dividends or just building the company's uh cash position. So capital allocation is something that investors should really pay attention to and and they can tell you a lot about the decision-making of the management team. (37:06) Financial statements also play a big role in how many investors are are viewing the company's valuation. So David Gardner, you know, he was talking about how um he's actually attracted to companies that uh financial commentators and analysts are saying are overvalued. Yet I think the irony with with many great businesses is that they often times appear more expensive than they really are when you're looking at these financial statements. (37:34) So, uh, one example I thought of was, um, looking at Netflix, for example, they've been investing in new content to try and boost their subscriber numbers over time. In theory, they could, um, stop investing in new content, and generate a ton of cash, a substantial amount of profit, and the stock might actually look cheap, but this would actually be detrimental to their business in the long term. (37:59) So there's this aspect of not, you know, looking at the numbers and understanding them, but not getting too bogged down in the numbers today. Um, and maybe focusing more on, you know, if it's a growth company like Netflix, focusing more on their management's ability to execute on their strategy and how successful they are in in painting that vision for where they want to be. (38:21) Yeah, you just highlighted probably one of the most confusing the the most confusing aspects of investing in valuation, especially if you're a new investor. Again, when I first started, I thought that the way that you valued a business was by looking at its PE ratio, its price toearnings ratio. And when I first understood what the PE ratio was, I would look at great companies like Apple, Netflix, Amazon, Intuitive Surgical, all of which had PE ratios that were 50, 80, 100, or even a thousand. (38:50) And my immediate next thought was too expensive. Can't buy that stock. It is just not for me. The problem is the PE ratio is a highly useful tool, but you have to use it at the right time. The price to earnings ratio is only a meaningful number when a company is fully optimized for generating profits. When a company is in growth mode, it is often not not optimized for generating profits. (39:18) it optimized for growth. Companies like Netflix or Amazon when they were in buildout mode were investing heavily in content in the case of of Netflix or investing heavily in distribution in the case of Amazon in order to increase their capacity in the anticipation of future growth that would come from future customers. (39:36) Those proved to be very smart savvy investments. But as a byproduct of that, it meant that their expenses were inflated when compared to the current size of the business. And since the expenses were inflated or overstated, that messy's profits, true profits were understated. And when profits are understated, that means the price toearnings ratio is inflated. (40:01) And that's why we saw companies like Amazon have a PE ratio of four or 500. and they were actually tremendous buys back then, even though they optically looked extremely expensive. So, a key thing I want listeners to do when you're analyzing a company's price to earnings ratio, ask yourself, is this company optimized for profits today? If the answer is no, don't use the PE ratio. (40:26) I'd also like to mention another item that you won't find on the balance sheet, which is uh optionality. So you know when you look at Netflix in 2015 they had zero advertising business and today Netflix has an advertising aspect to their business which as we know uh is extremely profitable for for many of these big tech platforms and this is same with Amazon you know it they might have had very little to no advertising 10 20 years ago and now advertising is a major you know segment of their business so that's why I'd also mention just how (40:59) well is management executing on what they they uh they're trying to do and what their strategy is and gaining market share and whatnot. Um because that optionality piece is is something that you need to consider if you're going to hold a stock for 5 10 plus years. Totally. And this is one of the most difficult things when it comes to analyzing a business. (41:18) So let me do give you my definition of optionality. I define optionality as the company's ability to launch new products and new services to its customers that generate needlemoving revenue and profits in the future. The best classic example that everyone can think of uh is Amazon. When Amazon first was a company, it sold books. (41:41) That was the business. It was selling books. What does Amazon sell today? Everything. like everything that you can possibly think of. So, Amazon by starting in books was developing a customer list and getting the operators in place to to to deliver books, but then it added on CDs and movies and electronics and now I think you can go as far as buying kayaks delivered straight to your home directly on Amazon. (42:08) So, Amazon is a tremendous example of a company that was able to launch new products and new services that opened up needlemoving revenue. When I look back at some of the best investments that I've ever made, many of them the reason for the upside that I have achieved is because of optionality uh as an example, Axon, which is formerly called Taser. (42:28) Uh they they made 100% of their revenue from from tasers that police use the police uh stun guns. If you look at the company today, that is still a major revenue driver for the company, but it also has Axon body cameras as well as a software solution that it developed internally that that ties all of its hardware components together. (42:48) So, if you were buying Axon stock 10 or 20 years ago, you were buying future optionality and these future products that you could not see at at at the time. And that is one reason why companies like Amazon, why companies like Apple, why companies like Marcato Libre have been such extreme outperformers over the last 10 and 20 years is because 10 and 20 years ago there there was hidden value in the company from future optionality. (43:15) I know that's something that David Gardner when he's investing looks for very closely. He asks, can this company launch new products and new services that open up new revenue opportunities? And if the answer is yes, the company might just be undervalued. Let's talk about red flags. So although accounting is the language of business, sometimes we can make the wrong interpretation of a company based on the numbers either because management is intentionally trying to show us what we want to see as investors or we aren't (43:43) looking in the right places within the financial statements. Uh how about we'll start with the income statement. What are some of the red flags that you look out for on the income statement? Yeah, there's there's a couple of them. I I define these more as yellow flags to to be perfectly honest. (43:57) I think when I think the word red flag, I think that means stop. Do not go any further. Do not invest. So I call the flags that we're about to go over yellow flags because when I see them tripped, I it just to me means investigate further. You need more information about this. So in the income statement in in particular, um I like to look at the revenue growth rate and I judge the revenue growth rate from year to year. (44:19) And if you see a sudden change in a company's revenue growth rate, that can be that that is a signal to Wall Street that the the thesis might be might be running out. And oftent times that can trigger a severe decline in the company's uh stock. So revenue growth rate from year to year is something that I do track. (44:39) And if a company is has a history of growing its revenue 30% per year and then suddenly it comes out with a report where revenue is growing 10% per year, that is a significant change in the company's revenue growth rate. And when that happens, it's often associated with a meaningful decline in the company's stock price. Another number that I track closely on the income statement is something called gross margin. (45:02) Gross margin is a company's gross profit divided by its revenue. and it tells you how profitable a product or service is on a unit basis. When the company's gross margin is declining over time, that to me is a big yellow flag that needs to be investigated because it either means the company is being forced to discount its product to consumers in order to drive it sales or its suppliers are increasing prices on its supplies and the company can't successfully pass those along to to consumers. (45:33) by both of which are are big yellow flags uh to me. The final one that I will look at is a company's shares outstanding or how many shares of stock uh exist. If this number is rapidly increasing over time, more than 3% per year, that to me is a yellow flag because it means the company doesn't respect their equity and is likely diluting shareholders through the issuing of too much stockbased compensation. (45:57) So those are three big yellow flags that I look for. A growth rate, gross margin, and a dilution rate. Yeah, I think delilution uh is definitely an important one to highlight because using that term I used earlier, it can be a bit more elusive where you know if if you see the stock price falling and management still needs to uh issue shares just to finance their business. (46:18) It's it's a bit in uh desperation mode if we can call it that. Uh how about we jump to the balance sheet? What are the red or yellow flags on the balance sheet? Sure. First thing I look at when I'm analyzing a balance sheet is the company's cash versus the company's debt. Uh, cash is king in a business. There's only one true sin and that it's running out of cash. (46:36) So, I like to compare how much cash or marketable securities, which is the same thing, essentially the same thing as cash a company has, and I compare that to its debt load, both short-term debt and long-term debt. Best case scenario is a company has millions or or billions of dollars in cash and zero debt, although that's pretty darn rare. (46:55) So, I at least like to check out the relationship between a company's cash balance and debt balance. as a general statement, it's okay that a company has debt, but I also want to see plenty of cash to be able to finance and support that debt um in into the future. So, that's the first thing that that I check. (47:09) Another number that I look for on the balance sheet is something called goodwill. Goodwill is the premium that companies have paid in the past to make acquisitions and it shows how much management teams overspent on the companies on the acquired companies assets in order to make the transaction uh happen. (47:30) Now, goodwill by itself is not necessarily a bad thing, but goodwill is a very there's no um there's no liquidity to the asset. You can't turn goodwill back into cash unless you sell the company that you acquired. So, I like to make sure that a company's goodwill is less than 10% of the company's total assets. A company can get into trouble if goodwill becomes the company's largest asset. (47:53) So if I see goodwill over 50% or or or even 60% that's when I raise that to me is a is a red flag. And the final thing that I look at are some current assets that are called accounts receivable um and and inventory. These are these are assets that the company has that will be converted into cash in in the future. But you don't want too much of a company's liquidity to be tied up in accounts receivable or inventory because the company might have trouble collecting on the accounts receivable that it has or the company might have (48:24) trouble selling inventory that it has and converting it into cash. So if a company has too much um uh working capital or too much accounts receivable or inventory and that number dwarfs its cash balance to me that's another red flag. Yeah. I love uh in one of your videos you highlighted goodwill right down by Teldoc. (48:46) So in 2021 they had a $14 billion in Goodwill and in 2022 you know that was written down to to1 billion. So um just a classic example of a company massively overpaying in an acquisition and uh you know paying for it in the end. That made me feel good as an investor because I've certainly bought lots of bad stocks that have cost me money but I've never bought a company that cost $13 billion. (49:10) So, uh, so management teams make plenty of mistakes, too. Yeah. How about red flags for the cash flow statement? Finally. Yeah. The cash flow statement is my favorite statement to to analyze because it shows you whether or not a company is producing or consuming cash. So, one of the first things that I look at on the cash flow statement is a company's net income. (49:29) And I compare that directly to a company's free cash flow. Now, free cash flow is not a number that's reported on most cash flow statements, but it's easy to calculate. You take operating cash flow and you subtract out capital expenditures. These numbers are right next to each other on on the cash flow statement. (49:45) And what you want to do as an investor is you compare net income to a company's free cash flow. In the best case scenario, a company is producing more free cash flow than it is net income. That would be a positive thing. And and the downside or the worst case scenario is a company is reporting lots of net income but its free cash flow is a negative number which means that the company is quote unquote profitable on paper but the company is not actually generating cash from operations. (50:16) And and there's a couple of big reasons why that could happen. They could be related to um to stockbased compensation expenses. They could be to big changes in in working uh capital. um or they could be to just huge capital expenditures to get the business off the ground. So that's not necessarily a red flag, but it definitely is worth a deeper dive as as an investor. (50:37) Another thing that I look at is stockbased compensation. I compare how much stockbased compensation is being issued and compare that to a company's net net income. As a general broad statement, I like it when less than 10% of a company's net income is issued as stockbased compensation. That's not always possible with high growth companies that are in the tech sector, but if a company is stock issuing stockbased compensation, I want to make sure it's a relatively small figure. (51:05) Excellent. Well, uh, I wanted to jump to one of the items you include in your investing checklist. Um, so one item you look for that would make a stock uninvestable is what you refer to as accounting irregularities. Uh, I don't know if I've had had anyone uh discuss this in depth, so I'd love for you to explain this for our listeners. (51:26) When a company says has to issue a press release saying we have some accounting irregularities, what they're telling you in plain English is our financial statements that we have issued in the past are not accurate. They are wrong. And they could be wrong for a bunch of reasons and they could be wrong in one direction and the other. (51:46) As a general statement, when a company does that, that means that they overstated their previous revenue or their or their profits and the auditors of their companies found significant problems with the way the company reports financial statements. To me, that is the only true red flag that exists when I'm making an investment that an inherent promise of that investment is that the numbers that I'm using to make a decision about the company and the valuation are accurate. (52:14) If all of a sudden I have to question the validity of the numbers that I use to make that decision, I just immediately sell that stock and write that company off as dead to me forever. There are thousands of companies out there that do not have to restate their financial statements. I don't think investors should bother at all with companies that accounting is a problem. (52:36) Yeah. Are there any examples in the past of this happening? Um maybe you've owned a company that is that has this published this this announcement. Yeah, there's lots of them that that happen. They they they they don't always happen to bign name companies, but the one that comes to mind immediately was Luck and Coffee, the uh the Chinese high- growth coffee company that in a matter of like three years or something like that had had as much uh as many locations as Starbucks did in its like 50-year history as a company. So when I (53:03) saw that, I was kind of scratching my head like, hm, that's interesting to see a company that in just a couple of years has matched Starbucks distribution scale and uh after being public for a couple of months, they did have to come out and say that we are restating our financial positions or we found some accounting irregularities. (53:19) When that happened, the stock dropped like 60% or something like that. I think peaked the trough, the stock went down like 90ish%. I believe in the case of Luck and Coffee, the company has since cleaned up its financial act and is back to being um in the good graces of Wall Street. I think the stock has appreciated meaningfully from when it declined. (53:37) But for me, the investor, I still would have zero faith in the accuracy of Luck and Coffey's financial statements at this point in time. And to me, I would never include that company in my portfolio. And is it the SEC that's sort of tapping him on the shoulder to to confirm that these numbers are correct and you know, they find that they're not? Is is it the SEC that does it? Is it shareholder push back or what leads to these regulations? It's a combination of of the SEC and the auditors of of the business. (54:02) So, companies that are publicly uh traded do have to get an outside auditing firm to go in and confirm that the numbers uh are correct. This is where the big four uh auditors uh come from and is one reason why if an investor does not see one of the big four auditors um on the company's financial statements. (54:19) They often time will have big questions in the place and saying u why are you bothering with this the outside auditor? We don't trust them. We do trust um the big four auditors uh in in the US. But typically it's a combination of the management team um the auditors uh the board of directors and the and the regulators that come up with these um that identify whether a company is has financial problems or not. (54:41) Excellent. We'll uh we've already mentioned David Gardner a couple of times during this conversation and uh I mentioned uh I had just interviewed him and that episode will go live a week after this one and I must say that it's one of my favorite conversations to date and uh you worked at the Mly Fool for a number of years and I know that Gardner was highly influential for you and your investment strategy and whatnot and uh as I was reading through the book I know that I see plenty of parallels between how both of you think about the world of (55:10) investing and Um, I'll also mention that Gardner amazingly I read in his book that uh his portfolio has seven 100 baggers and Amazon's more than a 1,000 bagger in his portfolio. Um, so really excited for that episode to go out next week. But um, before I give you the final handoff, I was curious if you could just talk a little bit about the impact that David Gardner has had either on you as an investor or as a person. (55:36) uh he David is a tremendous human being on so on so many fronts and uh one thing that I really like about studying David's investing style is it's so backwards and so differs so greatly from what you hear from the investing greats like Warren Buffett and Charlie Mer and and and Seth Clarin who emphasize valuation first in everything that they do. (56:01) David is I view as almost a venture capitalist investor who just so happens to fish in in public markets and he has his six signs of a of a rule breaker uh have been instrumental in helping me um as an investor in particular the thing that he has changed my mind about the most is is valuation and how to think about companies and that that that are valued. I am a natural value investor. (56:24) When I first started investing, I looked for big dividend yields and low PE ratios, and those were the stocks that I wanted to own. So, when I heard him say things like, "It's okay to pay 100 plus PE ratios for businesses." And I when I saw him recommending Amazon and Netflix early on in their growth phase, I thought he was nuts. (56:44) I just thought he was absolutely backwards and he was violating so many of the sound um investing principles. But when I look back at my biggest winners of all time, the things that have the biggest network uh impact on my personal net worth, they are almost exclusively companies that David Gardner uh picked out. Companies like um Netflix, Amazon, Intuitive, Surgical, uh Axon. (57:07) These are companies that I never would have put into my portfolio if he hadn't um recommended them and convinced me to. And in many cases, I was holding my nose about the valuation and buying. and looking back they were some of the best purchases I ever made. So he's had a tremendous impact on on on my financial life. Are there any ways in which you feel that your approach uh differs from his certain things you look for that he might not or or certain things you emphasize? Yeah, if you look at my checklist and compare it to his. Uh I have more (57:36) components on my checklist, but I am more of a quality investor at this time. I am okay with giving up the upside potential of a business. I try to I tend to invest later at later stages than he does because I want to see more that the thesis has been proven out. One thing that I like about his style is despite picking stock publicly for like 20 plus years, he is perfectly okay with with striking out uh on an investment going up and and being the champion for a company um uh like like Pelaton early on and saying yes, I I like this company. (58:08) that stock went on to fall like 70 plus uh percent and he is willing to shake it off, step up to the plate and still pick another stock that he thinks has upside potential. And what he showed me is that it is perfectly okay to lose and it's perfectly okay to have um a portfolio filled with losers. (58:28) You just need to get one Amazon or one Nvidia or one Apple into your portfolio and the gains that you get from that mega winner will pay for all of your losers combined. And um since valuation is is such an important piece of of looking at the financial statements, you mentioned, you know, initially uh you got attracted to to juicy dividend yields to low PE ratios. (58:55) And I remember very vividly back in college like I saw AT&T had a dividend deal to 5 6% and I was like man why am I not just putting a bunch of money into this but getting these these what I viewed as sort of guaranteed dividends you know of course they probably cut the dividend uh since then and um highly indebted company and whatnot. (59:14) Um so yeah I think it I don't know if you have anything else that you feel is um really important for your journey uh as an investor and you know looking at the numbers and understanding the numbers but also understanding how they fit into the bigger picture of understanding you know a company's value where that value might be in the future and just uh yeah viewing that from an investor standpoint. (59:37) Good investing is all about marrying the left side of your brain with the right side of your brain. And and I've learned that good investing is part art and part science. And you need both working in tandem with each other in order to do well. You need to have the financial knowledge to be able to analyze a company's financial statements and ask what's happening with revenue, what's happening with margins, can the company's balance sheet allow it to survive or will it have to raise capital and um dilute investors into oblivion? That's an very important skill (1:00:04) that you need to know. uh and to look at equally important is to be able to see the company where it is today and have the vision in your mind to say what can happen if this company does what it says it can do or is the future of this company even brighter than the most bullish analyst that's covering this stock today uh believes it's oftent time those companies the one that's outperform even the most wildly optimistic um expectations that that are out there that truly go on to deliver life-changing returns for for for (1:00:35) investors. This is one of the most important things that everybody listening this needs to know. What kind of investor are you? Where on the riskreward spectrum do you lie? Are you going after a 100 bagger stocks? If so, you need to really emphasize the story of the business and really deemphasize the current financials of the business. (1:00:53) If you're a value investor or dividend investor or a quality investor, you need to really emphasize the the financials of a business and deemphasize the um the story of the business. But it's really important to know yourself and to know what you're looking for so you can make the right investing decisions for you. (1:01:11) And lastly, uh how much emphasis do you put on, you know, building a DCF, building a model to determine whether you're going to, you know, invest in a stock or not? Personally, I put zero emphasis on DCF models. I don't use DCF models. I know many valuation gurus say that they're the only way to value business. (1:01:31) I I I don't agree with that um at all. Uh, I think the most useful DCF model is called the reverse DCF model where you solve for the company's implied growth rate by using the current stock price. That makes a lot of sense to me because you're not making estimates about what the company's going to do. (1:01:47) You're going to see you're seeing what does the market estimate that this company is going to do and do I think the company can outperform or underperform that. Valuation is one of the most tricky things to do, but I think the simpler you can keep it with valuation, the better you would do as an investor. So when I'm valuing companies, I'm looking at typically reverse discounted cash flow um uh analysis or um or simple multiples to determine uh a valuation. (1:02:10) I think while that is a very broad stroke, um I think that's all you need to do well as an investor. Excellent. Well, Brian, uh this was fantastic. A great uh conversation for many in our audience to become more familiar with financial statements and understanding, you know, how this all fits together and how understanding financial statements can help us as investors. (1:02:31) Um, I'd like to give you the final handoff here. Please let the audience know where they can get in touch with you and maybe even learn more about uh these these concepts. Yeah. So, financial statements are a really hard thing to express over a a a podcast. So, um I if anybody follows me on social media, I create a lot of visuals that kind of explain the nuance of accounting. (1:02:50) So, if you go to if your listeners go to financialstatements.school, financialstatements.school, school. Uh there I have an ebook that has 10 of my most popular accounting infographics all time and you can download them and then they'll make a lot of the concepts we talked about on today's episode make a whole lot more sense. Excellent. (1:03:09) Well, Brian, I really can't thank you enough and uh look forward to our next conversation in the future. Thank you for the invite, Clay. It's a pleasure to be here. On one extreme end of the valuation mindset spectrum, you have venture capitalists and growth investors. Those type of investors deemphasize valuation. The only thing that they are focused on is the upside potential of the business. (1:03:29) On the other extreme end is the Ben Graham, Michael Bur type of thinking where valuation is first and foremost the most important filter to put investments through and anything has a value if you buy it a cheap enough. In between those two extreme styles is what's called GARP investors, which is more growth at a reasonable price. (1:03:50) Those type investors are willing to pay a premium to own companies that have superior growth prospects, but companies that have lower growth prospects, they're not willing to pay as much of a premium uh for. So valuation is an important part of that process.