12 Companies With Ironclad Balance Sheets

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There are a lot of fierce economic headwinds pushing against your companies right now: tight credit markets, continued deleveraging, high unemployment, and paltry economic growth, just for starters. Now more than ever, investors must be mindful of companies' financial strength. 

This takes us to the balance sheet. It is critical that companies you invest in right now have significant cash positions, low or no debt, or ensured access to credit. In this environment, it's all about preservation of capital. You're not looking for companies that can necessarily profit in this environment; rather, look for the ones that have preserved capital and are better repositioning themselves for the coming boom.

Testing financial strength
There are a number of ways to test balance-sheet strength. The first is cash. Cash is always king -- and now, as far as investors are concerned, cash is the messiah.

Always look at how much cash is on a company's balance sheet. Look to see if the company has increased its cash position since last year. You can also measure a company's health by calculating its current ratio (current assets/current liabilities), which measures its ability to pay off its short-term obligations. A current ratio of 1 means the company has just enough short-term assets to pay off its short-term liabilities; higher ratios mean that some current assets would be left over, which is better.

Another way to view a company's cash position is to look at cash per share. This shouldn't be looked at in isolation, though, because it's a dynamic number, and the company could be burning through the cash instead of generating more. To help with that, also look for trends in cash flow. For instance, is cash flow from operations accelerating over a multiyear period? The answer should be "yes."

The next point of examination is the amount of debt the company carries on its books. There are a number of ways to measure this; the most common is the long-term debt-to-equity ratio. A ratio of 1 would mean that the company's creditors finance $1 for every $1 of equity the stockholders give. In this environment, the lower the ratio, the better, as refinancing can be painfully expensive and can increase default rates.

With these guidelines in mind, I sought to uncover companies with strong balance sheets by running a screen using the Motley Fool's CAPS screening tool. I searched for companies with:

  • Current ratios of 1 or greater.
  • Long-term debt-to-equity ratios of 1 or less.
  • CAPS ratings of five stars, the highest.
  • Market caps of $250 million or greater.       

Here are results from my screen:

Company

Market Cap

LT Debt-to-Equity Ratio

Current Ratio

Activision Blizzard (Nasdaq: ATVI)

$14.5 billion

0

3.5

Adobe Systems (Nasdaq: ADBE)

$18.8 billion

0.07

4.9

China Nepstar Chain Drugstore

$728 million

0

6.7

Duoyuan Global Water

$872 million

0

8.6

Endo Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: ENDP)

$2.7 billion

0.24

1.9

Forest Laboratories (NYSE: FRX)

$9.3 billion

0

5.0

Genoptix

$650 million

0

9.1

Jinpan International

$328 million

0

2.1

Novartis (NYSE: NVS)

$126.1 billion

0.16

1.7

PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP)

$97.5 billion

0.49

1.3

PetMed Express (Nasdaq: PETS)

$380 million

0

10.2

Syngenta

$24.3 billion

0.49

1.9

Data from Motley Fool CAPS.

Balance-sheet strength is a critical element to look at when researching companies. However, it's only one factor. Investors must remain mindful of the industry in which the company operates and whether that industry has growth potential. From there, you must assess the company's position within the industry. Is it a leader? If not, does it have a product or service that is gaining traction in the market to help it gain market share? These are just some of the questions to ask.

Start finding the strongest companies for your portfolio at Motley Fool CAPS today! Let the collective wisdom of our 145,000-member investment community help you make better investing decisions.

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Foolish contributor Jennifer Schonberger does not own shares of any of the companies mentioned in this article. Adobe Systems and Activision Blizzard are Motley Fool Stock Advisor recommendations. Jinpan International is a Motley Fool Hidden Gems pick. PepsiCo is an Income Investor pick. Novartis and Syngenta are Global Gains selections. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On November 25, 2009, at 3:45 PM, Mliaom wrote:

    Excellent post, To any new investor this article is very helpful. Great read.

  • Report this Comment On November 25, 2009, at 4:49 PM, Luctor wrote:

    This is total codswallop. Never but never pick a company because it has a mountain of cash in the bank. In general you will find that such companies are run by secret members of the communist party, who know better than you how to spend your money. In general such companies are slopilly run - with all that lolly there is no incentive to run a tight ship. In general directors and management will have snouts in troughs and disregard owners. Such a thing as a dividend is a dirty word.

    I am telling you nothing new by writing that you must look for companies that are lean and mean and look after owners, not the petty cash

  • Report this Comment On November 30, 2009, at 8:16 AM, htcarson wrote:

    Adobe is setting on mountain of cash and wasting the solution to creating a paperless world. They need to spend some of the cash showing the world the solutions built around Acrobat. Almost no one knows what the Acrobat solutions can do. Adobe started as a boxed graphic software company and still thinks like one.

    Everyone in the business world thinks they know Acrobat due to the Reader. The Acrobat family could be the next biggest jump in business productivity. You need managers with VISION and Adobe clearly showing the VISION.

    Acrobat, Connect and LiveCycle should be a separate business unit with a management team that understands business - not Graphics.

    Letting Acrobat take its rightful place could triple the value of Adobe in two years. It will just take spending some of the cash so Acrobat can create the paperless world.

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Related Tickers

2/10/2010 9:36 AM
NVS $53.61 Up +0.03 +0.06%
Novartis AG (ADR) CAPS Rating: ****
ENDP $19.57 Down -0.07 -0.33%
Endo Pharmaceutica… CAPS Rating: *****
ADBE $33.37 Up +1.06 +3.28%
Adobe Systems, Inc… CAPS Rating: ****
PETS $18.63 Up +0.17 +0.92%
PetMed Express, In… CAPS Rating: *****
FRX $28.98 Down +0.00 +0.00%
Forest Laboratorie… CAPS Rating: ****
PEP $60.20 Up +0.15 +0.25%
PepsiCo, Inc. CAPS Rating: *****
ATVI $10.21 Up +0.16 +1.59%
Activision Blizzar… CAPS Rating: *****

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