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Time to Short Joe's Jeans?

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At Fool.com, we believe in buying great companies for the long term. However, not every company commands a fair price, and many trade for far more than they're actually worth.

In these situations, investors actually have a chance to benefit from a stock's plunge. When shorting a stock, an investor bets that price of a stock will go down, and profits from any downward movement. The practice is risky, inviting unlimited losses while only providing limited upside. However, shorting wildly overvalued companies can also help balance your portfolio against the wild market swings we've seen in previous years.

To find shorting candidates, we screened for stocks with a high percentage of their publicly traded shares sold short. One such stock is Joe's Jeans (Nasdaq: JOEZ  ) , with a current short interest of 9.41%. That's pretty high, but let's see how it compares to other companies in its industry:

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

We consider short interest greater than 5% to be a warning sign. While plenty of great companies can carry high short interest, that red flag is your invitation to dig for troubling information that the company's buyers might be missing.

When evaluating short candidates, start by assessing their near-term financial health. To check on Joe's Jeans' immediate health, we looked at its current ratio, which simply divides its current assets by its current liabilities. The more assets a company has -- cash, inventory, and accounts receivable, among others -- the more easily it should be able to pay off its obligations in times of financial distress.

Joe's Jeans' ratio in this category is solid, at 2.27. We look for a current ratio greater than 1:

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

Once we've assessed a company's short-term financial health, next we determine whether it's overstating its earnings. Earnings are meant to show a smoothed-out picture of a company's profit potential over time. However, they're prone to various assumptions and manipulations. Companies can aggressively recognize revenue, or show high earnings even while they pour excessive amounts of cash into capital expenditures that are slowly accounted for over time.

For this reason, it's best to compare free cash flow to earnings. Free cash flow accounts for the actual cash flowing out of or into a business, and then subtracts out actual capital expenditure costs over a given period of time. In the last twelve months, Joe's Jeans' cash flow has been $3 million while their earnings were nearly $24 million.

Joe's Jeans' free cash flow has trailed earnings on average. In this case, it's a good idea to open up company filings and explore what's causing this cash flow lag. If free cash flow is showing a consistent trend of underperforming earnings, that could mean the company is overvalued according to its stated earnings. Alternately, it might be recognizing earnings too aggressively, which could lead to free cash flow declines in the future.

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

One last consideration for shorting a company is valuation. Excellent companies often trade for prices that aren't justified by their business's long-term outlook. Think back to the dot-com bubble: While technology companies like Amazon.com would eventually produce large profits, at the time they lacked business models and future earnings streams to justify their mammoth market capitalizations.

The PEG ratio is a simple measure of whether a company is excessively valued. It compares a company's P/E ratio to its estimated growth rate. We compared Joe's Jeans' expected P/E ratio of the next 12 months relative to its 5-year estimated growth rate. As an investor, you'd look for companies trading at P/Es less than their growth rate. As seen in the table below, Joe's Jeans currently trades at PEG ratio of 0.21.

Company

Forward P/E

5-Year Growth Estimate %

5-Year PEG Ratio

Joe's Jeans

14.6

71

0.21

Phillips-Van Heusen (NYSE: PVH  )

10.9

13.7

0.80

True Religion Apparel (Nasdaq: TRLG  )

8.4

22.5

0.37

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

With a PEG ratio of less than 1, Joe's Jeans looks attractively valued relative to its expected growth. Investors shorting the stock are either looking at other areas of concern, or feel analyst growth estimates have overstated the company's potential.

The long road to superior shorting
Identifying good short candidates requires diligent research. More importantly, you've got to know where to dig into a company's financial statements. While the measures we showed above are a great start in searching for shorting candidates, red flags like accelerating revenue recognition, aggressive acquisitions to hide underlying financial weakness, and changes in reporting methods can only be spotted by carefully analyzing the notes companies bury deep in their filings.

Finding these opportunities requires skill, but you can do it. That's why John Del Vecchio, CFA, a leading forensic accountant and The Motley Fool's shorting specialist, put together a detailed report that shows you how to spot five serious red flags that can help you detect time bombs in your portfolio and lead you to the next big short. You can get the entire report free by clicking here or by entering your email address in the box below.

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Jeremy Phillips does not own shares of the companies mentioned. Amazon.com is a Stock Advisor recommendation. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. 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 August 20, 2010, at 7:44 PM, slojewski wrote:

    Another initially confusing title, but the article itself then concludes this is a damned good stock. Watch the shorts stumbling over their untied shoelaces once this stock begins getting the attention it deserves. This could be a four or eight or a twenty bagger once everyone sees how the institutions are quietly buying huge numbers of shares--they doubled their holdings in the last year. Makes you wonder why the insiders at the company are selling their so many of their shares and not buying more--I think that is part of the reason the stock is so weak. When buyers see insiders selling without an equal amount of buying they sell what they have or avoid the stock completely.

    JOEZ Joe's Jeans

  • Report this Comment On August 23, 2010, at 2:09 PM, safefool1 wrote:

    You guys are consistently inconsistent. Did you read your own articles from the last 3 postings? I could see a short for a small time on this stock, but I tell you what...I wouldn't want to get caught on the wrong side coming Q3 and Q4 coming with new store established and Santa Monica online just in time for back to school and holiday shopping in Nov.

  • Report this Comment On August 23, 2010, at 4:34 PM, slojewski wrote:

    I'm with you. Thanks for the bright outlook rather than the confusing articles by the Fools fools.

  • Report this Comment On August 24, 2010, at 11:02 AM, PeyDaFool wrote:

    "Joe's Jeans: Forward P/E 14.6, 5-Year growth estimate: 71%, 5-Year PEG: 0.21."

    Looks good to me; I'm going to retire fat and happy with this stock.

  • Report this Comment On August 24, 2010, at 11:13 AM, Tastylunch wrote:

    Joe's is also under 5 dollars per share, those your brokers make very expensive and risky to short if your broker will even let you short it at all.

  • Report this Comment On August 24, 2010, at 11:23 AM, EnigmaDude wrote:

    The bottom line take-away that I get from this article is that anyone shorting JOEZ is likely to get burned. Yes, the title is mis-leading and as someone holding shares in real life it gave me pause. But this paragraph made me feel a little better:

    "With a PEG ratio of less than 1, Joe's Jeans looks attractively valued relative to its expected growth. Investors shorting the stock are either looking at other areas of concern, or feel analyst growth estimates have overstated the company's potential."

    I'm tempted to load up but will most likely wait to see what the next quarter or two looks like. Until then, I'm holding on to my shares.

  • Report this Comment On August 25, 2010, at 4:57 PM, Ironbob wrote:

    Yeah because you're bound to make a ton of money if you short like 10 million shares of JOEZ.

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:00 PM
TRLG $29.77 Down -0.05 -0.17%
True Religion Appa… CAPS Rating: ***
PVH $82.46 Up +0.08 +0.10%
Phillips-Van Heuse… CAPS Rating: ***
JOEZ $1.08 Down +0.00 +0.00%
Joe's Jeans, Inc. CAPS Rating: ***

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