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Covance Passes This Key Test

There's no foolproof way to know the future for Covance (NYSE: CVD  ) or any other company. However, certain clues may help you see potential stumbles before they happen -- and before your stock craters as a result. Rest assured: Even if you're not monitoring these metrics, short-sellers are.

A cloudy crystal ball
I often use accounts receivable (AR) and days sales outstanding (DSO) to judge a company's current health and future prospects. It's an important step in separating the pretenders from the market's best stocks. Alone, AR -- the amount of money owed the company -- and DSO -- days worth of sales owed to the company -- don't tell you much. However, by considering the trends in AR and DSO, you can sometimes get a window onto the future.

Sometimes, problems with AR or DSO simply indicate a change in the business (like an acquisition), or lax collections. However, AR that grows more quickly than revenue, or ballooning DSO, can also suggest a desperate company that's trying to boost sales by giving its customers overly generous payment terms. Alternately, it can indicate that the company sprinted to book a load of sales at the end of the quarter, like used-car dealers on the 29th of the month. (Sometimes, companies do both.)

Why might an upstanding firm like Covance do this? For the same reason any other company might: to make the numbers. Investors don't like revenue shortfalls, and employees don't like reporting them to their superiors.

Is Covance sending any potential warning signs? Take a look at the chart below, which plots revenue growth against AR growth, and DSO:

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Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. FQ = fiscal quarter.

The standard way to calculate DSO uses average accounts receivable. I prefer to look at end-of-quarter (EOQ) receivables, but I've plotted both above.

Watching the trends
When that red line (AR growth) crosses above the green line (revenue growth), I know I need to consult the filings. Similarly, a spike in the blue bars (DSO) indicates a trend worth worrying about. As another reality check, it's reasonable to consider what a normal DSO figure might look like in this space.

Company

LFQ Revenue

DSO

 Covance $513 84
 Pharmaceutical Product Development (Nasdaq: PPDI  ) $365 110
 Kendle International (Nasdaq: KNDL  ) $113 121
 Parexel International (Nasdaq: PRXL  ) $342 168

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's. DSO calculated from average AR. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. LFQ = last fiscal quarter. Dollar figures in millions.

Differences in business models can generate variations in DSO, so don't consider this the final word -- just a way to add some context to the numbers. But let's get back to our original question: Will Covance miss its numbers in the next quarter or two?

I don't think so. AR and DSO look healthy. For the last fully reported fiscal quarter, Covance's year-over-year revenue grew 3.2%, and its AR dropped 5.8%. That looks OK. End-of-quarter DSO decreased 8.7% from the prior-year quarter. It was down 4.6% versus the prior quarter. Still, I'm no fortuneteller, and these are just numbers. Investors putting their money on the line always need to dig into the filings for the root causes and draw their own conclusions.

What now?
I use this kind of analysis to figure out which investments I need to watch more closely as I hunt the market's best returns. However, some investors actively seek out companies on the wrong side of AR trends in order to sell them short, profiting when they eventually fall. Which way would you play this one? Let us know in the comments below, or keep up with the stocks mentioned in this article by tracking them in our free watchlist service, My Watchlist.

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Seth Jayson had no position in any company mentioned here at the time of publication. You can view his stock holdings here. He is co-advisor of Motley Fool Hidden Gems, which provides new small-cap ideas every month, backed by a real-money portfolio. Pharmaceutical Product Development is a Motley Fool Stock Advisor pick. The Fool owns shares of Kendle International. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. 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 January 25, 2011, at 1:45 PM, Somite wrote:

    Wouldn't an alternate and more tragic interpretation be that Covance is landing less work contracts and therefore less AR even when DSO is increasing? Covance has been terminating people left and right even below what some people believe is a critical mass of expertise.

  • Report this Comment On January 25, 2011, at 3:23 PM, dynozap wrote:

    Excellent post, Somite, and right on target.

  • Report this Comment On January 25, 2011, at 7:05 PM, exeeintheknow wrote:

    The author fails to recognize that Covance also has unbilled receivables and client advances. You must look at net A/R (A/R+Unbilled - Client Advances) and net DSO to get the true picture of the health of the company (based on A/R and revenue anyway). Read the company's 10-K to get a better understanding of accounting policies concerning revenue and receivables.

    Also, given what the company has publicly stated about it's earnings estimates for 2011, reaching these targets should be a layup. If the company misses it's 2011 targets, I would be VERY concerned.

  • Report this Comment On January 26, 2011, at 8:13 PM, rsinj wrote:

    It's too bad this author doesn't have a genuine idea of his own about any stock he "writes" about. He has 3 article templates and then he simply changes the company name, the symbol, a table and a graph. Every other word is boiler plate. Go take a look at some of the other articles - more than half of the first few have the same template as this one - word for word.

    It seems that most of the Fool authors do that these days.

    And they expect people to want to pay them money for their content? Get real.

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