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How Cheap Is Brigham Exploration's Stock by the Numbers?

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Numbers can lie -- but they're the best first step in determining whether a stock is a buy. In this series, we use some carefully chosen metrics to size up a stock's true value based on the following clues:

  • The current price multiples.
  • The consistency of past earnings and cash flow.
  • How much growth we can expect.

Let's see what those numbers can tell us about how expensive or cheap Brigham Exploration (Nasdaq: BEXP  ) might be.

The current price multiples
First, we'll look at most investors' favorite metric: the P/E ratio. It divides the company's share price by its earnings per share -- the lower, the better.

Then, we'll take things up a notch with a more advanced metric: enterprise value to unlevered free cash flow. This divides the company's enterprise value (basically, its market cap plus its debt, minus its cash) by its unlevered free cash flow (its free cash flow, adding back the interest payments on its debt). Like the P/E, the lower this number is, the better.

Analysts argue about which is more important -- earnings or cash flow. Who cares? A good buy ideally has low multiples on both.

Brigham has a P/E ratio of 96.3 and a negative EV/FCF ratio over the trailing 12 months. If we stretch and compare current valuations to the five-year averages for earnings and free cash flow, Brigham has a negative P/E ratio and a negative EV/FCF ratio.

A positive one-year ratio under 10 for both metrics is ideal. For a five-year metric, under 20 is ideal.

Brigham is zero for four on hitting the ideal targets, but let's see how it compares against some competitors and industry mates. 

Company

1-Year P/E

1-Year EV/FCF

5-Year P/E

5-Year EV/FCF

Brigham Exploration 96.3 NM NM NM
Contango Oil & Gas (AMEX: MCF  ) 14.4 70.9 11.2 NM
Apache (NYSE: APA  ) 13.0 25.1 24.2 48.0
Cabot Oil & Gas (NYSE: COG  ) 65.6 NM 31.5 NM

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's; NM = not meaningful.

Numerically, we've seen how Brigham's valuation rates on both an absolute and relative basis. Next, let's examine ...

The consistency of past earnings and cash flow
An ideal company will be consistently strong in its earnings and cash flow generation.

In the past five years, Brigham's net income margin has ranged from -260.6% to 14.9%. In that same time frame, unlevered free cash flow margin has ranged from -130.2% to -15.5%.

How do those figures compare with those of the company's peers? See for yourself:

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's; margin ranges are combined.

Additionally, over the last five years, Brigham has tallied up four years of positive earnings and no years of positive free cash flow.

Next, let's figure out ...

How much growth we can expect
Analysts tend to comically overstate their five-year growth estimates. If you accept them at face value, you will overpay for stocks. But while you should definitely take the analysts' prognostications with a grain of salt, they can still provide a useful starting point when compared to similar numbers from a company's closest rivals.

Let's start by seeing what this company's done over the past five years. In that time period, Brigham has put up past EPS growth rates of -16.3%. Meanwhile, Wall Street's analysts expect future growth rates of 38.5%.

Here's how Brigham compares to its peers for trailing five-year growth (because of past losses, Contango's trailing growth rate isn't meaningful):

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's; EPS growth shown.

And here's how it measures up with regard to the growth analysts expect over the next five years (my data provider doesn't list any growth estimates for Contango):

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's; estimates for EPS growth.

The bottom line
The pile of numbers we've plowed through has shown us the price multiples shares of Brigham are trading at, the volatility of its operational performance, and what kind of growth profile it has -- both on an absolute and a relative basis.

The more consistent a company's performance has been and the more growth we can expect, the more we should be willing to pay. We've gone well beyond looking at a 96.3 P/E ratio and the initial numbers aren't impressive except for the analyst expectations for future growth. But these initial numbers are just a start. If you find Brigham's numbers or story compelling, don't stop. Continue your due diligence process until you're confident one way or the other. As a start, add it to My Watchlist to find all of our Foolish analysis including this article by fellow Fool Isac Simon.

If you want some more stock ideas, check out my recent article: 7 Great Stocks Some Wall Street Idiots Are Missing.

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Anand Chokkavelu doesn't own shares in any company mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of Contango Oil & Gas. 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 June 08, 2011, at 6:24 PM, dheatguy wrote:

    MR. Anand Chokkavelu, CFA:

    Your analysis of BEXP smacks of the worst kind of financial journalism -- cherry picking a few metrics as a guide to future performance. Every ethical financial professional knows that past performance is, in itself, not a guide to future performance. But, apparently you disagree with this and apparently Fools like you do not have the time to do even a bit of due diligence as to the fundamental prospects of a company. Your thesis of "The more consistent a company's performance has been and the more growth we can expect, the more we should be willing to pay" is easily shattered with a name like Microsoft. How do you explain their share performance over the past 5 years? Same on you for such an assination on a name like BEXP.

  • Report this Comment On June 09, 2011, at 3:24 PM, snowbrush1 wrote:

    Apparently you missed the coming out party or failed to perform any meaningful research on the BEXP transformation. Over the past 3 years, BEXP has recapitalized itself, refocused its efforts to the Bakken, set the applied technology standard in the Williston Basin, grown it’s undrilled Bakken inventory to 15 to 20 years while expanding it’s dedicated rig count to 10 from 1, built out infrastructure such as field pipelines and evolved to eco-pad drilling concepts.

    Like most fools, you have made the mistake of evaluating one of the premier O&G production companies like you would a retailer who can merely call up suppliers to restock their shelves and adjust sales by a little advertising.

    An Oil and Gas Producer on the other hand makes a capital intense investment in a 30 year declining asset and ideally plows all of their cash flow back into growth.

    Further you indirectly allow the very prudent action of a producer hedging future production at a price or collar certain to be viewed as a negative. Like most fools, you are willing to allow mark to market of hedging activity to be recorded as a loss while not considering the revenue from owned, in ground production that the hedge applies too!

    In the current quarter bottom line that you relied on this resulted in an unrealized loss of 30 cents per share from true performance. For a speculator mark to market would be appropriate. For a Hedge it isn’t!

    BEXP is on a rapid controlled growth curve. Most fools have never had the privilege of this experience. I have. The impact of such growth is considerable expense invested in things like training, search fees for acquiring the best tallent, higher early year deprecation on new trucks, office supplies and ramp up costs that benefit future years but fall correctly to the current expense line.

    As a result you have evaluated an investment in BEXP like a driver only using the rear view mirror to direct his car. You would do yourself and your readers a favor by considering the Brigham of the next 3 to 5 years based on a total look at the Brigham today.

    Unlike each of your comparisons and even most others in the industry, BEXP has owned asset in place, a plan, a 61 consecutive well success rate and the capital and intelligence to execute and turn this asset into cash for 20 years in the future. You can’t say the same for Wal-Mart, Microsoft, Priceline or even Apple or Netflix.

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Related Tickers

12/31/1969 7:00 PM
BEXP.DL $0.00 Down +0.00 +0.00%
Brigham Exploratio… CAPS Rating: ***
MCF $53.62 Down -0.02 -0.04%
Contango Oil & Gas… CAPS Rating: *****
COG $34.77 Down -0.30 -0.86%
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APA $82.38 Up +0.29 +0.35%
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