Rite Aid (NYSE: RAD) may be cheaper than you think.

In the daily noise machine of CNBC, analyst estimates, and quarterly announcements, investors are inundated with talking heads obsessing over earnings-per-share figures.

Earnings, or net income, is an accounting construction that is the basis for the price-to-earnings ratio, the most popular way of measuring how cheap or expensive a stock is.

But free cash flow -- the amount of cash a company earns on its operations minus what it spends on them -- is another, oftentimes more accurate measure of earnings that can give you an advantage.

How Rite Aid stacks up                                     
If Rite Aid tends to generate more free cash flow than net income, there's a good chance earnings-per-share figures understate its profitability and overstate its price tag. Conversely, if Rite Aid consistently generates less free cash flow than net income, it may be less profitable and more expensive than it appears.

This graph compares Rite Aid's historical net income to free cash flow. (I omitted various gains and charges such as tax deferrals, restructurings, and benefits related to stock options.)

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

As you can see, Rite Aid has a tendency to produce more free cash flow than net income. This means that the standard price-to-earnings multiple investors use to judge companies (in Rite Aid’s case, a big fat “N/A”) may overstate its price tag.

There can be a variety of reasons to disregard such a discrepancy; for example, free cash flow can overstate earnings in businesses with volatile working capital needs, or understate earnings in high-growth companies that are reinvesting capital in the business.

Alternatively, in cases where free cash flow more accurately measures earnings, such a discrepancy can indicate a company that is more -- or less -- expensive than investors realize.

Let's examine Rite Aid alongside some of its peers for additional context:

Company

Price-to-Earnings Ratio

Adjusted Price-to-Free-Cash-Flow Ratio

Rite Aid N/A* 32.8
CVS Caremark (NYSE: CVS) 6.5 5.5
Walgreen (NYSE: WAG) 13.7 12.2
Safeway (NYSE: SWY) 12.3 8.0

* Negative net income.

Because Rite Aid hasn’t generated positive net income for some time, the company doesn’t even have a P/E.

But Rite Aid tends to generate much more free cash flow than net income, suggesting that -- while things may not exactly be going swimmingly -- the company’s stock might be a bit cheaper than many investors realize.

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