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SodaStream Has High-Quality Earnings

SodaStream (Nasdaq: SODA  ) reported $15 million in net income over the past four quarters. But how good are those earnings, really? Apparent profits on the income statement won't always tell you the whole story. Instead of looking just at the reported numbers, you need to find companies with authentic earnings power. So how do the earnings at SodaStream look?

It's earnings that count
In his book It's Earnings That Count, Hewitt Heiserman explains how to determine the quality of a company's profits. First, he points out four key limitations of the traditional income statement:

  • Fixed capital investments are not fully expensed but rather depreciated over time.
  • Investments in working capital are left off the income statement.
  • Intangible growth-generating expenditures (such as advertising) are immediately expensed, even though they pay off over time.
  • Retained earnings that are reinvested back in the business are not treated as an expense.

To compensate for these defects, Heiserman suggests that investors recalculate the income statement, creating both a defensive income statement and an enterprising statement. If a company can achieve profits on both statements, then that business has authentic earnings power.  And that, Heiserman explains, can lead to safer and more profitable investments.

The defensive income statement
The defensive statement shows whether a company can self-fund and generate more cash from its operations than it uses. It looks like a regular statement, but it corrects for the first two limitations Heiserman pointed out. First, it expenses all capital investments in the year they're incurred. Second, it treats a company's investments in working capital as if they were expenses. This statement is stringent to provide the most conservative look into the company's operations.

The enterprising income statement
The enterprising statement reveals whether the business can create value and turn shareholder money into even greater profit over time. It corrects for the second two of Heiserman's limitations. First, it treats R&D and advertising costs as capital assets, depreciating them over their useful lives. Second, it treats equity capital held on the balance sheet as an expense.  

Here are the statements for SodaStream and a few peers over the last few years, divided into enterprising and defensive profits, respectively. We're looking for solidly profitable numbers that grow over time, in order to show authentic earnings power.

Company

2010

2009

2008

2007

SodaStream $0.76, $1.49 $3.31, $0.28 $2.02, ($0.01) $1.50, ($0.40)
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters   (Nasdaq: GMCR  ) ($0.07), $0.96 $0.08, $0.29 $0.05, $0.25 $0, ($0.08)
Jarden (NYSE: JAH  ) ($1.99), $3.12 ($1.13), ($1.33) $0.36, $3.28 ($1.59), $10.70
Helen of Troy (Nasdaq: HELE  ) ($0.51), $5.17 ($0.05), $0.10 ($0.62), $2.84 ($0.35), $2.13

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

SodaStream has consistently improved its defensive earnings since 2007.  It also showed consistent improvement in its enterprising earnings between 2007 and 2009, but in 2010 its enterprising earnings dropped dramatically. The other companies have seen more fluctuations in their enterprising and defensive earnings, and all of them have negative enterprising earnings in 2010.   

The earnings power chart
For an illustrative depiction of a company's earnings power, Heiserman recommends graphing the earnings from the defensive and enterprising statements, plotting enterprising profits along the horizontal axis and defensive along the vertical. I've done this for SodaStream.

anImage

Ideally, you want to see the company generating both earnings figures in the upper right quadrant. A staircase of escalating earnings toward the upper right over time would be even better. That pattern would show that the company is consistently generating value and self-funding, two great signs of a winning company. As the chart demonstrates, SodaStream's defensive earnings remained fairly constant between 2006 and 2009, before jumping to a high in 2010, and its enterprising earnings were growing steadily until they declined in 2010. The company made a solid leap into the best quadrant in 2010.

Foolish bottom line
The enterprising and defensive statements can provide you some key insights into a company's earnings power and quality. Just because a company doesn't make it into the upper right quadrant, that doesn't mean it can't be a good investment. But if it isn't at least moving toward the upper right, you'll want to dig in deeper to find out why. To keep an eye on these companies, add them to your Watchlist:

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Jim Royal, Ph.D., owns no shares in any company mentioned here. Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of SodaStream International and Green Mountain Coffee Roasters and creating a lurking gator position in Green Mountain Coffee Roasters. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools don't 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 August 21, 2011, at 2:43 AM, kurai2009 wrote:

    This website is schizophrenic. Or has the value collapsed enough that now they think it's amazing?

  • Report this Comment On August 21, 2011, at 9:59 AM, BestSax wrote:

    This product seems so "novel" that I am uncertain how this markets in a bad economy. Soda is cheap enough, especially non-brand items. If this really is a contender with KO or PEP, they would just lower the price of their products keeping consumers from wanting to make their own soda. People don't even cook their own food if they have money... Why would they start making their own soda if they can afford such a contraption?

  • Report this Comment On August 21, 2011, at 11:04 AM, David369 wrote:

    @bestsax

    It's not really about the soda against coke/pepsi, it's about going "green" and reducing waste and eliminating the nasty high fructose corn syrup. Yeah it is slightly cheaper but the real push is healthy & greener and you can customize the levels of carbonation and/or sweetness. These things are very popular in Europe (were they have coke and other store sodas). I think you are basically right though. We are more lazy than fugal or green or want to be healthier. The bottom line it is more work than just pouring stuff out of a bottle from the store. I figure it will take off for 2-3 years then level out with about 80 percent of people who buy them not using them after a few months. It will probably do better in Europe and Asia where people are more willing to put forth a little effort to save a little money.

  • Report this Comment On August 22, 2011, at 6:01 AM, KurtEng wrote:

    My main complaint about this article is that it only considers earnings and ignores price. SodaStream's earnings seem reasonable, but the stock price is ridiculous. An investment site should focus on both.

  • Report this Comment On August 24, 2011, at 3:21 AM, david2158 wrote:

    so bettem line of this all report, is this stock a buy or a sell, stock was at a record high, and after reporting high earnings, the price just slashed

    Please explain

  • Report this Comment On August 24, 2011, at 3:55 AM, concealedweaponR wrote:

    this is crap. come on???? people buying pop makers like coffee makers??? come on?????? i cant even believe this crap exists.

  • Report this Comment On August 24, 2011, at 3:56 AM, concealedweaponR wrote:

    this will be one of the fastest biggest lowers in market history

  • Report this Comment On August 25, 2011, at 2:56 PM, knotayot wrote:

    The company has already proven themselves in Europe. Sales in the US have a lot of room to run since they don't even have 1 % of the market penetration when compared to Coke or Pepsi. This is a risky stock and depends a lot of the visionary capability of the company especially where it comes to marketing. I think it has great potential, think of all the small business owners that can use this product but don't have the volume to have a large soda machine. There is a lot of room for this to run.

  • Report this Comment On September 03, 2011, at 11:56 AM, healeyingarage wrote:

    Have you tasted it?.... The flavors taste horrible. We have one because my wife likes unflavored soda water...and it makes soda water far cheaper than store-bought. Nevertheless, it will not be competitive with Coca-Cola unless/until they get the Coke recipe.

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