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1 Reason Seagate Technology May Be Headed for a Slowdown

Here at The Motley Fool, I've long cautioned investors to keep a close eye on inventory levels. It's a part of my standard diligence when searching for the market's best stocks. I think a quarterly checkup can help you spot potential problems. For many companies, products that sit on the shelves too long can become big trouble. Stale inventory may be sold for lower prices, hurting profitability. In extreme cases, it may be written off completely and sent to the shredder.

Basic guidelines
In this series, I examine inventory using a simple rule of thumb: Inventory increases ought to roughly parallel revenue increases. If inventory bloats more quickly than sales grow, this might be a sign that expected sales haven't materialized.

Is the current inventory situation at Seagate Technology (Nasdaq: STX  ) out of line? To figure that out, start by comparing the company's figures to those from peers and competitors:

Company

TTM Revenue Growth

TTM Inventory Growth

Seagate Technology

(3.0%)

11.0%

Western Digital (NYSE: WDC  )

(2.1%)

15.0%

SanDisk (Nasdaq: SNDK  )

14.2%

29.9%

EMC (NYSE: EMC  )

19.1%

31.7%

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of latest fully reported quarter. TTM = trailing 12 months.

How is Seagate Technology doing by this quick checkup? At first glance, not so great. Trailing-12-month revenue decreased 3%, and inventory increased 11%. Over the sequential quarterly period, the trend looks healthy. Revenue dropped 1.7%, and inventory dropped 5.4%.

Advanced inventory
I don't stop my checkup there, because the type of inventory can matter even more than the overall quantity. There's even one type of inventory bulge we sometimes like to see. You can check for it by examining the quarterly filings to evaluate the different kinds of inventory: raw materials, work-in-progress inventory, and finished goods. (Some companies report the first two types as a single category.)

A company ramping up for increased demand may increase raw materials and work-in-progress inventory at a faster rate when it expects robust future growth. As such, we might consider oversized growth in those categories to offer a clue to a brighter future, and a clue that most other investors will miss. We call it "positive inventory divergence."

On the other hand, if we see a big increase in finished goods, that often means product isn't moving as well as expected, and it's time to hunker down with the filings and conference calls to find out why.

What's going on with the inventory at Seagate Technology? I chart the details below for both quarterly and 12-month periods.

anImage

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of latest fully reported quarter. Dollar amounts in millions. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

anImage

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of latest fully reported quarter. Dollar amounts in millions. FQ = fiscal quarter.

Let's dig into the inventory specifics. On a trailing-12-month basis, finished goods inventory was the fastest-growing segment, up 12.4%. That can be a warning sign, so investors should check in with Seagate Technology's filings to make sure there's a good reason for packing the storeroom for this period. On a sequential-quarter basis, finished goods inventory was also the fastest-growing segment, up 1.3%.

Foolish bottom line
When you're doing your research, remember that aggregate numbers such as inventory balances often mask situations that are more complex than they appear. Even the detailed numbers don't give us the final word. When in doubt, listen to the conference call, or contact investor relations. What at first looks like a problem may actually signal a stock that will provide the market's best returns. And what might look hunky-dory at first glance could actually be warning you to cut your losses before the rest of the Street wises up.

I run these quick inventory checks every quarter. To stay on top of the inventory story at your favorite companies, just use the handy links below to add companies to your free watchlist, and we'll deliver our latest coverage right to your inbox.

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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. The Motley Fool owns shares of Western Digital and EMC. 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 November 01, 2011, at 12:54 PM, mousenuts wrote:

    Have you been paying attention at all? The flooding in Thailand has devastated the storage industry (WD production facitlies, component suppliers to all HDD makers, etc.) and all projections for the current quarter have been thrown out the window. Finished goods inventory will essentially be wiped out with all of the production cuts, so your choice to use relative growth of TTM inventory levels to analyze company health shows a total lack of understanding of the stiuation. High inventory levels at the close of the prior quarter would BE FANTASTIC for a stoarge vendor facing their biggest supply crisis ever. Don't just read history (which is what financial reports basically are) - read the news too.

  • Report this Comment On November 01, 2011, at 2:40 PM, tkrtr27a wrote:

    You have published some lame stuff before but this is an award winner. Looks like the same article posted last week under the heading "One reason WD may be slowing down" As the previous comment pointed out right now inventory is gold!! Glad they have some, not enough though. First, Drive companies always have higher inventories this time of year to meet the Christmas rush. Second read some news!! This article is wetter than a WD factory!

  • Report this Comment On November 01, 2011, at 3:22 PM, Realist2011 wrote:

    This is probably one of the most embarassing examples of ignorance that I have every seen/read/etc. You pretend to understand topics you post about, but in fact something like this "article" shows your absolute level of ignorance! You got some charts and graphs about inventory from some website, but then you don't even READ THE NEWS? People are dying, factories are completely shuttered and potentially millions of jobs are lost and you are totally oblivious to REALITY?!?!? You should take this off the website ASAP so more people don't find out the truth about how ignorant you are!!!!

  • Report this Comment On November 01, 2011, at 3:24 PM, MotleyFoolSux69 wrote:

    It's amazing to me that anyone would follow the erroneous reporting of Seth Jayson when thinking about investments. Mr Jayson obviously does no research before publishing drivel like this. The market for Seagate at this point, and moving forward, is as rich as they want to make it. WD is on the ropes right now, Samsung is now part of Seagate and Hitachi has no clue how to capitalize on the current opportunity in front of them. Let's just hope Seagate doesn't screw it up.

  • Report this Comment On November 01, 2011, at 5:16 PM, mattdavidian wrote:

    Perhaps "Seth Jaysen" should pass a Turing Test before writing any more articles. Compare this article to "1 Reason Western Digital May Be Headed for a Slowdown". Most of it is boilerplate. I wouldn't be surprised if this entire article was automatically generated by software. If it was generated by a human, he is using a template and just filling in the blanks.

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:00 PM
STX $26.18 Down -0.21 -0.80%
Seagate Technology CAPS Rating: ***
WDC $34.21 Up +0.38 +1.12%
Western Digital Co… CAPS Rating: ****
SNDK $33.73 Up +1.48 +4.59%
SanDisk Corp CAPS Rating: ****
EMC $24.24 Up +0.01 +0.04%
EMC Corp CAPS Rating: *****

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