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Is Rite Aid's Cash Machine Empty?

Although business headlines still tout earnings numbers, many investors have moved past net earnings as a measure of a company's economic output. That's because earnings are very often less trustworthy than cash flow, since earnings are more open to manipulation based on dubious judgment calls.

Earnings' unreliability is one of the reasons Foolish investors often flip straight past the income statement to check the cash flow statement. In general, by taking a close look at the cash moving in and out of the business, you can better understand whether the last batch of earnings brought money into the company, or merely disguised a cash gusher with a pretty headline.

Calling all cash flows
When you are trying to buy the market's best stocks, it's worth checking up on your companies' free cash flow once a quarter or so, to see whether it bears any relationship to the net income in the headlines. That brings us to Rite Aid (NYSE: RAD  ) , whose recent revenue and earnings are plotted below.

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. Dollar values in millions. FCF = free cash flow. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Over the past 12 months, Rite Aid generated $233.6 million cash while it booked a net loss of $555.4 million. That means it turned 0.9% of its revenue into FCF. That doesn't sound so great. Since a single-company snapshot doesn’t offer much context, it always pays to compare that figure to sector and industry peers and competitors, to see how your business stacks up.

Company

TTM Revenue

TTM FCF

TTM FCF Margin

 Rite Aid $25,215 $234 0.9%
 Walgreen (NYSE: WAG  ) $69,915 $3,073 4.4%
 CVS Caremark (NYSE: CVS  ) $96,413 $2,774 2.9%
 Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT  ) $421,849 $10,944 2.6%

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. Dollar values in millions. FCF = free cash flow. TTM = trailing 12 months.

All cash is not equal
Unfortunately, the cash flow statement isn't immune from nonsense, either. That's why it pays to take a close look at the components of cash flow from operations, to make sure that the cash flows are of high quality. What does that mean? To me, it means they need to be real and replicable in the upcoming quarters, rather than being offset by continual cash outflows that don't appear on the income statement (such as major capital expenditures).

For instance, cash flow based on cash net income and adjustments for non-cash income-statement expenses (like depreciation) is generally favorable. An increase in cash flow based on stiffing your suppliers (by increasing accounts payable for the short term) or shortchanging Uncle Sam on taxes will come back to bite investors later. The same goes for decreasing accounts receivable; this is good to see, but it's ordinary in recessionary times, and you can only increase collections so much. Finally, adding stock-based compensation expense back to cash flows is questionable when a company hands out a lot of equity to employees and uses cash in later periods to buy back those shares.

So how does the cash flow at Rite Aid look? Take a peek at the chart below, which flags questionable cash flow sources with a red bar.

anImage

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. Dollar values in millions. TTM = trailing 12 months.

When I say "questionable cash flow sources," I mean items such as changes in taxes payable, tax benefits from stock options, and asset sales, among others. That's not to say that companies booking these as sources of cash flow are weak, or are engaging in any sort of wrongdoing, or that everything that comes up questionable in my graph is automatically bad news. But whenever a company is getting more than, say, 10% of its cash from operations from these dubious sources, investors ought to make sure to refer to the filings and dig in.

With 74.5% of operating cash flow coming from questionable sources, Rite Aid investors should take a closer look at the underlying numbers. Within the questionable cash flow figure plotted in the TTM period above, other operating activities (which can include deferred income taxes, pension charges, and other one-off items) provided the biggest boost, at 22.5% of cash flow from operations. Overall, the biggest drag on FCF came from capital expenditures, which consumed 41.0% of cash from operations.

A Foolish final thought
Most investors don't keep tabs on their companies' cash flow. I think that's a mistake. If you take the time to read past the headlines and crack a filing now and then, you're in a much better position to spot potential trouble early. Better yet, you'll improve your odds of finding the underappreciated home run stocks that provide the market's best returns.

We can help you keep tabs on your companies with My Watchlist, our free, personalized stock tracking service.

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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. Wal-Mart is a Motley Fool Inside Value pick and a Motley Fool Global Gains choice. Wal-Mart is a Motley Fool Income Investor pick. Motley Fool Options has recommended a diagonal call position on Wal-Mart. The Fool owns shares of Wal-Mart. 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 April 15, 2011, at 3:20 PM, ctyank99 wrote:

    Here you go again. Bash Rite Aid. The stock is a dollar, guys. They are a good company with plenty of cash flow to operate, pay bills (including loans), update stores, etc... They are doing a good job. You make it sound as though the stock is $25. For a $1 stock, this company has great potential. My money is on Rite Aid.

  • Report this Comment On April 15, 2011, at 4:52 PM, robertct wrote:

    Alex Grass did a stellar job of building a very fine, respected business, capitalizing on a new trend in the retail drug business. Martin Grass did an equally stellar job driving it into the ground. Unfortunately I don't see any hope that Rite Aid can ever pay down it's debt low enough to be profitable and compete in the marketplace. Best thing current management can do is to "Put the Key in the Door".

  • Report this Comment On April 15, 2011, at 11:20 PM, ELASN wrote:

    Dear Mr. Jayson

    You had served your master well.

    Why will anyone spend all these time analysing a beat down penny stock amazes me.

    Unless you had an alternative motive. Maybe you form part of a group out there that is doing everything they

    can to discredit RAD so they can buy it on the cheap.

    It is unbelievable the negative campaign you and your compadres are mounting. I don't honestly believe you are

    just shorting the stock since the upside risk is way too high your group intention is to bankrupt the company.

    All one have to do is to glance at RAD's Google finance page to get a sense of how is this company

    being torpedo. My favorite recent posting was " Man Buys 1 Powerade At Rite Aid, Gets 21 Inch Receipt" which is actually

    a positive article portrayed with a negative overtone. If you look at Google page you will think that RAD is the only business that

    gets robbed "Real Druggies Prefer RAD". I guess. Everything RAD does gets posted is it absolutely mind boggling.

    But what you forgot to factor-in is that as RAD'S color on its logo ,RAD represent represent the American spirit, We love

    the underdog and RAD is not afraid to go down fighting. Is the Rocky Balboa of the retail drug stores industry "

    "it ain't about how hard you hit; it's about how hard you can get hit, and keep moving forward", the little engine that could.

    At the end we can't ignore the difficult environment and the head winds RAD is facing. If unemployment stay high and the

    price of oil keeps going up RAD will need to seek new partners, maybe SUV is in their future maybe Blackstone ( one of

    of your potential masters) will get to buy it on the cheap.

    But emotions should not be part of any investing strategy and believe it or not, despite your relentless campaign to discredit RAD

    I had made good $$$ on RAD buying the deeps and selling the rallies $0.25 -$0.50 at the time.

    What bothers me is the forum that you picked. We at the Fool's community have not room for people that is serving the Hedge Funds or investment bankers.

    You need to take your conversation to CNBC, Bloomberg or the WSJ. We here at Fools expect real untainted analysis and not analysis

    based on some type of hidden agenda. We here at fool are not much different than RAD a bunch of renegades trying to beat the odds.

    You need to write to your peers in the fields where you belong. Leave us the small investors make our investment decisions based on good

    sounded facts and not is distorted analysis. The real facts had you listens to the latest conference call is that RAD situation is improving,

    they are paying down debt and cutting their loses. The RAD-SUV co-branded stores showed at 83% increase in sales.

    You want to do some real research, Try this compile a list of companies with 25 Billion dollars in sales or higher and you will then

    see the potential that a small increase of RAD margins represent.

    Cordially

    ELSAM

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:01 PM
RAD $1.31 Down -0.03 -2.24%
Rite Aid Corp CAPS Rating: *
WMT $65.31 Up +0.24 +0.37%
Wal-Mart Stores CAPS Rating: ****
WAG $31.36 Up +0.10 +0.32%
Walgreen Company CAPS Rating: ****
CVS $44.98 Down -0.19 -0.42%
CVS Caremark Corp CAPS Rating: ****

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