Stock Analysis: When Times Get Tough, Cash is King
Today's post was the result of a premium subscriber asking my opinion about a stock that was being talked about a few days ago...a "cloud services" company called Fastly (FSLY).
One of the more valuable aspects of having a premium membership is having access to my "second opinion" service.
I can't advise anyone individually on whether to buy or sell a stock - I'm not a broker or advisor. But I think it's always good to get a second opinion on someone else's hot stock idea.
So my friend Rachel emailed me and asked what I thought of Fastly, which was being touted a few days ago by analysts at Bank of America as a stock rebound play:
And if you had a crystal ball and an itchy trigger finger - and bought the stock before the analysts' "double upgrade" headline...you would have done pretty well:
And perhaps the stock will continue to climb in coming days, just on pure momentum. But in reality, it's no higher now than it was a year ago, and down nearly 90% from 2 years ago:
Still, it's tempting to think...maybe this company is going to be one of those that in 5 years will be 1,000% higher, and we'll all be kicking ourselves for not buying it.
So how do we judge the odds of a potentially successful turnaround?
Cash is King
A company with lots of cash on hand (or the ability to generate steady amounts of it from its existing operations) has a lot of turnaround potential. It can outlast a recession, out-compete its competitors, and come out as a thriving company in the end.
But Fastly has always been a deeply unprofitable company (and therefore without any ability to generate cash from its own operations) since it went public in 2019.
So Fastly's probabilities for a successful turnaround seem rather doubtful if you look at the chart below:
In Fastly's case, there is no cash flow (the red bars in the chart above). It's burning cash at a rising rate - most recently losing nearly $62 million in the most recent quarter.
Meanwhile, its stockpile of "cash and equivalents" (the green bars above) continues to dwindle lower and lower, most recently pegged at roughly $88 million.
And do you see the largest of the green bars on the chart, around the second quarter of 2021? That influx of cash was thanks to Fastly borrowing $900 million in the bond market.
There are some good "moving parts" to Fastly's story. It still has fast-rising sales. It also has a new CEO who came over from Cisco Systems (CSCO). And he's laid out a new business strategy to try and turn things around.
But the lack of cash is going to be a huge challenge and priority #1 for the new CEO.
I won't belabor the point. I'm as curious as anyone to see how Fastly does in coming quarters.
My main message is that you can sketch out the greatest turnaround plan ever - but without a steady, cheap supply of cash to fund operations, a company won't survive long enough to see those plans to success.
Jeff