The fall and rise in Vodafones (LSE: VOD) stock price has been entertaining to watch in the last couple of days. If you are tempted to bet on it, you should consider the risks associated to its free cash flow profile and its debt pile before hitting the buy button in the next 12 months.
From Hell ToHeaven In 24 Hours
Vodafone was down more than 3% inthe wake of poor full-year results on Tuesday,but it has risen 4.5% today, as remarks from John Malone, chairman of Liberty Global, made the rounds after the market closed yesterday.
Guess what? The two companieswould make for a great fit, Mr Malone said.
Comparing Vodafone to a big banana in the jar, Malone said: The question is: how do you get your hand out of the jar with the banana,’ Bloomberg wrote yesterday.
My advice is to focus on fundamentals rather than on takeover speculation, which has boosted Vodafone over the last 12 months and currently accounts for 25p to 35p of Vodafones 235p valuation, according to my calculations.
0.1% Quarterly Growth A Beat?
Investors who bought into Vodafone stock ahead of full-year results were left with a bitter taste in their mouth.
Vodafones operations in Germany fared much worse than expected, while its guidance for 2016 Ebitda came just in line with consensus estimates at between 11.5bn and 12bn. Trends fororganic service revenue are encouraging on a quarterly basis, trailing results show, but growth is nowhere is sight.
We returned with group organic service revenue growth in the last quarter, after 10 quarters, albeit it a small one, plus 0.1%,Vittorio Colao, chief executive, said in a call with analysts after the results were announced. Analysts were expecting a 0.0% growth rate.
Mr Colao added that Europe organic service revenue, at minus 2.4%, is an improvement versus the previous quarter, essentially driven by commercial execution and some price stability; and, of course, data growth. Thats a fair assessment, but other problems may lie ahead.
The Spotlight Is On Debt & Free Cash Flow
Vodafone met itsfull-year guidance of 1.1bn for free cash flow, with year-end net debt at 22.3bn, which carries an average interest cost of 4.7%. Thats 1bn in interest payments a year, which isnt exactly small change it equates to about 30% of Vodafones adjusted operating income.
Nick Read, chief financial officer, added that to arrive at a pro forma for FY 16 (net debt), we obviously add the India spectrum that we secured, dividend and then we have positive guidance free cash flow, gets you to circa around the 28 billion net debt figures.
This does not include the $5.2 billion of Verizon Wireless loan notes and does not include the FY 16 spectrum auctions, he noted, saying that moving into 2017, Vodafone will return to a capital intensity of 13% to 14%, and the free cash flow starts to de-lever the company.
In the light of a significant debt pile, Vodafones projected free cash flow profile plays a rather important part when it comes to determining the risk associated to the investment.When results came out, Royal Bank of Canada told investors that Vodafone pointed to positive 2016 free cash flow after all capex, which is a very vague statement given consensus is at 940m, according to the broker.
Other analysts I talked to were similarly unimpressed.
My simple view is that while Vodafone says that it is very comfortable operating with a BBB+ rating, which implies net leverage in the 2x to 2.5x range, it may want to provide investors with more details about its de-leveraging plan, which could jeopardise a forward dividend north of 5% if things do not go according to plan.
If you are after strong and rising dividends, forget about Vodafone and consider instead fivevalue stocks that have beenselected by our team of analysts— do not miss the opportunity:they offer abalancedyield/growthprofile!
In ourFREE report, we have sighted value investmentsthat promisemulti-year gains in the double-digitterritory.Our criteria includestrong market share and cash generation, solid balance sheets and risingearnings:click here right awayto get your free copy and start building your balanced portfolio!
Alessandro Pasetti has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. We Fools don’t all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.