Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery (SHSE:603638) Has A Pretty Healthy Balance Sheet

Simply Wall St · 09/29 02:14

Warren Buffett famously said, 'Volatility is far from synonymous with risk.' So it might be obvious that you need to consider debt, when you think about how risky any given stock is, because too much debt can sink a company. As with many other companies Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery Co., Ltd. (SHSE:603638) makes use of debt. But the more important question is: how much risk is that debt creating?

What Risk Does Debt Bring?

Generally speaking, debt only becomes a real problem when a company can't easily pay it off, either by raising capital or with its own cash flow. Ultimately, if the company can't fulfill its legal obligations to repay debt, shareholders could walk away with nothing. While that is not too common, we often do see indebted companies permanently diluting shareholders because lenders force them to raise capital at a distressed price. Of course, the upside of debt is that it often represents cheap capital, especially when it replaces dilution in a company with the ability to reinvest at high rates of return. When we think about a company's use of debt, we first look at cash and debt together.

Check out our latest analysis for Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery

What Is Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery's Debt?

As you can see below, at the end of June 2024, Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery had CN¥1.59b of debt, up from CN¥1.53b a year ago. Click the image for more detail. However, it also had CN¥961.2m in cash, and so its net debt is CN¥631.6m.

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SHSE:603638 Debt to Equity History September 29th 2024

How Healthy Is Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery's Balance Sheet?

According to the last reported balance sheet, Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery had liabilities of CN¥1.74b due within 12 months, and liabilities of CN¥1.06b due beyond 12 months. Offsetting this, it had CN¥961.2m in cash and CN¥1.32b in receivables that were due within 12 months. So its liabilities total CN¥514.4m more than the combination of its cash and short-term receivables.

Since publicly traded Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery shares are worth a total of CN¥13.2b, it seems unlikely that this level of liabilities would be a major threat. However, we do think it is worth keeping an eye on its balance sheet strength, as it may change over time.

In order to size up a company's debt relative to its earnings, we calculate its net debt divided by its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) and its earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) divided by its interest expense (its interest cover). The advantage of this approach is that we take into account both the absolute quantum of debt (with net debt to EBITDA) and the actual interest expenses associated with that debt (with its interest cover ratio).

With net debt sitting at just 1.1 times EBITDA, Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery is arguably pretty conservatively geared. And this view is supported by the solid interest coverage, with EBIT coming in at 8.3 times the interest expense over the last year. Fortunately, Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery grew its EBIT by 8.0% in the last year, making that debt load look even more manageable. When analysing debt levels, the balance sheet is the obvious place to start. But ultimately the future profitability of the business will decide if Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery can strengthen its balance sheet over time. So if you want to see what the professionals think, you might find this free report on analyst profit forecasts to be interesting.

Finally, a company can only pay off debt with cold hard cash, not accounting profits. So we always check how much of that EBIT is translated into free cash flow. Over the last three years, Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery recorded negative free cash flow, in total. Debt is usually more expensive, and almost always more risky in the hands of a company with negative free cash flow. Shareholders ought to hope for an improvement.

Our View

Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery's conversion of EBIT to free cash flow was a real negative on this analysis, although the other factors we considered were considerably better. In particular, we thought its interest cover was a positive. When we consider all the elements mentioned above, it seems to us that Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery is managing its debt quite well. But a word of caution: we think debt levels are high enough to justify ongoing monitoring. The balance sheet is clearly the area to focus on when you are analysing debt. However, not all investment risk resides within the balance sheet - far from it. For example, we've discovered 1 warning sign for Yantai Eddie Precision Machinery that you should be aware of before investing here.

If, after all that, you're more interested in a fast growing company with a rock-solid balance sheet, then check out our list of net cash growth stocks without delay.