Not All Earnings are Equal – Revenue Growth Matters! (Sell Microsoft)

Not All Earnings are Equal – Revenue Growth Matters! (Sell Microsoft)


For the first time in 20 years, Apple’s quarterly profit exceeded Microsoft’s (see BusinessWeek.comMicrosoft’s Net Falls Below Apple As iPad Eats Into Sales.) Thus, on the face of things, the companies should be roughly equally valued.  But they aren’t. This week Microsoft’s market capitalization is about $215B, while Apple’s is about $365B – about 70% higher.  The difference is, of course, growth – and how a lack of it changes management!

According to the Conference Board, growth stalls are deadly.

Growth Stall primary slide
When companies hit a growth stall, 93% of the time they are unable to maintain even a 2% growth rate. 75% fall into a no growth, or declining revenue environment, and 70% of them will lose at least half their market capitalization. That’s because the market has shifted, and the business is no longer selling what customers really want.

At Microsoft, we see a company that has been completely unable to deal with the market shift toward smartphones and tablets:

  • Consumer PC shipments dropped 8% last quarter
  • Netbook sales plunged 40%

Quite simply, when revenues stall earnings become meaningless. Even though Microsoft earnings were up, it wasn’t because they are selling what customers really want to buy. In stalled companies, executives cut costs in sales, marketing, new product development and outsource like crazy in order to prop up earnings.  They can outsource many functions.  And they go to the reservoir of accounting rules to restate depreciation and expenses, delaying expenses while working to accelerate revenue recognition.

Stalled company management will tout earnings growth, even though revenues are flat or declining.  But smart investors know this effort to “manufacture earnings” does not create long-term value.  They want “real” earnings created by selling products customers desire; that create incremental, new demand.  Success doesn’t come from wringing a few coins out of a declining market – but rather from being in markets where people prefer the new solutions.

Mobile phone sales increased 20% (according to IDC), and Apple achieved 14% market share – #3 – in USA (according to MediaPost.com) last quarter. And in this business, Apple is taking the lion’s share of the profits:

Apple share of phone profits 1Q 2011
Image provided by BusinessInsider.com

When companies are growing, investors like that they pump earnings (and cash) back into growth opportunities.  Investors benefit because their value compounds. In a stalled company investors would be better off if the company paid out all their earnings in dividends – so investors could invest in the growth markets.

But, of course, stalled companies like Microsoft and Research in Motion, don’t do that.  Because they spend their cash trying to defend the old business.  Trying to fight off the market shift.  At Microsoft, money is poured into trying to protect the PC business, even as the trend to new solutions is obvious. Microsoft spent 8 times as much on R&D in 2009 as Apple – and all investors received was updates to the old operating system and office automation products.  That generated almost no incremental demand.  While revenue is stalling, costs are rising.

At Gurufocus.com the argument is made “Microsoft Q3 2011: Priced for Failure“.  Author Alex Morris contends that because Microsoft is unlikely to fail this year, it is underpriced.  Actually, all we need to know is that Microsoft is unlikely to grow.  Its cost to defend the old business is too high in the face of market shifts, and the money being spent to defend Microsoft will not go to investors – will not yield a positive rate of return – so investors are smart to get out now!

Additionally, Microsoft’s cost to extend its business into other markets where it enters far too late is wildly unprofitable.  Take for example search and other on-line products: Microsoft online losses 3.2011
Chart source BusinessInsider.com

While much has been made of the ballyhooed relationship between Nokia and Microsoft to help the latter enter the smartphone and tablet businesses, it is really far too late.  Customer solutions are now in the market, and the early leaders – Apple and Google Android – are far, far in front.  The costs to “catch up” – like in on-line – are impossibly huge.  Especially since both Apple and Google are going to keep advancing their solutions and raising the competitive challenge.  What we’ll see are more huge losses, bleeding out the remaining cash from Microsoft as its “core” PC business continues declining.

Many analysts will examine a company’s earnings and make the case for a “value play” after growth slows.  Only, that’s a mythical bet.  When a leader misses a market shift, by investing too long trying to defend its historical business, the late-stage earnings often contain a goodly measure of “adjustments” and other machinations.  To the extent earnings do exist, they are wasted away in defensive efforts to pretend the market shift will not make the company obsolete.  Late investments to catch the market shift cost far too much, and are impossibly late to catch the leading new market players.  The company is well on its way to failure, even if on the surface it looks reasonably healthy.  It’s a sucker’s bet to buy these stocks.

Rarely do we see such a stark example as the shift Apple has created, and the defend & extend management that has completely obsessed Microsoft.  But it has happened several times.  Small printing press manufacturers went bankrupt as customers shifted to xerography, and Xerox waned as customers shifted on to desktop publishing.  Kodak declined as customers moved on to film-less digital photography.  CALMA and DEC disappeared as CAD/CAM customers shifted to PC-based Autocad.  Woolworths was crushed by discount retailers like KMart and WalMart.  B.Dalton and other booksellers disappeared in the market shift to Amazon.com.  And even mighty GM faltered and went bankrupt after decades of defend behavior, as customers shifted to different products from new competitors.

Not all earnings are equal.  A dollar of earnings in a growth company is worth a multiple.  Earnings in a declining company are, well, often worthless.  Those who see this early get out while they can – before the company collapses.

Update 5/10/11 – Regarding announced Skype acquisition by Microsoft

That Microsoft has apparently agreed to buy Skype does not change the above article.  It just proves Microsoft has a lot of cash, and can find places to spend it.  It doesn’t mean Microsoft is changing its business approach.

Skype provides PC-to-PC video conferencing.  In other words, a product that defends and extends the PC product.  Exactly what I predicted Microsoft would do. Spend money on outdated products and efforts to (hopefully) keep people buying PCs.

But smartphones and tablets will soon support video chat from the device; built in.  And these devices are already connected to networks – telecom and wifi – when sold.  The future for Skype does not look rosy.  To the contrary, we can expect Skype to become one of those features we recall, but don’t need, in about 24 to 36 months.  Why boot up a PC to do a video chat you can do right from your hand-held, always-on, device?

The Skype acquisition is a predictable Defend & Extend management move.  It gives the illusion of excitement and growth, when it’s really “so much ado about nothing.”  And now there are $8.5B fewer dollars to pay investors to invest in REAL growth opportunities in growth markets.  The ongoing wasting of cash resources in an effort to defend & extend, when the market trends are in another direction.

The Wal-Mart Disease


Summary:

  • Many large, and leading, companies have not created much shareholder value the last decade
  • A surprising number of very large companies have gone bankrupt (GM) or failed (Circuit City)
  • Wal-Mart is a company that has generated no shareholder value
  • The Wal-Mart disease is focusing on executing the business's long-standing success formula better, faster and cheaper — even though it's not creating any value
  • Size alone does not create value, you have to increase the rate of return
  • Companies that have increased value, like Apple, have moved beyond execution to creating new success formulas

Have you noticed how many of America's leading companies have done nothing for shareholders lately?  Or for that matter, a lot longer than just lately.  Of course General Motors wiped out its shareholders.  As did Chrysler and Circuit City.  The DJIA and S&P both struggle to return to levels of the past decade, as many of the largest companies seem unable to generate investor value.

Take for example Wal-Mart.  As this chart from InvestorGuide.com clearly shows, after generating very nice returns practically from inception through the 1990s, investors have gotten nothing for holding Wal-Mart shares since 2000.

Walmart 20 year chart 10-10

Far too many CEOs today suffer from what I call "the Wal-Mart Disease."  It's an obsession with sticking to the core business, and doing everything possible to defend & extend it — even when rates of return are unacceptable and there is a constant struggle to improve valuation.

Fortune magazine's recent puff article about Mike Duke, "Meet the CEO of the Biggest Company on Earth" gives clear insight to the symptoms of this disease. Throughout the article, Mr. Duke demonstrates a penchant for obsessing about the smallest details related to the nearly 4 decade old Wal-Mart success formula.  While going bananas over the price of bananas, he involves himself intimately in the underwear inventory, and goes cuckoo over Cocoa Puffs displays.  No detail is too small for the attention of the CEO trying to make sure he runs the tightest ship in retailing.  With frequent references to what Wal-Mart does best, from the top down Wal-Mart is focused on execution.  Doing more of what it's always done – hopefully a little better, faster and cheaper.

But long forgotten is that all this attention to detail isn't moving the needle for investors.  For all its size, and cheap products, the only people benefiting from Wal-Mart are consumers who save a few cents on everything from jeans to jewelry. 

The Wal-Mart Disease is becoming so obsessive about execution, so focused on doing more of the same, that you forget your prime objective is to grow the investment.  Not just execute. Not just expand with more of the same by constantly trying to enter new markets – such as Europe or China or Brazil. You have to improve the rate of return.  The Disease keeps management so focused on trying to work harder, to somehow squeeze more out of the old success formula, to find new places to implement the old success formula, that they ignore environmental changes which make it impossible, despite size, for the company to ever again grow both revenues and rates of return.

Today competitors are chipping away at Wal-Mart on multiple fronts.  Some retailers offer the same merchandise but in a better environment, such as Target.  Some offer a greater selection of targeted goods, at a wider price range, such as Kohl's or Penney's.  Some offer better quality goods as well as selection, such as Trader Joe's or Whole Foods.  And some offer an entirely different way to shop, such as Amazon.com.  These competitors are all growing, and earning more, and in several cases doing more for their investors because they are creating new markets, with new ways to compete, that have both growth and better returns.

It's not enough for Wal-Mart to just be cheap.  That was a keen idea 40 years ago, and it served the company well for 20+ years.  But competitors constantly work to change the marketplace.  And as they learn how to copy what Wal-Mart did, they can get to 90%+ of the Wal-Mart goal.  Then, they start offering other, distinctive advantages.  In doing so, they make it harder and harder for Wal-Mart to be successful by simply doing more of the same, only better, faster and cheaper.

Ten years ago if you'd predicted bankruptcy for GM or Chrysler or Circuit City you'd have been laughed at.  Circuit City was a darling of the infamous best seller "Good To Great."  Likewise laughter would have been the most likely outcome had you predicted the demise of Sun Microsystems – which was an internet leader worth over $200B at century's turn.  So it's easy to scoff at the notion that Wal-Mart may never hit $500B revenue.  Or it may do so, but at considerable cost that continues to hurt rates of return, keeping the share price mired – or even declining.  And it would be impossible to think that Wal-Mart could ever fail, like Woolworth's did.  Or that it even might see itself shredded by competitors into an also-ran position, like once powerful, DJIA member Sears.

The Disease is keeping Wal-Mart from doing what it must do if it really wants to succeed.  It has to change.  Wal-Mart leadership has to realize that what made Wal-Mart once great isn't going to make it great in 2020.  Instead of obsessing about execution, Wal-Mart has to become a lot better at competing in new markets.  And that means competing in new ways.  Mostly, fundamentally different ways.  If it can't do that, Wal-Mart's value will keep moving sideways until something unexpected happens – maybe it's related to employee costs, or changes in import laws, or successful lawsuits, or continued growth in internet retailing that sucks away more volume year after year – and the success formula collapses.  Like at GM.

Comparatively, if Apple had remained the Mac company it would have failed.  If Google were just a search engine company it would be called Alta Vista, or AskJeeves.  If Google were just an ad placement company it would be Yahoo!  If Nike had remained obsessed with being the world's best athletic shoe company it would be Adidas, or Converse.

Businesses exist to create shareholder value – and today more than ever that means getting into markets with profitable growth.  Not merely obsessing about defending & extending what once made you great.  The Wal-Mart Disease can become painfully fatal.

 

Avoid succumbing to conventional wisdom – Target & Pershing Square

"Target heads toward the Crossroads" is the Marketwatch headline today.  Like almost all large retailers, Target has had a tough year.  Profits dropped, and Target hit a growth stall.  If not careful, the company could fall away into noncompetitiveness, like KMart did.  At the same time, some think Target is the only strong competitor to WalMart.  Just to rough up the problem, outside investors led by raider Bill Ackman are trying to pressure Target to "restructure" and spin off its real estate into a publicly traded trust. Management isn't helped by a Wall Street Journal report "Proxy firm backs critics in Target vote" recommending shareholders vote to put Mr. Ackman on the Board. At this time, in the Flats, is when management teams are most vulnerable – and more often than not make decisions that doom the company.

It's at this time, when growth has stalled and vultures are swirling around, that management is most likely to turn to Defend & Extend Management.  They look backward, and try to implement old practices hoping it will ward off attacks.  They stop Disrupting, instead forcing high levels of conformance among employees.  They jump into short-term cost cutting actions, which kill off new growth ideas, and shut down White Space projects to conserve cash.  Instead of heading toward new markets, they emulate traditional competitors and focus on short-term actions.  Unfortunately, these actions throw the company into the Swamp, hurting their ability to compete long term and making them victims of competitors.  Look at Motorola, which swung from an intense high into the throws of near-failure when the executive team turned toward D&E management after Carl Icahn attacked the company.  Instead of going after market growth, the D&E practices plunged the company into a cash drain leading to cataclysmic drop in sales and market share.

The worst thing Target could do is try to be Wal-Mart.  Nobody can beat WalMart at being WalMart.  And WalMart has its own troubles, including saturation of its stores as well as declining customer interest in its low-cost format.  Recent resurgence, linked to the worst economy in 70 years, does not reflect a change in what customers want from retailers long-term.  Rather, it's a short-term blip for a Locked-in Success Formula that has seen declining returns on investment for over a decade.  If Target were to try emulating WalMart, in format or approach, it would be disastrous.

Nor is doing what Target always did the right thing to do.  The market has shifted.  What worked in 2005 cannot be assured of working in 2010.  Trying to refind its "core" and do more of the same practices would again be a Defend & Extend approach which will hurt results.  Amplifying those D&E practices by taking radical actions, such as spinning out its real estate in a short-term financial machination, would only reduce the variables Target can use to regain growth.  Following the recommendations of raider Ackman and his Pershing Square firm will attempt to short-term spike profitability, but at the grave risk of killing the company long-term.

What Target needs to do now, more than ever, is study the market.  The retail industry is under a major shift as on-line participants increase capability and share, per-store numbers struggle to maintain, and as underlying real estate values tumble.  Customer expectations, from baby boomers to GenY are different than they were in 2001, and all retailers need to adapt to these changes.  The retailers that do, with new approaches – perhaps mixed approaches that combine on-line with traditional, and/or combine mega-stores with specialty, etc. – will be the ones that capture share as pent-up consumer demand re-emerges in the future.  What scenario of the future looks most likely to attract and retain customers in 2015?

Simultaneously, Target needs to study competitors, to define its positioning that produces best results.  The good news is that the biggest competitor (WalMart) is so locked in that it's easy to predict.  Target can study WalMart, Kohl's, Gordman's, J.C.Penney and others to identify what actions it can take that will avoid head-to-head battering and instead provide rapid growthEspecially by focusing on on-line competitors, including Netshops.com, much can be learned about how the market is shifting and where Target should go to maximize growth.

Above all, Target needs to take this opportunity to Disrupt old behaviors and convince employees, and shareholders, that Target will pull out all stops to become the leading retailer by 2020.  WalMart is so Locked-in that it can easily decline (and if you doubt that, just look at other market leaders and how they did coming out of downturns – like GM and Sears).  The right retailer, making the right decisions, can become the next leader.  But not by just doing more of the same.  It will take a concerted effort to open the doors for trying and doing new things.

And right now Target needs to be throwing up test stores and new concepts – White Space projects – where it can learn what will work for the next great retailing Success FormulaNo amount of planning is worth as much as experimentation.  The newest ideas in retailing need to be reviewed and tested to see what can work now.  Maybe the time has finally arrived for home grocery shopping, for example. Who knows?  What we do know is that the company that uses this market transition period to build a new Success Formula aligned with changing customer expectations will be positioned to be the new market leader.

Conventional wisdom would say that Target should cut costs, emulate WalMart, get really cheap with prices, tighten its supply chain, spin out all "non core" assets and focus on returning to practices that made a profit in 2004, 05, 06 and 07.  But our studies for The Phoenix Principle showed that those practices almost always doom the competitor.  Instead, at this critical lifecycle point, it's more important than ever to focus on GROWTH and return to the Rapids – otherwise you end up in the Swamp, moving along toward the Whirlpool, like Woolworths, S.S. Kresge, TG&Y, Sears, KMart and Sharper Image.

You really wouldn’t consider buying that, would you? Ford new stock offering

"Invest in America – but Savings Bonds."  I grew up seeing those signs.  Of course, I'm over 50.  They came from the World War era, when America asked people to buy "war bonds" to pay for involvement.  At the time, pre-Bretton Woods, America was still on a gold standard.  The country couldn't tust print all the money it wanted.  To pay for war goods, Americans were asked to buy bonds.  Not for the  rate of return – nor even for the eventual gain on principle.  It was pure patriotism.  Buy bonds to pay for the war.  As the clock turned, this patriotic thinking migrated to buying government bonds to help pay for highways, bridges, dams and other projects to help grow America. 

I was reminded of this when I saw the Marketwatch.com headline "Ford raises $1.4billion in stock offering".  I thought to myself, why would anyone on earth buy newly issued shares in Ford?  It's hard to conceive of buying shares in the company as it exists, what with its very long history of weak profits, tepid product lines, limited innovation and lack of attachment to market trends.  But to give the company new money, in form of equity with guarantee of a return on or of your principle…. Why that is simply befuddling.  This money is not intended to go for new products or improving the company's links to customers.  Rather, it all is intended to pay for part of a health care trust that might assuage growing total labor costs.  Sort of like paying for part of a clean up on a previous toxic spill.  Not something that makes money.

Ford is a company in the Whirlpool.  It's odds of surviving are low.  It's odds of making high rates of return and being globally competitive are almost nonexistent.  Ford wants people to help management defend its past actions – which won't even extend past horrible perfornce – much less improve it.  None of this mone is for White Space to do anything new.  There is nothing in this offering to make you think Ford will ever be able to repay your investment – or even ever pay a dividend on it.

So I was left thinking that I guess you could buy this offering because you are patriotic.  Sort of "Defend America by Defending Ford" and it's management ability to keep running a company that doesn't meet customer, investor or employee expectations.  Henry Ford advanced civilization with his ideas for automation and how he applied them at his company – so we need to keep his namesake company alive, I guess (and conveniently forget he was opposed to civil rights, opposed to women's rights and opposed to all forms of organized labor.)  And perhaps you want to invest in defending & extending America's involvement in auto production – even though we have a long history of being #1 in making something before exiting it - like shipbuilding, steelmaking and television set production.  And maybe you just feel like its your duty to give money to Ford because it represents a great American brand – like RCA, Woolworth's, Studebaker and Hotpoint once did.

Or we can realize this is simply an investment intended to keep Ford alive for another year or two.  A form of corporate life support hoping something new comes along to save the patient.  For most of us, we're better off with the mattress.  There are pension funds out there that receive cash quarter after quarter.  They are always looking for investments.  Some have billions of newly arrived dollars to invest.  And for many, investing that money is done by "rules" rather than analysis.  They have to invest x% in equities, and that's allocated Y% and Z% and A% into specific categories.  And they will probably buy these shares, after their fund managers have some greatly expensive steak dinnbrs courtesy of the underwriters.  Unfortunately, that doesn't make our pensions funds any healthier – but we have little or nothing we can do to affect those decisions.

Keep your money in companies that have White Space.  Companies that don't fear Disruption in order to keep themselves aligned with market shifts.  Invest in companies that talk about the future, and how their new products will open new opportunities for their customers to accomplish new things.  Pay attention to those with long track records of above-average performance – like Google, Apple, Cisco – or Nike, GE and Johnson & Johnson.  Invest in the Disruptors that are going to grow the new economy, not those hoping to suck off its benefits with no innovation or other contribution.  That will more likely get your 401K back where you want it.

PS – for regular readers – I opologize for being offline without comments for a few days.  Computer gremlins attacked me and it's been a struggle to regain control of the machine.  Hopefully I'm back on track.