Dell: Absurdly Cheap
I just want to give you an example of how absurdly cheap stocks are right now.
Thursday, on the back of Intel’s (INTC) reduced forecast and Goldman Sachs putting it on its Conviction Sell list, Dell (DELL) traded down to $9 a share.
The first thing is that Dell has $3.78 a share in net cash and short term investments on its balance sheet. That is: Add up its cash and short term investments, subtract its debt, and that’s what the company has. That’s money in the bank.
Subtract that from the share price and you get Dell’s business for $5.22. Over the last four quarters, Dell earned $1.34. That’s a trailing P/E of 3.9! That is sick! - as the kids say. Even if earnings get cut in half going forward that’s an 8 multiple. That is absurdly cheap. The stock is just being given away at this price.
Disclosure: Top Gun is long shares of Dell.
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This article has 8 comments:
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brewer
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416 Comments
Nov 14 09:19 AM-
spincus614
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3 Comments
Nov 14 10:20 AM-
Nom De Plum
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15 Comments
My Website
Nov 14 10:25 AM1) As a passive investor you have zero control on how that cash is employed. DELL has decided to buy back Billions of its own stock in the face of no visibility into its own business and shareholders are down significantly on those investments.
2) DELL has shown an incredible willingness to pay exorbitant prices for unproven businesses without any forseeable payback. 10x Revenues for Equalogic in the face of a global recession is just plain desperation or incompetenence.
3) Last twelve months earnings are completely fictitious and are the final remnant of a global credit bubble that financed tons of consumable goods with very short lives. At least the tech bubble produced innovation through its creative destruction.
4) Where is the growth or innovation going to come from DELL. The whole premise behind a multiple is "expected" growth. I can buy virtually the same computer from DELL, Apple, Lenovo, Hewlett, etc. The innovation is what's inside and that's why Apple has a leg up on everybody right now in the computer space.
5) The same rudimentary argument could have been made about P/Es on Wang and Digital Equipment...how did those companies fare?
I rest my case......next!
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Pj568
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182 Comments
Nov 14 01:11 PM-
Pj568
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182 Comments
Nov 14 01:39 PM-
brewer
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416 Comments
Nov 17 02:46 PMI'd rather buy a company that offers something no other company can match, and one that is in good shape financially. Also, one with more markets than just computers. Especially in these times.
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Max Profit
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3 Comments
Nov 24 08:14 PMthey have a ton of cash on-hand (which the the main point of Greg's article).
Could you give us an example of your investing prowess if you only invest in companies that offer something no other company can match? That would be a monopoly correct?
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Max Profit
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3 Comments
Nov 24 08:19 PMSo how can you say that they are near bankruptcy and are strapped for cash?