As as sports fan, watching Brady and Belichick win the Super Bowl, Roger Federer triumph at the Australian Open and LeBron James carry the Cleveland Cavaliers to victory over the Warriors, it struck me how we take uncommon brilliance for granted. It is so easy, in the moment, to find fault, as many have, with these superstars and miss how special they are. That was the same reaction that I had as I watched another earnings report from Apple and the usual mix of reactions to it, some ho hum that the company made only $45 billion last year, some relieved that the company was able to post a 3% growth rate in revenues and the usual breast beating from those who found fault with it for not delivering another earth-shaking disruption. Since this is a company that I have valued after every quarterly earnings report since 2010, I thought this would be a good time to both take stock of what the company has managed to do over the last decade and to value it, given where it stands today.
The Cash Machine Revs up
In my last post on dividend payout and cash return globally, I noted that large cash balances don't happen by accident but are a direct result of companies paying out less than they have available as potential dividends or free cash flows to equity, year after year. Since Apple's cash balance almost reached $250 billion in its most recent quarterly report, by far the largest cash balance ever accumulated by a publicly traded company, I decided that the place to start was by looking at how it got to its current level. I started by collecting the operating, debt financing and reinvestment cash flows each year from 2007 to 2016 and computing a free cash flow to equity (or potential dividend) each year.
Starting in 2013, when Apple started to tap into its debt capacity, the company has been able to add to its potential dividends each year. In 2015 alone, Apple generated $93.6 billion in FCFE or potential dividends, an astounding amount, larger that the GDP of half the countries in the world in 2015. Each year, I also looked at how much Apple has returned to stockholders in the form of dividends and stock buybacks.
Note that while Apple took a while to start returning cash, and it needed prompting from David Einhorn and Carl Icahn, it not only initiated dividends in 2012 but has supplemented those dividends with stock buybacks of increasing magnitude each year. In fact, Apple returned $183 billion in cash to stockholders in the last five years, making it, by far, the largest cash-returner in the world over that period.
There are two amazing (at least to me) aspects to this story. The first is that in spite of the immense amounts of cash that Apple has returned each year, its cash balance has increased each year, partly because its operating cash flows are so high and partly because they are being supplemented by debt payments. You can see the cash build up between 2007 and 2016 in the chart below:
Note that while Apple was returning $183 billion in cash between 2013-2016, its cash balance continued to increase, as its cash inflows increased even more. If having a cash spigot that never turns off is a problem, Apple has it, but I am sure that it will not get about as much sympathy from the rest of the world as a supermodel who complains that she cannot put on weight, no matter how much she eats. The other equally surprising feature of this story is that Apple's managers have not felt the urge (yet) to use their huge cash reserves to buy a company, a whole set of companies or even an entire country, a fact that those who like Apple will attribute to the discipline of its management and Apple haters will argue is due to a lack of imagination.
My Apple Valuation History
As many of you who have been reading this blog are aware, I have valued Apple many times before but rather than rehash old history, let me summarize. For Apple, the story that I have been telling about the company for the last five years has been remarkably unchanged. In my July 2012 valuation, where I looked at Apple just after it had become the largest market cap company in the world and had come off perhaps the greatest decade of disruption of any company in history (iTunes, iPod, iPhone and iPad), I concluded that while Apple was one of the great cash machines of all time, its days of disruption were behind it, partly because Steve Jobs was no longer at the helm but mostly because of its size; it is so much more difficult for a $600 billion company to create a significant enough disruption to change the trend lines on earnings, cash flows and value.
So, in my story, I saw Apple continuing to produce cash flows, with low revenue growth and gradually decreasing margins, as the smartphone business became more competitive. I won't make you read all of the posts that I have on Apple, but let me start with a post that I had in August 2015, when I updated the Apple story (and looked at Facebook and Twitter at the same time). The value I estimated for Apple in that post was $130, higher than the stock price of $110 at the time, prompting me to buy the stock. I revisited the story after an earnings report from Apple in February 2016 and compared it to Alphabet. At the time, I valued Apple at about $126 per share, well above the $94/share that it was trading at the time. In May 2016, Carl Icahn, a long time bull on Apple sold his shares, and Warren Buffett, a long time avoider of tech companies, bought shares in the company. In a post at the time, I argued that while these big names entering and exiting the stock may have pricing consequences, I saw no reason to change my story and thus my value, leaving my Apple holdings intact.
Apple's Earnings Report & My Narrative
Last week, Apple released its latest 10Q and in conjunction with its latest 10K (Apple's fiscal year end is in September). It contained a modicum of good news, insofar as there was growth in revenues as opposed to the decline posted in the prior quarter and still-solid profit margins, but the revenue growth was only 3% and the margins are still lower than they used to be. Using the numbers in the most recent report, I took at look at my Apple story and guess what? It looks just like it did last year, a great cash machine, with very slow-growing revenues and declining margins. Using the process that I describe, perhaps in too much detail in my book on narrative and numbers, I converted my story in inputs to my valuation:
Some of you may find my story too cramped , seeing a greater possibility than I do of Apple breaking through into a new, big market (with Apple Pay or the Apple iCar). If you are in that group, please take my structure and make it yours, with a higher growth rate coming from your disruptive story, accompanied by lower margins and higher reinvestment. Others may find this story too optimistic, perhaps seeing a more precipitous fall of profit margins in the smart phone business and a greater tax liability from trapped cash. You too can alter the inputs to your liking and make your own judgment on Apple!
An Updated Valuation of Apple
Once you have a story for a company and convert that story into valuation inputs, the rest of the process becomes just mechanics. In the picture below, I have my February 2017 valuation of Apple.
Download spreadsheet with valuation |
Just as my valuation looked too optimistic a year, when the earnings report contained darker news, it may seem too pessimistic this year, after a much sunnier report. That said, it is worth emphasizing how much Apple is on the iPhone roller coaster ride, reporting better earnings in the quarters immediately after a new iPhone is released and much worse earnings in the quarters thereafter. While the market seems to want to go on a ride with Apple on its ups and downs, my fundamental story for Apple has barely shifted in the last few years and my valuations reflect that story stability.
Apple's Price/Value Dynamics
I have taken my share of punishment on investments that have not gone well, with Valeant being a source of continuing pain (which I will return to after its next earnings report). Apple, though, has served me well in the last decade, but even with Apple, I have had extended periods where my faith has been tested. The picture below graphs Apple's stock price from 2010 and 2017 with my valuations shown across time:
I held Apple from 2010 to 2012, as it traded under my estimated value. I sold in April 2012, just before a brief interlude where the price popped above value in June 2012, it reverted back to being under valued until June 2014. After spending a few months as an overvalued stock, the price plummeted in the late summer of 2015, making me a buyer, but it continued to drop until almost April 2016. It's been a good ride since, and much as I want to attribute this to my valuation insights and brilliant timing, I have a sneaking suspicion that luck had just as much or perhaps more to do with it. Now that the stock is fully valued, decision time is fast approaching and I am ready with my sell trigger at $140/share, the outer end of the range that I have for Apple's value today.
Conclusion
Apple is the greatest corporate cash machine in history and it is fully deserving of its market value. Its history as a disruptive force has led some investors to expect Apple to continue what it did a decade ago and come up with new products for new markets. Those expectations, though, don't factor in the reality that as a much larger player with huge profit margins, Apple is more likely to be disrupted than be disruptor. Until investors learn to live with the company, as it exists now and not the company that they wish would exist in its place, there will continue to be mood swings in the market translating into the ebbs and flows of its stock price, and I hope to take advantage of them.
YouTube
My book
Prior Blog Posts on Apple
YouTube
My book
Prior Blog Posts on Apple
- Narrative Resets: Revisiting a Tech Trio (August 2015)
- Race to the top: The Duel between Apple and Alphabet (February 2016)
- Icahn exits, Buffett enters: Whither Apple? (June 2016)
Professor,
ReplyDeleteFirstly, I would like to say thank you x 100 for all the work you do. I honestly can't believe how much you teach and GIVE via your videos. I learn every time and look forward to each email in my inbox.
I have a personal request, I'm not a stakeholder, just thought it would be fun. Snapchat is doing an IPO. Here we have no price or anchoring bias. We have no information except their SEC form: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1564408/000119312517034993/d270216ds1a.htm
So can you please work through a valuation of this....(hopefully before the IPO)
On a specific note, I looked at their income statement 2015 and 2016. How can they run the company with Cost of Sales > Revenue. (Not even considering SGA, Staff, R&D etc.) I thought these tech businesses had high gross margin. What is in the cost of good sold for Snapchat?
Another enjoyable and highly useful valuation analysis where both the conclusions and methodology are of high interest. Your emphasis on the reluctance of investors in Apple to recognize the nature of the company at this time is especially insightful. The "mood swings" you identify are almost humorous in a supposedly rational market.
ReplyDeleteHave you ever turned your attention to Tesla? As in the Jobs era Apple it seems less of a company than a cult. But that doesn't mean it would not be a good investment. However when one notes that Ford has a capitalization to sales ratio of about 1/3 while even going out to year end 2018 Tesla is at 3/1 the question becomes is this anywhere near GARP? Your perspective would be especially welcome.
Professor, do you feel that once *any* company reaches Apple's size, high growth will be next to impossible to come by?
ReplyDeleteIt does seem like there is some natural asymptote that large companies will reach in terms of market cap. Otherwise, of course, you'd see the company consume the entire planet.
Thank you for this post. It makes me feel better about selling my shares at 130.02 two days ago. Trading and investing is a part-time hobby for me. I feel like I can never be sure exactly what a company is worth but I like guessing and trying to make money. I have enjoyed reading your books and website info since 2008. Thank you for all the wonderful information.
ReplyDeleteAnother of your very rational and objective valuations of Apple. One need only look at Nokia as evidence that superior margins of a market leader can not, and will not last forever. There was a time that Nokia had 38% market share and operating margins of 20%+ when the other cell phone competitors lanquished with operating margins of 5% to 10%. Analysts projected that Nokia would maintain market dominance for many years to come...until both Apple changed the model and low cost producers made feature phones of similar quality as Nokia. As you point out, Apple is a tremendous company, but you must value you it with a rational perspective as to its value growth duration. Rich Fagan
ReplyDeleteProfessor : I´ve been a reader of yours for many years ! Thank you for sharing all your knowledge and lectures : amazing work and attitude .
ReplyDeleteThat said, allow me to "intensify" our inquiring upon your vast knowledge : question :
- regarding Apple buybacks ( and any other company on buyback " mode " ), is it possible to value how much the stock price has increased (*) due to the amount of stocks removed from the market by the issuer ( Apple in this case ) ?
My point : I only see 3 realistic ways to make money on stocks :
1 - on an IPO on first years of a company bringing a new " disruptive " business
2 - dividends
3 - steady business going trough buyback phase ( assuming business can keep the current status )
(*) I am naively assuming it only increases
Thanks.
The plunder of the Inca's was a better cash machine. ~200 soldiers stole a mine that is still producing silver.
ReplyDeleteA less moral one (when we forget where Apple gets Colgan from), but Apple is not the cash machine the conquering of the Inca's was.
I have a hard time with aapl, I've owned it since 2013 on value merits, but also view it differently than a "normal" company. Although I have a difficult time with the implied quantitative assumptions that would naturally flow from what I believe the company might be. My Gedankenexperiment inputs: It is certainly no nokia or blackberry; it's that model to start but with, embedded services (of nearly unlimited variety provided by a high % of external labor) on an owned platform - both hardware and software, with previously unheard of optionality (cash). I see aapl as essentially a market owner on top of all else - the iphone, watch etc. being the tickets to the market that contains products that hook into many areas of your life. If done well there will always be a premium available for the aggregation and simplicity. Amazon, Facebook, LinkedIn (msft), are similar in that way, and I think there are some network effects that may be obvious with a company like facebook but be underappreciated related to aapl. No market can grow to infinity, but can an owned market be so profitable for so long that one can essentially cash out all willing shareholders within an unprecedented time frame? Can aapl buy back so much stock that I'm the last shareholder standing in 20 years? Of course a market can be replaced by another - nothing is certain. Playful things to think about in any case.
ReplyDeleteProfessor, in your latest Apple valuation spreadsheet from Feb.2017, you had changed the assumption from your last spreadsheet valuation, from May 2016, where the Cost of Capital will be gradually changed to a Cost of Capital similar to mature companies (Riskfree rate + 4.5%).
ReplyDeleteDo you know why you changed this assumption? I asked since if you set the Feb. 2017 model the same setting as May 2016, and override with the same 8% cost of capital, then the resulting value per share drops $9.00 to $120.71.
I thought these model settings should be consistent, unless something significant had changed about the company or industry. I did not see anything in your narrative that would explain why this cost of capital setting was changed.
In the sheet Input, cell B38, is the assumption/setting I am referring to. In the Feb. 2017 sheet you have this setting to No, while in the May 2016 sheet you have this setting at Yes, with the cost of capital after year 10 set to 8%.
Professor Damodaran,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your excellent work & your on-going efforts to teach. I have a query on your Options calculation in the Apple spreadsheet. I was wondering why the numbers are so different to those on page 64 of the Apple 10-k. Your outstanding Options' value seems much lower than the company's estimate (are we talking about the same items as the company is calling them Restricted Stock Units). Thanks for the clarification.
Best regards, Rob
Professor Damodaran,
ReplyDeleteThank you for the opportunity to comment on your excellent work. I have a query regarding your Apple value of Options. I can't seem to align your numbers to those in the 10-k (page 64). Where did you get your data from for valuing the Options?
Many thanks & best regards, Rob
Rob,
ReplyDeleteRestricted stock units are not options and are actually much easier to deal with. You count them as part of shares outstanding and you move on. The only restriction is on them being sold (liquidity) and thus there is nothing that sets them apart from regular shares.
Professor,
ReplyDeleteThanks for your post. As AAPL is looking to pass the $140 mark sometime this week - I want to ask you if you are firm in your valuation and will sell as you said you would. I am very curious on the dynamics of when to sell a stock and often see people holding on longer than they said they would.
Also do investors who are entering the stock recently like Warren Buffet worry you that perhaps you are incorrect on the valuation?
Thanks!!
Professor... Its at $140!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the interest AAPL analysis. I was wondering why the amount of reinvestment jumps around 4x in the terminal year on your spreadsheet (to 6,235 million)? Is this a mistake or is there some reason behind it that I missed? If it is a mistake, how would that affect the AAPL valuation?
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Hello Professor,
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot for the inputs, especially for enabling students like us to tell our own stories by providing your knowledge and excel files for free!
I used the excel file linked in this post to do a valuation-story of my own. I noticed that the Reinvestment in the Terminal Period is given by 'Revenue Growth/ROIC*EBIT(1-t)'. I did not understand the logic behind this. Why not use the Sales-to-Capital Ratio to project the Reinvestment needs for the Terminal Period as well?
Indeed, if I use the 'Revenue Growth/ROIC*EBIT(1-t)' formula, the Reinvestment need in the Terminal Period eats up a lot of value and looks out of line with prior Reinvestment needs. If I use Sales-to-Capital to project that figure in line, that looks more logical in my eyes. Looking forward to the explanation.
Thank you.