Friday, September 26, 2014
Thanks for the Love
I have to link back to http://averypublicsociologist.blogspot.co.uk/search?updated-max=2014-09-16T22:11:00%2B01:00&max-results=10 and thank them for the traffic. Thanks for noticing!
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Kingsford is Barbecue: A Response to Harvard Business School Case Study 9-506-020 by Narayandas and Wagonfeld
I
was at the store today, looking at the seasonal section that is slipping away
from summer to the fall. The firewood is being replaced with Oktoberfest beers;
Halloween candy is rearing its ugly head. The barbecue briquettes are still on
the shelf though. There are different sizes and flavors, and various
accessories hand around them. There is one thing all those bag have in common –
red, white, and blue. Most of those bags show the Kingsford logo. There is one
group of bags on the lower left who just carry the colors without the logo. It
is a store brand. It is priced 30% less than the comparable sized bag of Kingsford
briquettes. I see that display, and it tells me one thing: Kingsford is
barbecue.
In 2001, though, the present
situation may not have been so assured. Barbecuing had been growing at an
awesome rate: the number of times Americans barbecued had more than doubled in
between 1987 and 2000, growing from 1.4 Billion to over 3 billion times (2).
Over that time, Kingsford had enjoyed positive growth between one and three
percent. Within the grilling category, Kingsford’s biggest competition was the
growing use of propane grills, where by 2000 over 54% of US households owned a
grill powered by propane where 49% owned a charcoal grill (5). In terms of
charcoal, though, Kingsford was king. Since at least 1997, they had enjoyed a
majority of the charcoal category. Their biggest competition being private
labels such as I saw in the supermarket today, and a competing brand, Royal
Oak.
Though
Kingsford enjoyed category domination, the activity it supported was maturing,
and the category’s growth was “softening” (1). It had spiked as the economy was
growing, hitting four percent growth in fiscal 1998 and growth had slowed to
two percent to an anticipated loss in 2000 (5). This noted softening is a hit
on the share price for Clorox, the parent company. Especially important to note
is that charcoal represented a higher profit margin than most of the company’s
other brands, since it was nine percent of the revenues, but more than that for
net profits (3). The problem was not within the category. In fact, Kingsford
had become more dominate in the charcoal category over that time. Part of the
reason was that the competing brand, Royal Oak, and the private labels had
increased their prices. This increase made the once 30% discount into a 10%
discount, and made Kingsford an attainable luxury with their higher-quality
product (5). The real competition is the gas grilling. Between 1996 and 2000,
gas grills shipped had increased from 6.5 million to 9.3 million. At the same
time, charcoal grills shipped had stayed relatively flat, going from 5.1 to 5.9
million units shipped (5). This created an imbalance: where once there was
parity between gas and charcoal grills, five percent more households in the US
had gas grills as opposed to charcoal grills in 2000 (15). The brand managers
Marcilie Smith Boyle and Allison Warren had a dilemma on their hands. How do
you get back to that four percent growth and pad Clorox’s bottom line?
What Boyle and Warren need to do is simple
to say – they need to revive the growth that has halved to a more traditional
path of around 4% annual growth without hurting profitability. There is also
not much time to accomplish this achievement, as 11,000 employees of Clorox are
depending on their success (3). I will look at various solutions to bring
Kingsford to this path and then identify what is best based on the evidence
presented in the case study.
The brand managers have identified
four separate areas where they could possibly apply resources to maintain
continued growth in the Kingsford brand. The first area they are looking at is
pricing. Both Royal Oak and the private label brands have increased their
pricing in the last year. The traditional gap between the less premium brands
and Kingsford has shrunk. One option then is to increase pricing to maintain
the gap between the lower and the upper levels (7). There are multiple issues
with that approach though. First off, there has not been an appreciable rise in
company costs, making it so that as noted by Marketing Director Derek Gordon: “We
don’t have a clear justification for a higher price point” (7). The second
issue is that this approach might raise profitability on each bag sold; it has
a chance of decreasing sales and slowing growth. The brand managers countered
that charcoal has a higher elasticity of pricing because it is seen as a “happy
product” (7) which is often an impulse purchase. This allows pricing to
increase since the customers are not as affected by the possibility of a price
rise. My opinion on increasing the pricing is that it is a suboptimal because
it means that it will give back some of the advantage Kingsford has gained over
the competing brands. Its share of charcoal category has grown as pricing has
come closer to parity. If the price is increased, that gain will be lost and
overall profitability will not grow.
A second option looked at is promotion.
This is working with the retail partners so that Kingsford Charcoal is in
stock, customers know it is in stock and is visible within the store. This is a
key part of maintaining Kingsford at the level of sales it is currently at. In
the words of the sales team, “With Kingsford, the key is display – you need to
pile it high and watch it fly” (4). Kingsford works hand in hand with the retailers
for this display, because having Kingsford on hand increases the sales of the
other merchandise by 30% (9). Brand managers on the Kingsford team want to take
advantage of this by extending the traditional grilling season, and keep
growing the number of “grilling occasions” that people take advantage of
outside the summer holidays (9). Looking at trends and food consumption habits,
Kingsford may have a tough row to hoe if this is the platform for growth.
Exhibit 2 on page 13 shows the spikes where consumption peaks in the summer and
goes down in the winter. A full 64% of all US charcoal sales are from May to
September. Wanting to expand beyond these months could be futile since it goes
against habit and against the weather. One noted factor in the softening of the
business in 2000 was the fact that the weather was wetter and colder than
normal towards the last part of the year (6). If you want to expand outside the
normal grilling window in much of the country, you will face the same sort of
weather conditions that hold people back from going outside to grill and are aiming
at growing the number of grilling occasions within a small niche of users.
A final consideration is in looking
at capacity. Though the company runs five plants (3), continued growth is
possible. The plants only run at about 80% capacity, so there is room. The
brand managers do have to know that expansion of the plants or outsourcing of
the manufacturing is possible, but doing so entails additional costs that
challenge the ultimate profitability of the brand even in the face of rising
sales. In the short term, as long as growth does not exceed “5 percent for
several years in a row” (10), then those costs are not a problem. Ultimately, growth
will necessitate expansion, so the two to five years lead time necessary to
build out that expansion should be a factor in the years ahead as the current
plants utilize more of the capacity.
If we, as we have covered, raising prices
could hurt the bottom line and in-store promotion only holds the current
levels, how are we meet the goal of returning the brand to the previous growth?
For me the ultimate answer is to advertise the brand again. Kingsford had not advertised
since 1998 (1), nor has Royal Oak or any of the private labels had any
advertising on the air (6). This lead to a vacuum where there was no message of
charcoal in the air (6). Instead, the main hope was to lead the sales from the
retail store, the so-called “Pile it high and watch it fly” approach (4). The
problem with this approach is that it was not working, and the sales growth had
turned negative. The problem with this need is that the brand managers came to
the brand first off with a warning: “There is no additional money to spend”
(5). A warning like that only reinforces the status quo. Luckily, we learn that
there is a reserve of between five and seven million dollars available in the
Clorox “kitty” the brand managers can apply for to spread their message (8).
To get that money, though, the Boyle
and Warren need a strong message, one that does not muddle the brand as senior
sales executive Grant LaMontagne notes where marketers change the brand image
as they seek greater sales (4). What is that message? For me, it is simple:
Kingsford is Barbecue. No other charcoal
or no other method of grilling surpasses Kingsford. What the message does is
not try to gain market share over other charcoal companies nor wholly increase
the grilling instances, but instead show the superiority of grilling with
briquettes over using gas. Looking at the stats and history show this superiority
to be true. The company invented the briquettes segment almost 100 years ago
(3). Additionally, If you look at the list of reasons that people give for
enjoying grilling which include “great flavor, desire to be outdoors, hanging
out with family and friends, change of pace, easy clean-up, and informality”
(2), the only thing on that list that propane grills have an advantage with is
ease of clean up (2). Grilling is a primal and social activity where we eat
some of our favorite meats – and according to blind taste tests, those meats
taste better with a two to one preference over gas (8). Therefore, what I see
is the problem being is that Clorox and the previous brand managers were being
complacent in the sustained growth. Investing in the brand with this message,
knowing that Kingsford enjoys sector dominance in the charcoal category is a
smart allocation of the available resources. The studies done by the third
party Marketing Management Analytics show that by taking advantage of this
opportunity, Kingsford can grow their brand’s growth by between three and seven
percent (8). Kingsford can no longer ignore the gas grills and enjoy the
dominance over the category rivals. They have to take to the airwaves and
remind the consuming public of one thing: Kingsford is Barbecue.
The biggest worry, of course, is of
outside forces limiting potential growth. Our forecasts have assumed that the
economy of 1995-2000 will remain on the same growth path into the near future.
An additional headwind was looked at earlier. Though the goal is to reignite
growth to the previous path of roughly 4% annualized, our projections have an
upper limit of 7% growth. At that rate, Kingsford would face some costly
decisions about expansion of factory capacity, though for the short term
anything under 5% should be within Clorox’s limits to handle without costly expansion,
which would hit profitability negatively.
Overall, I think the Kingsford brand
has a good opportunity to return to growth and help support the parent company’s
bottom line. By investing in the advertising they are repositioning them
somewhat. Previous advertising focused on competition in the segment and they
were losing out to gas grilling. The gas grill companies had used advertisng of
their own, growing from four to ten million a year in dollars spent (6). The problem
for the gas grillers is that of the points of difference that they can point
to, all they can show a clear advantage is ease of cleaning. In terms of the
social aspect and the change of pace, they are comparable to Kingsford. So that
means Kingsford can use the point of difference of taste to position the brand
as superior to gas. Of the stakeholders, from the brand managers to the director
of marketing, the only person who might be worried about the new direction is
the sales manager who was worried about muddling the message. The problem is that
the previous messages Kingsford had been using were to show points of
difference against their competitors, i.e. Lights
faster, burns longer (8). The new positioning takes for granted Kingsford’s
advantage against those competitors and focuses on the clear and present threat
of the gas grill and sells both the experience and the taste of the meat. Gas
is clean and hygienic but it belongs in the kitchen where you can use it
year-round. If you want a special experience, you use Kingsford, the originator
of Barbecue. The final obstacle I can see here is if the managers of the
advertising “kitty” withhold the funds to invest in the advertising. Without
those resources, the advertising push would be fruitless. However, I feel with
the new angle and the studies from the third-party marketing experts would be
enough to convince the Clorox Company that this is the right investment,
especially when so much is riding on the company returning to profitability.
With nine percent of the company’s sales on a high margin item, Clorox cannot
afford not to invest.
Monday, September 22, 2014
The House of Debt: A Book That Deserves to be Talked About
There were three major books in economic this summer. First
came the Flash Boys, then hot on its heels was the doorstop of Piketty’s
Capitol. Then there was House of Debt.
Each book had its readers and it policy prescription, but
House of Debt was overshadowed by everyone who had read Piketty having to write
a think-piece on it. Everyone else, as the kindle stats seemed to show, stopped
around page 30. (I for one made it all the way to page 100 or so before I
realized that the idle readings that I had during work pretty much summed up
Piketty’s argument).
But I digress. In house of debt the authors pretty convincingly
show that a special feature of the debt
build-up in the middle of the aughts was responsible for the long bust and
recovery. (I am inclined to be convinced for two reasons. First, I have long
been of the mind that the bad guys of the crash who were let off too easily
were the ratings agencies. The face of my crisis is Moody’s, S&P, and
Fitch. Secondly, I am easily convinced by the things I read. I was not fun to
be around after I finished “My Struggle” and not the Norwegian novel, you dig?)
So here’s the thing. The borrowing was the problem to the authors because the
junior claims on the mortgages – the home occupiers – were the party with the
biggest stake in the house in terms of a wealth effect. The homeowners lost
their equity and stopped their spending.
The bailouts thus went to the wrong people. The banks lost some of the value of their
investments when they went underwater, but the people who put in the down
payment to move in. It was funny how we went from a party pushing an ownership society
in homes (and the social security) to demonizing those people who bought into
the rhetoric and tried to join that ownership society. You a cable-television
blow-hard on a trading floor being cheered for mocking the idea of trying to
get in on the rising home price escalator. It is nice to know that Cuccenelli
et al were not complicit in the boom or the bust.
So we come around and ask, “How do we not let this happen again?”.
As much as I hate putting out the old fires instead of building so the fires don’t
happen, the authors have a very good actionable idea that will never be
considered – share both the risk and reward of mortgages. Instead of having the
borrower take all the risk, they would instead have a percentage of the value
of the house equal to the original investment. You have a house worth 100K and
you put 20% down, and it loses 20% if its value, you are not wiped out, but you
still own 20% of 80K. The loan is then figured on the current value of the
home. To compensate lenders, you give them some of the upside if houses
appreciate.
What this allows is for people to stay in their home and incentives
for them to keep paying on the homes and keep maintaining the homes and to
arrest the downward spiral that happens when houses start being foreclosed and
emptying out by people who lost all stake in the neighborhood. (Alternately, domino effect. Whatever you
call it, it is a spooky cycle). Will this be enacted? Most likely not,
especially with how Piketty took all the air out of the room on any other
proposals this summer. However, it has more chance of happening than a globally adjudicated wealth tax, pace Piketty. House of Debt deserves to be talked about.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Schwed's "Where Are The Customers Yachts": Still True After All These Years
This is an awesome book.
It is funny and it feel contemporary.
Schwed has an amazing way with words and a deep insight on the market.
The only thing that feels off is that there are some references that were contemporary with the writing of the book that feel a little off. FOr example, there is a reference to Hitler that makes it seem that the crimes of Nazism had not been fully brought to life.
Other than that it is funny and easy to read.
THe customers still don't have any yachts, but we can't blame Schwed -- he admits that knowing the problem is not the same as knowing the answers.
It is funny and it feel contemporary.
Schwed has an amazing way with words and a deep insight on the market.
The only thing that feels off is that there are some references that were contemporary with the writing of the book that feel a little off. FOr example, there is a reference to Hitler that makes it seem that the crimes of Nazism had not been fully brought to life.
Other than that it is funny and easy to read.
THe customers still don't have any yachts, but we can't blame Schwed -- he admits that knowing the problem is not the same as knowing the answers.
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Fake Company Analysis
To our shareholders:
As
you know, calendar year 2008 was a challenging year for many industries, unless
you were selling mattresses to hide your currency reserves under, doomsday
shelters, guns, water purifiers, or oddly enough, toaster ovens. Concordia
Corporation Ltd is in none of those sectors; instead, as you of course know, we
are a purveyor of fine artisanal carbonated beverages. Our main competitors are
the mass-market holdings of the Coca-Cola Company, PepsiCo, and the Doctor
Pepper Snapple Group. We exist in a specialty niche with the likes of Jones
Soda Corp.
In
spite of the headwinds the larger economy poses, I feel that the company is
poised for growth unmatched in the company’s history. This is a time of fear,
and as Warren Buffet says, the time to be greedy is when everyone else if
fearful. That is why in the current fiscal year we are making a huge marketing
push behind our flagship brand, Blamm!,
the low-calorie high energy thirst refresher that is known from Hollywood
Boulevard to Wall Street and all the Main Streets in between.
Though
we look to the future, this is a time for reflection on the highs and lows of
the previous year. In the following sections, I will assess the profitability;
performance and efficiency; resource use; liquidly; the financial stability and
solvency of Concordia Corporation Ltd. I will synthesize the all of these into
a general comment and conclusions based on the totality of these sections.
I: Profitability, Performance, and
Resource Use for the Stockholder
When
looking at the profitability of a company, it is too easy to look at the top
line number. So, when you look at the gross sales from 2009 on the income
statement (Fig 2), and you see that we brought in less in fiscal 2009 than we
did ($68800 in 2009 compared to $73500 in 2008). However, we were able to
almost double our net income by taking an extraordinary after tax income of
4800 where we had an after tax loss the previous fiscal year of $1000. This
boosted our net income to $8860 for the fiscal year.
There
are other ways to look at our profit, which show the strength of the company.
For example, our gross margin percentage, which is a comparison of the net
sales and the profit after the cost of goods sold has increased over Fiscal
2008 and even compared to Fiscal 2007. We have been able to do so mainly be
decreasing the cost of goods sold by negotiation of favorable terms with our
bottlers, and intelligent speculation on the corn futures market. Corn sugar
makes up 60% of the overall materials cost of Blamm! and a similar amount of our other branded products. These
two actions have allowed Concordia to see a 12% drop in materials cost in the
last two years (fig 5) and growing our gross margin ratio to 44.56 %, in line
with industry averages.
Unfortunately,
the gross margin is not all profit, and we cannot just return all that money to
shareholders as dividends nor can we invest it to grow the company. All the
expenses have to come out of that margin: selling, administrative,
depreciation, interest, and taxes have to be paid. The good news is that, as we
spoke above, we were able to clear a profit in spite of the economy, and even
have a greater profit margin than our competitors, clearing 12.87% of our gross
sales as profit for the company and our shareholders. This compared to an
industry average in 2009 of an 8.5% margin, so we beat out the industry by
almost half again of their margin, in spite of the larger players ability to
negotiate with suppliers (fig 12).
Likewise,
with our net income, many of the other metrics of our profitability have
increased in the past year compared to 2008, but it is necessary to point out
that in terms of net income, 2008 was an anomaly, with net income lowered
rather than raised with after-tax extraordinary charges. Perhaps can go even
further back in time and compare the 2009 growth and growth potential with
periods before the recession beginning. Green shoots already are sprouting that
the recovery will be swift and painless, the financial crash of 2008 forgotten
in memory like the Eisenhower Recession of 1958. The recovery summer is
beginning, so let us look briefly at our return on assets. We have increased
our net income, with interest payments (net of taxes) added back in as a ratio
to total assets compared to 2008 (fig 12), but compared to 2007 we have
actually decreased our income as a percentage of assets. That is troubling, and
it is a trend to watch, but it is a place where we see we can gain
efficiencies. If we can pare back the size of our balance sheet as we have this
past year, mostly by the sale of land and securities (fig 10), we will be able
to maximize the return on assets even with a comparable net income.
The
final part to look at our profitability is our shareholders. We want to give
back as much as possible to the owners of the company as possible. We have not
been the best at that as we could be. The dividend yield ratio, a comparison of
how much is given back to the shareholders in terms of the share price and the
shares outstanding has slipped to just less than 2% compared to just less than
3% in 2007 (fig 12). A lot of the decline is based on the rise in the share
price in the last two years, as it has increased from fifteen dollars to
twenty-five dollars on the open market, and the dividend yield and the share
price are inversely correlated. Another troubling issue concerning our
investors is that the both the book value and the earnings per share have been
shrinking, even with the perceived raise of 2009 over 2008. The good news is
that company remains profitable and has increased total dividends per share
even over 2007 levels. This is a pattern our shareholders can expect to
continue as we grow in profitability and shrink the balance sheet.
II: Liquidity Analysis for the
Short Term Creditor
Our
short-term creditors can be assured that our liquidity is growing in strength.
Our long term-debt positions have decreased 24% in the last four years (fig 4),
keeping our interest expenses in check. This decrease in liabilities has
allowed our working capital to grow from negative $93200 to a positive $69400
in the last three years. This swing from a negative working capital to a
positive working capital means that the value of our current assets have
surpassed the value or our current liabilities. It also means that the current
ratio, a comparison between these two figures has gone from less than one to
more than one, showing that we finally have a surplus of fairly liquid assets.
Of note is that the competition in our industry has consistently had a current
ratio larger than we have had on hand, where the current assets are twice
liabilities (fig 4). In our case, this is based on the larger amount of debt we
carry relative to equities, and less on the amount of assets we have on hand.
At
issue with the current asset structure is our reliance on accounts receivable.
From a look at the common-size balance sheet (fig 10), it is easy to say that
A/R is one of the largest asset classes we have. In fact, it is almost half the
size of our net sales as a consistent A/R turnover ratio around two would
indicate. This means either that we are giving too much leeway in terms of the
sales of our products, or that we need to be more aggressive in our collections
tactics of outstanding debt. This over-reliance on receivables as a large part
of our current assets may inflate what we see as the cash position in the
current ratio. Instead, it may show a bit of trouble since the quick, or
acid-test ratio consistently being below one means that we are not as flexible
short-term because a lot of our assets are in short-term debt that we have to
collect from our customers. This is another position where we can improve and
grow, as we can see that while we are taking 192 days to clear our receivable,
the industry average is almost six months less than we are achieving (fig 12).
Once we are able to make that change and rely less on A/R, we will have more
cash on hand and thus a better liquidity position. A related issue is that we
are not selling our inventory fast enough. We have traditionally turned over
our inventory slower than our competition. This means that it could be out
there being sold more even if we just raise the rate of sales. This will be
hopefully be addressed in the coming year with the previously spoken of
marketing push for Blamm!, so that we
are not sitting on unproductive assets.
III: Solvency Analysis for the Long
Term Creditor
In
2006, we expanded our balance sheet by issuing notes to fund the construction
of our headquarters in River Forest, Illinois. These long-term notes funded the
total cost of $38000 (with construction capitalized). This action had the
effect of increasing our long-term debt over the prior year infinitely. Since
that time, we have been diligent in paying off these liabilities. The long-term
debt in that time has decreased from 19% to 15% of our total debt and equity
position of the balance sheet (fig 10). In real terms, that is a non-inflation
adjusted decrease of $7000. The consequence of this borrowing for the long-term
creditor is that it massively increased our debt to equity level. Our current
level of 83% is much higher than the industry average of 30%. Though we are
paying that down over time, it remains one of the larger fractions of the same
size balance sheet. We have rolled it
over to new bonds at a much lower rate than we were able to obtain in 2006. Though
we have little faith that this current low interest rate environment will
remain much beyond 2010, funding expansion with debt meant we did not have to
dilute the pool of shares issued to build our headquarters, keeping up
dividends per share.
IV: Concluding Remarks
We
remain confident that the crisis of 2008 was just a blip in our earnings and
the larger economy. We remain on a growth path, and look to the years prior to
fiscal 2008 as our trend lines. Based on the preceding discussion, Concordia
Corporation Ltd has three pointed goals that we need to work on for fiscal
2010.
The
first goal is sales growth. As stated above, we are making a major push to
position Blamm! as an everyday drink
and not just a specialty soda. This will take marketing dollars, but it should
also increase both gross sales and net income.
The
second goal is increasing turnover in both inventory and our accounts receivable.
They lag the industry average and negatively affect our liquidity positions.
They are also non-productive assets. We would rather invest the cash where we
can seek yield and not in our warehouses or our customer’s pockets. On that
front, we are making major efforts on making collections more efficient and in
our just-in-time manufacturing. Most of our inventory is in raw materials, and
we need to coordinate with our suppliers so those assets are used smarter.
Finally,
we want to return more to our shareholders. To accomplish this goal, we have a
two-part plan. First, we are increasing the dividend, as we have
year-over-year; we also have plan to buy back a quarter of outstanding shares,
so that our industry-beating earnings per share as well as the market price per
share will increase.
With pride in the
Concordia Corporation Ltd mission, and an eye for new opportunities, we feel
that these specific actions will help grow our company’s growth and position it
as a leader in the industryConcordia Corporation Ltd | ||||||
Balance Sheet | ||||||
2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | |||
Cash at Bank | $ 11,100.00 | $ 11,600.00 | $ 16,700.00 | $ 10,300.00 | ||
Cash on Hand | $ 400.00 | $ 400.00 | $ 600.00 | $ 600.00 | ||
Marketable Securities | $ 12,800.00 | $ 4,300.00 | $ 10,900.00 | $ - | ||
Accounts Receivable | $ 20,400.00 | $ 37,800.00 | $ 35,000.00 | $ 37,400.00 | ||
Inventory | $ 11,280.00 | $ 11,300.00 | $ 11,240.00 | $ 11,100.00 | ||
Prepayments | $ 4,720.00 | $ 4,370.00 | $ 4,560.00 | $ 4,850.00 | ||
Plant (Net) | $ 15,000.00 | $ 18,000.00 | $ 19,000.00 | $ 21,000.00 | ||
Land | $ 40,000.00 | $ 40,000.00 | $ 40,000.00 | $ 30,000.00 | ||
Buildings (Net) | $ 70,000.00 | $ 64,000.00 | $ 54,400.00 | $ 60,400.00 | ||
Patents | $ 12,000.00 | $ 11,600.00 | $ 13,200.00 | $ 13,300.00 | ||
Goodwill | $ 2,000.00 | $ 1,600.00 | $ 1,200.00 | $ 800.00 | ||
Total | $ 199,700.00 | $ 204,970.00 | $ 206,800.00 | $ 189,750.00 | ||
Liabilities | ||||||
Accounts Payable | $ 46,400.00 | $ 52,890.00 | $ 49,270.00 | $ 35,210.00 | ||
Bills Payable | $ 18,000.00 | $ 18,000.00 | $ 8,000.00 | $ 11,000.00 | ||
Wages Payable | $ 7,800.00 | $ 4,800.00 | $ 9,900.00 | $ 8,400.00 | ||
Income Tax Payable | $ 5,500.00 | $ 3,400.00 | $ 3,600.00 | $ 2,700.00 | ||
Debentures (Long Term Debt) | $ 38,000.00 | $ 32,200.00 | $ 39,000.00 | $ 29,000.00 | ||
Equity | ||||||
Paid up Capital ($1 shares) | $ 56,000.00 | $ 56,000.00 | $ 56,000.00 | $ 56,000.00 | ||
Share Premium Reserve | $ 6,000.00 | $ 6,000.00 | $ 6,000.00 | $ 6,000.00 | ||
Retained Profits | $ 22,000.00 | $ 31,680.00 | $ 35,030.00 | $ 41,440.00 | ||
Total | $ 199,700.00 | $ 204,970.00 | $ 206,800.00 | $ 189,750.00 |
Concordia Corporation Ltd | ||||||||||
Income Statement | ||||||||||
Year Ending June 30th 2009 | ||||||||||
2007 | 2008 | 2009 | ||||||||
Operating Revenue | $ 71,200.00 | $ 73,500.00 | $ 68,800.00 | |||||||
Cost of Goods Sold | ||||||||||
Opening Inventory | $ 11,280.00 | $ 11,300.00 | $ 11,240.00 | |||||||
Purchases | $ 43,000.00 | $ 45,200.00 | $ 38,000.00 | |||||||
$ 54,280.00 | $ 56,500.00 | $ 49,240.00 | ||||||||
Closing inventory | $ 11,300.00 | $ 11,240.00 | $ 11,100.00 | |||||||
Cost of Goods Sold | $ 42,980.00 | $ 45,260.00 | $ 38,140.00 | |||||||
Gross Profit | $ 28,220.00 | $ 28,240.00 | $ 30,660.00 | |||||||
Expenses | ||||||||||
Selling | $ 6,800.00 | $ 8,200.00 | $ 9,900.00 | |||||||
Administrative | $ 3,400.00 | $ 3,400.00 | $ 6,000.00 | |||||||
Depreciation | $ 6,500.00 | $ 5,000.00 | $ 5,000.00 | |||||||
Interest | $ 3,000.00 | $ 2,500.00 | $ 3,000.00 | |||||||
$ 19,700.00 | $ 19,100.00 | $ 23,900.00 | ||||||||
Operating profit before income tax | $ 8,520.00 | $ 9,140.00 | $ 6,760.00 | |||||||
Income Tax Expense | $ 3,400.00 | $ 3,600.00 | $ 2,700.00 | |||||||
Operating profit after income tax | $ 5,120.00 | $ 5,540.00 | $ 4,060.00 | |||||||
Extraordinary items (after tax) | $ 6,800.00 | $ (1,000.00) | $ 4,800.00 | |||||||
Operating profit after tax and ext. items | $ 11,920.00 | $ 4,540.00 | $ 8,860.00 | |||||||
Retained Profits at 1 July | $ 22,000.00 | $ 31,680.00 | $ 35,030.00 | |||||||
$ 33,920.00 | $ 36,220.00 | $ 43,890.00 | ||||||||
Dividends Paid (All Common) | $ 2,240.00 | $ 1,190.00 | $ 2,450.00 | |||||||
Retained Profits at 30 June | $ 31,680.00 | $ 35,030.00 | $ 41,440.00 |
Ratio Analysis | |||||||||||
Concordia Corporation LLC | Industry Average | ||||||||||
2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | ||||||
The Common Stockholder | |||||||||||
Earnings Per Share | $ 2.38 | $ 0.91 | $ 1.77 | $ 0.60 | $ 0.60 | $ 0.62 | |||||
Gross Margin Percentage | 39.63% | 38.42% | 44.56% | ||||||||
Price-earnings Ratio | 6.292 | 22.026 | 14.108 | ||||||||
Dividend Payout | $ 0.19 | $ 0.26 | $ 0.28 | ||||||||
Dividend Yield Ratio | 2.99% | 1.19% | 1.96% | ||||||||
Return on Total Assets | 6.78% | 2.93% | 5.38% | ||||||||
Return on Common Shareholder's Equity | 13.42% | 4.76% | 8.84% | 11% | 12% | 11% | |||||
Book Value Per Share | $ 18.74 | $ 19.41 | $ 20.69 | ||||||||
Profit Margin | 16.74% | 6.18% | 12.87% | 6.50% | 8.50% | 8.50% | |||||
The Short Term Creditor | |||||||||||
Working Capital | $ (9,320.00) | $ 8,230.00 | $ 6,940.00 | ||||||||
Current Ratio | 0.882 | 1.116 | 1.121 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.2 | |||||
Acid Test Ratio | 0.684 | 0.893 | 0.843 | 0.9 | 1 | 0.9 | |||||
A/R Turnover | 2.45 | 2.02 | 1.90 | ||||||||
Average Collection Period | 149.18 | 180.76 | 192.05 | 125 | 124.5 | 125.3 | |||||
Inventory Turnover | 3.81 | 4.02 | 3.41 | 6 | 5.6 | 6.2 | |||||
Average Sales Period | 95.88 | 90.89 | 106.90 | ||||||||
Long Term Creditor | |||||||||||
Times Interest Earned Ratio | 6.107 | 4.256 | 4.853 | ||||||||
Debt-to-Equity Ratio | 119% | 113% | 83% | 30% | 32% | 30% |
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