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Published: July 23, 2010
According to their by-laws, many mutual
funds are forbidden from owning stocks that have a share price
of less than $5. Of course, once those stocks hit the $5 mark, a
whole new world of buyers takes a look at them. Here are some
promising companies that you can buy now, before the big fund
managers step up to the plate.
Casual Male (Nasdaq: CMRG)
If you know any men who are very tall, or large in general, then
chances are they've heard of Casual Male, which carries suits
and other menswear in hard-to-find sizes. Yet as you may
suspect, the economic slowdown was not kind to this retailer.
Sales fell -4% in fiscal (January) 2009, and another -11% in
fiscal 2010. If there is a silver lining, the slump forced
management to take a close look at expenses, paring fat in order
to stay lean in these tough times.
Their handiwork is already in evidence. In the first quarter
ended in April, sales fell another -2.6%, but profits soared.
For starters, management became much smarter about its
merchandising efforts, eliminating the need for wasteful
markdowns. And that pushed gross margins to a company record
45.9%. And general
overhead was cut about -4% from the prior year. As a result,
a $3 million negative free cash flow figure a year ago became a
$3 million positive
free cash flow figure this time around. That led management
to boost
earnings per share (EPS) guidance for this year to a range
of $0.26 to $0.29, which would mark the best showing in five
years.
Now, all Casual Male has to do is wait for the economy to
improve and unemployment to fall. Even moderate sales increases
could turn this into an earnings powerhouse. Let's assume that
gross margins stabilize at 44% in fiscal 2012. And let's also
assume that sales also rebound to the $465 million mark seen in
fiscal 2007 and 2008. Lastly, let's assume operating expenses
rise back up to $175 million from an expected $165 million this
year. That would yield about $30 million in
operating income, or about $0.70 a share.
Casual Male saw
EPS rise to $1.21 at the peak of the last retail cycle in
2007. With lower overhead, a moderately expanded base of stores
since then and improved merchandising, profits could conceivably
top that figure in the next cycle. Shares, at a recent $3, don't
begin to reflect that kind of earnings power.
GSE Systems (AMEX: GVP)
One of the perils of investing in smaller companies is that they
tend to get hit especially hard when the stock market is
crumbling. Case in point: GSE Systems, which has seen its shares
fall from around $5.50 to a recent $3.70. GSE provides training
and simulation services to power plant operators, with an
emphasis on nuclear power operators. Revenues for the company
had been stuck in the $20 million to $30 million range
throughout the last decade, but soared to $40 million in 2009,
thanks to a string of new contract wins. And analysts expect
that momentum to continue, predicting sales will exceed $50
million this year and $60 million in 2011. They derive that
confidence form a
backlog that has moved north of $50 million.
But this is a fairly lumpy business, as revenue recognition
against certain contracts gets lumped into certain quarters.
In-the-know investors may have been selling shares on those
concerns, which is really the only reason I can divine for why
shares have fallen so sharply.
GSE's bulls are focused on the prospects of lots of new nuclear
power plants being built. It's already happening in China, where
the company is seeing a rising book of business, and it may soon
happen in the United States. Considering that many nuclear
engineers got their start in the 1970s and are nearing
retirement age, we may see a frenzy of new nuclear engineering
recruits in coming years. And they'll need GSE's training
classes and simulation facilities to get up to speed.
Sealy (NYSE: ZZ)
StreetAuthority resident sage Andy Obermuller highlighted
the appeal of this mattress maker back in January. And the
assessment is still valid, even if shares have yet to be fully
appreciated by Wall Street. Andy reminded us that Sealy
routinely earned $0.80 to $0.90 a share when the economy was
healthy in the middle of the last decade. Of course, consumers
are holding off on replacing mattresses these days, which is why
Sealy's EPS is stuck in the $0.10 to $0.20 range these days. But
mattresses wear out over time, and the longer people hold on to
them, the greater the snapback in demand when purse strings
finally loosen.
One of the reasons shares are so cheap is because of a seemingly
untenable debt load, which stands at $800 million. That's the
result of a botched private equity transaction and eventual new
IPO that didn't raise enough money to sharply reduce debt.
But Sealy is generating more than enough
cash flow to support debt service costs, even in these tough
times.
Yet this is where
leverage can pay off. Any jumps in gross profits can yield
even larger jumps in net profits, as the interest costs remain
in place. By my math, a +10% jump in sales, leveraged over those
fixed debt costs, would yield a +40% boost in income. That may
not happen for a few more years, but shares of Sealy now
represent deep value. They've fallen from above $4 in late April
to a recent $2.65. We don't need to see EPS rise back to $0.80,
as Andy referenced above. This would be a dirt cheap stock if
EPS rose to just $0.40 or $0.50. This is a potential double,
triple, or even quadruple gainer when the economy gets back on
its feet.
Action to Take --> All three
of these stocks have moved even farther off the radar in recent
months. But they're each positioned for an eventual robust
rebound in profits, and trade at very low multiples in relation
to potential earnings. Yet as with any micro-cap, they could
fall even more out of favor before moving back into the
spotlight.
-- David Sterman
Staff Writer
StreetAuthority |