Our website is made possible by displaying non-intrusive online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling or pausing your ad blocker.
Ben Graham, the father of value investing, made famous the valuation metric known as the Net-Net. It is computed by deducting the total liabilities from the current assets. Many consider the Net-Net as a short hand for the liquidation value.
In Ben Graham days, he focussed on buying companies trading at a discount to their Net-Net. The logic was that if these are viable businesses, there is no reason for them to be trading below the liquidation value.
White Horse currently has a Net Net value of RM 1.39 per share compared to its market price of about less than RM 0.80 per share. Is this a viable business or is this a company going out of business?
White Horse is a leading ceramic tile manufacturer in the region and its performance over the past few years were impacted by the soft property market. It incurred losses.
If you believe that the property sector is cyclical and we are now leaving the bottom of the cycle, the performance of White Horse would improve. More important if it survived so far and is financially sound, ie not a company facing liquidation, the market must be wrong to price it below its liquidation value.
Is the market wrong or do you follow the crowd and avoid this Net Net? For more insights into White Horse refer to page 20 of INVEST https://notice.shareinvestor.com/email/newsletter/invest/pdf/Vol209-Invest-31May.pdf
White Horse is currently trading below its Graham Net Net. The Graham Net Net is a short hand for its liquidation value. So why is the market so pessimistic? This is not a sunset sector and there is no digital disruption. White Horse Malaysian business has declined due to the soft property market. I expect the Group to return to profitability when the property market recovers. There is growing global demand and hence export potential. My estimate is that this will take another 2 to 3 years before we see any results.
The Group is financially strong and not burning cash giving it time to outlast the economic downturn.
White Horse has had a terrible past few years. This is because its revenue is very tied to the Malaysian property sector which had been soft since the mid-2010s. It lost money because it was operating below its breakeven levels. The company took steps to cut cost as one way to get out of the breakeven trap. But it still needs increased sales volume to be profitable. The Malaysian property sector is probably at the bottom of the cycle and I expect it to uptrend soon. When this happens so will the performance of White Horse. If you are a long-term value investor, check this out. https://www.i4value.asia/2020/11/case-06-1-is-white-horse-value-trap.html#more