Value Investing Congress Blog

July 23, 2008

Hello Ruby Tuesday by Jonathan Heller

Filed under: From the co-founders — Tags: , , — Jane Scottsdale @ 9:12 pm

Hello Ruby Tuesday (RT, $7.25) 

Shares of this casual dining chain have been pummeled recently, along with many others in the sector.  Down 30% year to date, and 72% from this time last year, its’ a reflection of the economy and overall market conditions as well as the company’s lackluster operating performance.  Ruby Tuesday was also recently booted out of the S&P Midcap Index, and added to the S&P Small Cap Index. 

The fact is that when the consumer is getting squeezed, they will ultimately cut back discretionary spending, and restaurants are a casualty.  Compounding this situation is a huge run up in materials, a huge part of operating costs, second only to labor—and to add insult to injury, there’s a minimum wage hike on the way in late July.  Its’ difficult to pass along increasing costs if customers decide they can no longer afford to eat out.  

Restaurant stocks typically get pummeled during a severe economic slowdown or perhaps even the appearance of one, and from a valuation perspective often get very cheap as a result.  Post recession, however they tend to do very well.   As the economy picks up, consumers resume their dining out habits, and since the supply of new restaurants lags during a slowdown, this creates a supply/demand situation that can be beneficial to restaurant stock investors

This brings us back to Ruby Tuesday. For the past several years, profits have been falling. While 4th quarter results (announced recently) beat expectations, for the most part recent results have been lackluster, and same store sales challenged to put it nicely. What sounds like a no-win situation does have a bright side, especially if you believe this economy of ours will ultimately begin to show some life.

Ruby Tuesday happens to be a rarity in the restaurant business, one of the few publicly traded restaurant chains that owns a substantial amount of its real estate.  In this case, the company owns the land and buildings of 330 locations, and the building only (land leased) at another 200+.  That’s a potentially very nice portfolio of commercial real estate, especially given the company’s market cap of just $350 million, and an enterprise value of $944 million.  On an enterprise value to owned location (land and building) that works out to $2.86 million.  (That isn’t to suggest that each location is actually worth $2.86 million, but rather for perspective.)

 Ruby Tuesday currently trades at 13.4 times trailing, and 12.9 times forward earnings, (although I would not put a great deal of stock in the forward estimates at this point).  At just .8 times book, with a real estate portfolio in the mix, shares are currently cheap.  But, they may stay that way for awhile. 

The company recently had to re-work some credit agreements, and as a result no longer pays what appears to be very fat 7.3% dividend yield on many data financial data vendors’ profiles of the company.   (That’s what we in the data business (as a 17 year Bloomberg veteran) call stale data.) They may decide to resume paying a dividend in the future, but only with lender approval.

This is one to keep an eye on, but don’t expect a quick recovery.  As the economy goes so will the Ruby Tuesday and the restaurant sector in general. 

Jonathan Heller, CFA

No position in RT  

May 6, 2008

Value Investing Congress West 2008: III

Filed under: From the co-founders — Tags: , , , , , , — Jane Scottsdale @ 9:33 pm

Zeke Ashton, of Centaur Capital, opened with some observations of some of the things that we, as value investors, think we should not do. Among them:
• Don’t sell short
• Run concentrated portfolios
• No leverage
• Buy and hold
• No technology companies
• No stocks with commodity price risk
• Must accept high volatility
• Don’t use derivatives
• If Warren wouldn’t do it neither should you
Zeke’s point was well taken: we often become so beholden to the concept and textbook notion of value, that we tie our hands in the process, leaving opportunity on the table. Ashton also made the case for utilizing covered call strategies in our portfolios, in an intelligent way.

His favorite idea was American Oriental Bio (AOB,$9.50):
• $733 million market cap, $130 million cash, $603 million EV
• Fast growing manufacturer/distributor of pharma/nutritional products in China
• Continues to acquire small, undercapitalized Chinese companies at bargain prices
• Despite recent bad press, China risk, high short interest, Ashton believes fair value is in the $15 range

Randall Abramson of Trapeze Capital presented a more technically oriented proprietary method his firm uses to time buys and sells. This unique strategy is based on historical trends and levels of price to adjusted book value, and can be applied to stocks and indices.

Abramson revealed this analysis on a number of stocks, and indices, suggesting that:
Office Depot (ODP, $13.51) Ruby Tuesday (RT, $8.52) and Walgreen (WAG, $35.45) are significantly undervalued.
• Berkshire Hathaway (BRK/A, $130,200; BRK/B, $4,345) now appears overpriced. (Abramson deserves credit for making such an assertion in a roomful of Berkshire devotees, many of whom were in Omaha last week).
• As for the major indices, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, NASDAQ Composite , and Russell 2000 are all undervalued at current levels

Jonathan Heller, CFA
*The author does not have positions in any of the securities mentioned