lw395
Well-Known Member
My reading of the data is that things went wrong 2 years ago when a lot of borrowing was done, and this year these borrowings have become current rather than future liability.
But the borrowings are not so vast in relation to turnover, the problem is a massive drop in operating profit. Presumably caused by fixed costs and a drop in sales.
The interest on the debt would be no big deal if they were still making half the profit of 2 years ago?
The LBO is not really the point, that is farther back in history.
Of course I have no numerical information for the second half of this year.
How little we know about the shares we buy!
I've not done even a week at management college, but as an engineer I see ebitda as 'earnings before being got at by accountants', a useful indicator of profit, but not the whole story.
To have the whole story you need to understand the company and its market.
But the borrowings are not so vast in relation to turnover, the problem is a massive drop in operating profit. Presumably caused by fixed costs and a drop in sales.
The interest on the debt would be no big deal if they were still making half the profit of 2 years ago?
The LBO is not really the point, that is farther back in history.
Of course I have no numerical information for the second half of this year.
How little we know about the shares we buy!
I've not done even a week at management college, but as an engineer I see ebitda as 'earnings before being got at by accountants', a useful indicator of profit, but not the whole story.
To have the whole story you need to understand the company and its market.