The external fund manager backed by Berkshire Hathaway’s Charlie Munger, Li Lu, makes no bones about it when he says ‘The biggest investment risk is not the volatility of prices, but whether you will suffer a permanent loss of capital.’ It’s only natural to consider a company’s balance sheet when you examine how risky it is, since debt is often involved when a business collapses. We note that Nabors Industries Ltd. (NYSE:NBR) does have debt on its balance sheet. But the real question is whether this debt is making the company risky.
When Is Debt Dangerous?
Debt and other liabilities become risky for a business when it cannot easily fulfill those obligations, either with free cash flow or by raising capital at an attractive price. If things get really bad, the lenders can take control of the business. However, a more usual (but still expensive) situation is where a company must dilute shareholders at a cheap share price simply to get debt under control. Of course, the upside of debt is that it often represents cheap capital, especially when it replaces dilution in a company with the ability to reinvest at high rates of return. When we think about a company’s use of debt, we first look at cash and debt together.
What Is Nabors Industries’s Debt?
You can click the graphic below for the historical numbers, but it shows that Nabors Industries had US$3.08b of debt in September 2021, down from US$3.29b, one year before. On the flip side, it has US$771.9m in cash leading to net debt of about US$2.30b.
How Healthy Is Nabors Industries’ Balance Sheet?
The latest balance sheet data shows that Nabors Industries had liabilities of US$516.1m due within a year, and liabilities of US$3.42b falling due after that. Offsetting this, it had US$771.9m in cash and US$308.9m in receivables that were due within 12 months. So its liabilities total US$2.86b more than the combination of its cash and short-term receivables.
This deficit casts a shadow over the US$661.8m company, like a colossus towering over mere mortals. So we’d watch its balance sheet closely, without a doubt. At the end of the day, Nabors Industries would probably need a major re-capitalization if its creditors were to demand repayment. The balance sheet is clearly the area to focus on when you are analysing debt. But it is future earnings, more than anything, that will determine Nabors Industries’s ability to maintain a healthy balance sheet going forward.
In the last year Nabors Industries had a loss before interest and tax, and actually shrunk its revenue by 20%, to US$1.9b. To be frank that doesn’t bode well.
Caveat Emptor
Not only did Nabors Industries’s revenue slip over the last twelve months, but it also produced negative earnings before interest and tax (EBIT). Its EBIT loss was a whopping US$286m. If you consider the significant liabilities mentioned above, we are extremely wary of this investment. That said, it is possible that the company will turn its fortunes around. But we think that is unlikely since it is low on liquid assets, and made a loss of US$583m in the last year. So while it’s not wise to assume the company will fail, we do think it’s risky. When analysing debt levels, the balance sheet is the obvious place to start.