Legendary fund manager Li Lu (who Charlie Munger backed) once said, ‘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. Importantly, Noodles & Company (NASDAQ:NDLS) does carry debt. But the real question is whether this debt is making the company risky.
What Risk Does Debt Bring?
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. Ultimately, if the company can’t fulfill its legal obligations to repay debt, shareholders could walk away with nothing. 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. By replacing dilution, though, debt can be an extremely good tool for businesses that need capital to invest in growth at high rates of return. The first thing to do when considering how much debt a business uses is to look at its cash and debt together.
How Much Debt Does Noodles Carry?
You can click the graphic below for the historical numbers, but it shows that Noodles had US$21.0m of debt in December 2021, down from US$42.1m, one year before. However, it also had US$2.26m in cash, and so its net debt is US$18.7m.
How Healthy Is Noodles’ Balance Sheet?
We can see from the most recent balance sheet that Noodles had liabilities of US$76.6m falling due within a year, and liabilities of US$227.2m due beyond that. Offsetting this, it had US$2.26m in cash and US$4.07m in receivables that were due within 12 months. So its liabilities total US$297.5m more than the combination of its cash and short-term receivables.
This deficit is considerable relative to its market capitalization of US$303.5m, so it does suggest shareholders should keep an eye on Noodles’ use of debt. Should its lenders demand that it shore up the balance sheet, shareholders would likely face severe dilution.
In order to size up a company’s debt relative to its earnings, we calculate its net debt divided by its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) and its earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) divided by its interest expense (its interest cover). Thus we consider debt relative to earnings both with and without depreciation and amortization expenses.
Looking at its net debt to EBITDA of 0.55 and interest cover of 5.5 times, it seems to us that Noodles is probably using debt in a pretty reasonable way. But the interest payments are certainly sufficient to have us thinking about how affordable its debt is. We also note that Noodles improved its EBIT from a last year’s loss to a positive US$12m. There’s no doubt that we learn most about debt from the balance sheet. But ultimately the future profitability of the business will decide if Noodles can strengthen its balance sheet over time.
Finally, while the tax-man may adore accounting profits, lenders only accept cold hard cash. So it’s worth checking how much of the earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) is backed by free cash flow. Happily for any shareholders, Noodles actually produced more free cash flow than EBIT over the last year. That sort of strong cash generation warms our hearts like a puppy in a bumblebee suit.
Our View
On our analysis Noodles’s conversion of EBIT to free cash flow should signal that it won’t have too much trouble with its debt. But the other factors we noted above weren’t so encouraging. For example, its level of total liabilities makes us a little nervous about its debt. When we consider all the factors mentioned above, we do feel a bit cautious about Noodles’s use of debt. While debt does have its upside in higher potential returns, we think shareholders should definitely consider how debt levels might make the stock more risky.