Like AAPL sitting on $40b cash or cash equivalent. Is this good or bad?
1) It's bad. The company doesn't want to invest cash because they believe there isn't any "value" at current levels.Quote from turkeyneck:
....AAPL sitting on $40b cash.......Is this good or bad?
Quote from black diamond:
I did some research on this once. I sorted practically all stocks by cash as a % of assets every year for about 20 years. A portfolio of the highest 10% outperformed the bottom 10% by around 40 bps per month.
I think what nazzdack said is true and might be the most important factors for some companies, but there are other benefits of cash good that seem to be more important on average.
Quote from black diamond:
I did some research on this once. I sorted practically all stocks by cash as a % of assets every year for about 20 years. A portfolio of the highest 10% outperformed the bottom 10% by around 40 bps per month.
Quote from Sell 'em:
At first I was taken in by the quick synopsis of your study, but very soon I saw the holes.
You've incorporated a natural scew (sp?) re: strong companies vs. weak companies. Weak companies rarely have the luxury/opportunity to carry large cash balances, whereas strong companies often do. Thus what your study told us was that strong companies generally outperform weaker ones.
Better if you could hold results constant for such factors as operating margin, cyclicality of business, etc.
In a nutshell, I don't think your study told us anything intelligible. Whether high cash balances makes sense really depends on the type of business, and how adept management is at allocating capital. For example, many investors trust Buffett to sit on a pile of 'rainy day' cash. The same couldn't be said for many, perhaps most, other companies.
The answer to whether it is good for management to sit on a load of cash is that 'it depends.' That is where solid funamental analysis must brought to bear on a case by case basis.
Quote from Ghost of Cutten:
Did you test for the volatility and max drawdown of this outperformance?