Saluki Posted February 2 Posted February 2 I wonder if you can consider adding something to the list of cannibals if they have a big authorization but haven't bought back a lot of stock yet. Both Olin and Anterix have buybacks authorized for half of their market cap, but you need money to carry that out.
Xerxes Posted February 3 Posted February 3 On 2/1/2025 at 7:28 PM, Sweet said: Nice article - thanks. I do think there are some differences, NVR managed to be capital light, but GM is not. GM is not getting a large return on invested capital. Do you own GM? What do you like about apart from the obvious - the obvious being low multiple and potential for continued buy backs? sorry for late reply. I was busy doing my civic duties on the tariff thread. on GM. I own it. Originally based on the fact that they were selling off and shrinks their global footprint and their investment in developing EV platform, in contrast to Ford. of course the thesis probably changed with the new administration.
Xerxes Posted February 3 Posted February 3 On 2/1/2025 at 7:41 PM, Eng12345 said: The above is what has struck my interest in MGM recently. I have taken a small positon as I get comfortable with it. IAC
KPO Posted February 3 Posted February 3 31 minutes ago, Xerxes said: IAC Exactly why I’ve been buying in recent days.
Sweet Posted February 3 Posted February 3 1 hour ago, Xerxes said: sorry for late reply. I was busy doing my civic duties on the tariff thread. on GM. I own it. Originally based on the fact that they were selling off and shrinks their global footprint and their investment in developing EV platform, in contrast to Ford. of course the thesis probably changed with the new administration. You don’t owe me a reply so don’t worry, but thanks for replying
KPO Posted February 19 Posted February 19 TOL has repurchased ~50% in the last decade while maintaining a strong balance sheet and not starving the business.
Xerxes Posted February 26 Posted February 26 https://investor.gm.com/news-releases/news-release-details/gm-board-approves-new-share-repurchase-plan-including-2-billion
FCharlie Posted February 26 Posted February 26 1 hour ago, Xerxes said: https://investor.gm.com/news-releases/news-release-details/gm-board-approves-new-share-repurchase-plan-including-2-billion With the initial delivery from the ASR, GM will have repurchased 30% of its shares in less than a year and a half. Assuming they complete the entire $6 billion this year that number will be up to 36% in two years. Current non-GAAP EPS estimates are $11.45 but all things equal, EPS estimates should immediately rise because of this ASR, probably closer to $11.75-$12, putting the non-GAAP P/E on today's purchase price at about 4. Of course these estimates are subject to change due to tariffs but does a dividend increase and a $6 billion buyback sound like a company that is worried about tariffs? Also noteworthy, in the last six years GM has generated over $50 billion of free cash flow, meanwhile today's market cap is $48 billion.
Xerxes Posted February 27 Posted February 27 9 hours ago, FCharlie said: With the initial delivery from the ASR, GM will have repurchased 30% of its shares in less than a year and a half. Assuming they complete the entire $6 billion this year that number will be up to 36% in two years. Current non-GAAP EPS estimates are $11.45 but all things equal, EPS estimates should immediately rise because of this ASR, probably closer to $11.75-$12, putting the non-GAAP P/E on today's purchase price at about 4. Of course these estimates are subject to change due to tariffs but does a dividend increase and a $6 billion buyback sound like a company that is worried about tariffs? Also noteworthy, in the last six years GM has generated over $50 billion of free cash flow, meanwhile today's market cap is $48 billion. Thanks Charlie.
Sweet Posted February 27 Posted February 27 14 hours ago, FCharlie said: With the initial delivery from the ASR, GM will have repurchased 30% of its shares in less than a year and a half. Assuming they complete the entire $6 billion this year that number will be up to 36% in two years. Current non-GAAP EPS estimates are $11.45 but all things equal, EPS estimates should immediately rise because of this ASR, probably closer to $11.75-$12, putting the non-GAAP P/E on today's purchase price at about 4. Of course these estimates are subject to change due to tariffs but does a dividend increase and a $6 billion buyback sound like a company that is worried about tariffs? Also noteworthy, in the last six years GM has generated over $50 billion of free cash flow, meanwhile today's market cap is $48 billion. Great information Charlie thanks. It’s very tempting but I feel like the next capex cycle is always around the corner with these companies and they trade deservedly at lower PEs. There was a five year period not too long ago that they were cashflow negative for example. But they seem to be developing a cannibalism mentality.
FCharlie Posted February 27 Posted February 27 6 hours ago, Sweet said: Great information Charlie thanks. It’s very tempting but I feel like the next capex cycle is always around the corner with these companies and they trade deservedly at lower PEs. There was a five year period not too long ago that they were cashflow negative for example. But they seem to be developing a cannibalism mentality. You may be right about them deserving a low PE. The market certainly disagrees with me, but I'm in the David Einhorn camp that the market is fundamentally broken and the passive bid is just relentlessly being pumped into to the same winners while the losers are permanently abandoned. If this is true, GM is doing the exact right thing and the market is going to allow them to buy 40%, 50%, 60%, hopefully 70% without rerating the stock. This doesn't mean the stock won't go up, in fact, eps estimates for 2025 have risen from $7.60 to $11.45 since they started this aggressive share repurchase strategy. I believe $11.45 will be revised higher because of the $2 billion ASR which should advance over 30 million shares today, taking the share count from 995 million to 965 million.
This2ShallPass Posted March 2 Posted March 2 On 2/26/2025 at 10:42 AM, FCharlie said: With the initial delivery from the ASR, GM will have repurchased 30% of its shares in less than a year and a half. Assuming they complete the entire $6 billion this year that number will be up to 36% in two years. This made me look at GM! In my 30 mins of research, the only question I have come up is on their debt - is GM financial debt non recourse to the parent? I would assume so. They have an EV of ~$65B and ~$12-13B 2025 EPS. Tariffs impact is a big unknown.
Rainier Posted March 3 Posted March 3 (edited) I don’t know anything about this company, but will do some research. Anyone know anything about it? It just came up as I was researching BIRG and came across this guy’s twitter. Irish Continental Group (also, can anyone tell me how to embed a twitter post so it can actually be seen in the body of my forum post here on cobf?) Edited March 3 by Rainier
influx Posted Friday at 02:34 AM Posted Friday at 02:34 AM Hi Folks, Do you have any cannibals screeners that you use, free or otherwise (not bloomberg)? I am not an institutional investor. I did some search and I am yet to check my results and see what's out there. I am aware I can check company's outstanding shares over time though, say on https://www.macrotrends.net
Spekulatius Posted Friday at 04:08 AM Posted Friday at 04:08 AM (edited) I posted a Tikr cannibal screen upthread. Edited Friday at 04:08 AM by Spekulatius
TwoCitiesCapital Posted Friday at 06:02 AM Posted Friday at 06:02 AM (edited) RC Capital Not a ticker I follow regularly, but is a REIT of sorts that just reduced its dividend and announced a $150 million stock buybacks program. $150 million is 15-20% of the plunge-adjusted market cap. Supposedly book value of portfolio is ~$10 per share while shares now trade near $5 - so should be accretive. And they seem serious about it to. Repurchased $40 million in the quarter preceding the dividend/reduction and plunge Buyback plus plunge in price were enough to interest me. Will take a deeper dive once I find the time - but struck me as the situation we all hope for: a management willing to cut the divvy for buybacks, when it makes sense, a falling stock price to supercharge that accretion. Edited Friday at 06:12 AM by TwoCitiesCapital
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