Here's Why Fullshare Holdings (HKG:607) Has A Meaningful Debt Burden

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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.' So it might be obvious that you need to consider debt, when you think about how risky any given stock is, because too much debt can sink a company. We note that Fullshare Holdings Limited (HKG:607) does have debt on its balance sheet. But is this debt a concern to shareholders?

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. 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. Having said that, the most common situation is where a company manages its debt reasonably well - and to its own advantage. When we think about a company's use of debt, we first look at cash and debt together.

Check out our latest analysis for Fullshare Holdings

How Much Debt Does Fullshare Holdings Carry?

The image below, which you can click on for greater detail, shows that Fullshare Holdings had debt of CN¥11.3b at the end of June 2019, a reduction from CN¥14.4b over a year. However, it also had CN¥6.94b in cash, and so its net debt is CN¥4.35b.

SEHK:607 Historical Debt, September 4th 2019
SEHK:607 Historical Debt, September 4th 2019

How Healthy Is Fullshare Holdings's Balance Sheet?

Zooming in on the latest balance sheet data, we can see that Fullshare Holdings had liabilities of CN¥18.0b due within 12 months and liabilities of CN¥6.29b due beyond that. Offsetting this, it had CN¥6.94b in cash and CN¥8.03b in receivables that were due within 12 months. So it has liabilities totalling CN¥9.36b more than its cash and near-term receivables, combined.

The deficiency here weighs heavily on the CN¥3.71b company itself, as if a child were struggling under the weight of an enormous back-pack full of books, his sports gear, and a trumpet. So we definitely think shareholders need to watch this one closely. At the end of the day, Fullshare Holdings would probably need a major re-capitalization if its creditors were to demand repayment.

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). The advantage of this approach is that we take into account both the absolute quantum of debt (with net debt to EBITDA) and the actual interest expenses associated with that debt (with its interest cover ratio).