Mphasis Limited (NSE:MPHASIS): How Much Money Comes Back To Investors?

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If you are currently a shareholder in Mphasis Limited (NSE:MPHASIS), or considering investing in the stock, you need to examine how the business generates cash, and how it is reinvested. What is left after investment, determines the value of the stock since this cash flow technically belongs to investors of the company. I’ve analysed below, the health and outlook of MPHASIS’s cash flow, which will help you understand the stock from a cash standpoint. Cash is an important concept to grasp as an investor, as it directly impacts the value of your shares and the future growth potential of your portfolio.

Check out our latest analysis for Mphasis

What is free cash flow?

Mphasis generates cash through its day-to-day business, which needs to be reinvested into the company in order for it to continue operating. What remains after this expenditure, is known as its free cash flow, or FCF, for short.

I will be analysing Mphasis’s FCF by looking at its FCF yield and its operating cash flow growth. The yield will tell us whether the stock is generating enough cash to compensate for the risk investors take on by holding a single stock, which I will compare to the market index. The growth will proxy for sustainability levels of this cash generation.

Free Cash Flow = Operating Cash Flows – Net Capital Expenditure

Free Cash Flow Yield = Free Cash Flow / Enterprise Value

where Enterprise Value = Market Capitalisation + Net Debt

Mphasis’s yield of 1.96% indicates its sub-standard capacity to generate cash, compared to the stock market index as a whole, accounting for the size differential. This means investors are taking on more concentrated risk on Mphasis but are not being adequately rewarded for doing so.

NSEI:MPHASIS Net Worth December 1st 18
NSEI:MPHASIS Net Worth December 1st 18

Does Mphasis have a favourable cash flow trend?

Can MPHASIS improve its operating cash production in the future? Let’s take a quick look at the cash flow trend the company is expected to deliver over time. In the next few years, the company is expected to grow its cash from operations at a double-digit rate of 17%, ramping up from its current levels of ₹10b to ₹12b in two years’ time. Although this seems impressive, breaking down into year-on-year growth rates, MPHASIS’s operating cash flow growth is expected to decline from a rate of 8.3% next year, to 8.3% in the following year. However the overall picture seems encouraging, should capital expenditure levels maintain at an appropriate level.

Next Steps:

The company’s low yield relative to the market index means you are taking on more risk holding the single-stock Mphasis as opposed to the diversified market portfolio, and being compensated for less. Though the high operating cash flow growth in the future could change this. Now you know to keep cash flows in mind, I suggest you continue to research Mphasis to get a more holistic view of the company by looking at: