Post by
TheWolfOfWLU on Jan 24, 2022 1:47pm
Dilution
Throughout the past few months I have read many reports concerned about short term dilution affecting long term growth. Expectations seemed to be that more shares would need to be issued, while in oversold territory, in order to keep creditors satisfied as interest rates rise.
My expectation now is that Well's strong cash inflows and the return of share buybacks will prove to the market that short term dilution is simply not a concern; the market has this company pegged as much higher risk than it actually is. Well is far less leveraged than the majority of it's competitors, but still manages to outpace the industry's average growth by a wide margin.
Thoughts?
Comment by
hrgoyal on Jan 24, 2022 5:03pm
My 2 cents on interest rate: there was 3.1M interest paid in Q3. The existing prime rate is 2.45%. If fed increase 0.25% from March to 1.0% by Dec, average increase for 2022 will b 0.5%. So prime rate will go up 2.95% . This is 20% more interest, so 0.6M per Q IF all interest payment is on floating rate basis. For 100M revenue, 0.6M additional interest should not b a problem.
Comment by
TheWolfOfWLU on Jan 24, 2022 5:22pm
All great points, so thank you all. Remember, as they are allocating cash to buy back shares, rather than paying down debts, it is because insiders expect Well's return on equity to outperform the debt yield in the short to medium term. The management team is very well versed in allocating capital, as their track record indicates.
Comment by
Capharnaum on Jan 24, 2022 5:37pm
They paid $2.07M in interest on loans in Q3 (Note 7) and they had $311M in debt as of Sept 30 2021, which makes for an average rate of 2.7%. If rates increase 1%, then that would mean $0.8M each quarter. Considering their net operations (including working capital changes) resulted in $8.1M of cash for Q3, that extra interest is easily covered by operations.