120405 xerox is like a cash machine

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  • 7/28/2019 120405 Xerox is Like a Cash Machine

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    Xerox Is A Cash Machine

    April 5, 2012by: Vitaliy Katsenelson

    | about: XRX

    On the surface Xerox Corp. (XRX) smells a lot like its Nifty 50 brethren, once-hotter-than-the-sun-but-now-bankruptEastman Kodak Co. (EKDKQ.PK) and Polaroid Corp. Its stock has gone nowhere since forever. But Xerox was not yourtypical overvalued blue chip of the 1990s, like Cisco Systems (CSCO), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) and Microsoft Corp.(MSFT), whose earnings have tripled or quadrupled since then the kind of stocks I have advocated in this column.Xerox was very pricey in the late 90s, but its revenue and earnings per share have since declined. And to make matters

    worse, printing and copying is just so analog, so last century. It is hard to get excited about a company makingequipment whose main trick is putting ink on paper. However, all these negative optics have resulted in onemisunderstood company and a very mispriced stock.

    Though we think of Xerox as a company that sells copiers, that represents only 20 percent of its revenue. About onethird of revenue comes from selling toner and servicing copiers a beautiful, high-margin, annuitylike business. Lookaround your desk, and youll still see plenty of paper; the death of printing and copying has been greatly exaggerated. Itis very ungreen of us, but we still copy and print.

    Xeroxs story gets better. About half of its revenue comes from services. Xerox is a giant in the document-outsourcingbusiness, which provides about one sixth of its revenue. Corporate customers, sick of paper cuts and spilled toner,realize that managing copiers and printers is not their core competency, so they let Xerox take care of that. This hasbeen a very nicely growing business, up 6 percent in the fourth quarter.

    About one third of Xeroxs revenue comes from its business-process-outsourcing service. Xerox got into this business in

    2010 when it bought Affiliated Computer Services. It paid fair value for ACS, but it had to issue a lot of undervaluedstock to finance the purchase. ACS was touted as a transformative acquisition for Xerox; unlike most such acquisitions,

    which often destroy value, this one is turning out to be as good as Xeroxs management proclaimed it to be. Xeroxhelped ACS go international; ACS gave Xerox access to its domestic customers. This acquisition has resulted inseveral hundred new deals. The integration has gone smoothly. The CEO of ACS is still running the business, and new-contract signings are up by double digits.

    Last year was not kind to Xerox. The company sources $2 billion worth of parts from Japan each year and got hit hardby the earthquake and tsunami, which created supply shortages. Xerox had to fly copiers to its customers to make surethey got them on time; its gross margins took it on the chin. In addition, the relentless ascent of the Japanese yen up50 percent against the dollar in three years hurt Xeroxs cost of goods sold. But tsunamis are unlikely to becomeannual events, and the yen will probably decline in the long run given that Japan is the most indebted nation in the

    world, has one of the oldest populations and is very dependent on the health of the shaky Chinese economy.

    Declining interest rates resulted in a lower pension discount rate and forced Xerox to contribute $200 million to pensionassets. But pensions will turn from a headwind into a tailwind in the future: First, Xerox closed its defined benefit plan in2011; second, though interest rates may decline further, in the long run theyll likely rise, boosting Xeroxs cash flows.

    At first blush, Xerox appears to have a very leveraged balance sheet, laden with $8.6 billion of debt. However, $6 billionof it is finance debt that is secured by equipment and leveraged 7-to-1 (if our banks had had this leverage, we would nothave had a financial crisis). Xerox has $2.6 billion in corporate debt, which it can pay off in a little more than a year fromits free cash flow.

    Because 80 percent of Xeroxs revenue is an annuitylike stream, the company is a cash machine, spitting out about $2billion of free cash flow a year. Management has been very specific on what it intends to do with the cash: pay downdebt, continue to pay a dividend (the stock currently yields about 2 percent), spend about $1 billion on stock buybacks

    Page 1 of 2Xerox Is A Cash Machine - Seeking Alpha

    4/6/2012http://seekingalpha.com/article/480001-xerox-is-a-cash-machine?source=email_cfa_daily&i...

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    and make a few small tuck-in acquisitions. Xerox will be able to buy 8 to 10 percent of its shares outstanding this year.

    The companys service revenue should continue to grow 5 to 10 percent a year; assuming the copier business is flat,overall revenue should grow in the low single digits. As profit margins rise, Xerox should be able to grow earnings in themidteens without doing much heavy lifting. The best part is that the current valuation of less than six times free cashflow sets the bar very low for this company. It needs to show proof of life (of which it has plenty), not proof of growth.

    Page 2 of 2Xerox Is A Cash Machine - Seeking Alpha

    4/6/2012http://seekingalpha.com/article/480001-xerox-is-a-cash-machine?source=email cfa daily&i...