These 4 Measures Indicate That Gemilang International (HKG:6163) Is Using Debt Reasonably Well

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The external fund manager backed by Berkshire Hathaway's Charlie Munger, Li Lu, makes no bones about it when he says 'The biggest investment risk is not the volatility of prices, but whether you will suffer a permanent loss of capital. When we think about how risky a company is, we always like to look at its use of debt, since debt overload can lead to ruin. We can see that Gemilang International Limited (HKG:6163) does use debt in its business. But is this debt a concern to shareholders?

What Risk Does Debt Bring?

Debt assists a business until the business has trouble paying it off, either with new capital or with free cash flow. 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. By replacing dilution, though, debt can be an extremely good tool for businesses that need capital to invest in growth at high rates of return. When we examine debt levels, we first consider both cash and debt levels, together.

Check out our latest analysis for Gemilang International

How Much Debt Does Gemilang International Carry?

You can click the graphic below for the historical numbers, but it shows that Gemilang International had US$7.95m of debt in April 2019, down from US$10.7m, one year before. However, because it has a cash reserve of US$2.42m, its net debt is less, at about US$5.53m.

SEHK:6163 Historical Debt, November 9th 2019
SEHK:6163 Historical Debt, November 9th 2019

How Healthy Is Gemilang International's Balance Sheet?

According to the last reported balance sheet, Gemilang International had liabilities of US$25.0m due within 12 months, and liabilities of US$90.0k due beyond 12 months. Offsetting these obligations, it had cash of US$2.42m as well as receivables valued at US$9.61m due within 12 months. So its liabilities total US$13.1m more than the combination of its cash and short-term receivables.

Gemilang International has a market capitalization of US$44.3m, so it could very likely raise cash to ameliorate its balance sheet, if the need arose. But it's clear that we should definitely closely examine whether it can manage its debt without dilution.

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).