The importance of undistributed earnings

By Susy Abbondi | February 14, 2014 | Last updated on February 14, 2014
3 min read

Modern portfolio theory suggests you should value stocks based on the sum of discounted dividend cash flows—called the dividend discount model.

But while dividends are a tangible benefit to investing in equities, this valuation method doesn’t consider earnings retained and reinvested for the benefit of shareholders.

For the most part, if a company owns at least 20% of an entity, the proportional share of that entity’s net earnings must be included in the owner’s income statement.

On the other hand, if the company owns less than 20% of an entity, accounting rules say the company has no significant influence on that entity. So only the dividends received from these holdings are recorded on the company’s books. Undistributed earnings are ignored.

But they shouldn’t be: they are reinvested into the company to increase future earnings and dividends for shareholders.

For most publicly traded entities, only a small fraction of earnings are paid out as dividends (sometimes none at all). This leaves the majority of earnings power unaccounted for. When valuing a company that owns less than 20% of other companies, each investor will assess its value differently.

To overcome the limitations of accounting, Warren Buffett created a metric called look-through earnings to analyze the overall earnings-generating capabilities of a firm. The theory is that all corporate profits benefit shareholders, whether paid out as cash dividends or reinvested into the company.

Look-through earnings

To calculate look-through earnings, include the dividends already received from stock ownership, and add the percentage share of the retained operating earnings. From this total, subtract taxes (calculated as if the entire amount had been paid out as dividends). And when formulating operating earnings, don’t include capital gains, or any considerable non-recurring items.

For instance, at the end of 2012, Buffett reported his company Berkshire Hathaway had significant ownership in American Express, Coca-Cola, IBM and Wells Fargo. And while the look-through earnings for these holdings amounted to $3.9 billion, only $1.1 billion of those were reported on the company’s financials. This leaves $2.8 billion of earning power unaccounted for.

Similarly, Berkshire’s earnings per share was $8,977. If we were able to include the $2.8 billion of unreported earnings earnings per share would grow by $1,697, giving us look-through earnings that amount to $10,674 per share—a figure 19% higher than the one reported.

As a result of increased stock prices and dividends, each dollar retained has produced more than one dollar of value for Berkshire (see “Berkshire’s model,” this page). Unrealized capital gains for these four investments have amounted to $26.7 billion at year-end 2012.

The value of undistributed earnings

Although the calculation of look-through earnings can be useful in valuing investments, and assessing opportunities, the real value lies in how those retained earnings are deployed. So investors need to judge whether the retained earnings are as valuable as those reported.

Whether a company is using the funds to expand operations, make acquisitions, repurchase shares, or reduce debt load, retained earnings will best serve shareholders if the company can employ incremental capital to their advantage.

Investors should search for great businesses with significant reinvestment opportunities that are likely to produce high rates of return. And find a talented management team that is shareholder-oriented—they’re the ones who are entrusted with the value-creating capital allocation decisions.

Just as Buffett calculates look-through earnings to attain a more accurate valuation of Berkshire, investors can adopt a similar valuation approach for the holdings in their portfolios to determine true long-term profitability potential.

Susy Abbondi is a portfolio manager at Duncan Ross Associates.

Susy Abbondi