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Topic: How To Invest

How goodwill plays an important role in your stock market research

When we’re looking for stocks to recommend in our newsletters and investment services, our stock market research puts a lot of importance on the amount of goodwill that a company carries as an asset on its balance sheet.

Goodwill is an accounting entry that reflects the price that the company paid for its acquisitions, minus the value of the tangible assets, like land and equipment, that it received as part of the acquisition. The term means “value as a going concern.”

However, goodwill acquired in an unwise acquisition can lose value overnight. When that happens, the company has to write it off against earnings. At worst, the company might have to write off most, if not all, of its goodwill.

If that writeoff wipes out most of the company’s shareholders’ equity, and/or most of a year’s earnings, it can devastate the share price. That’s a situation you should avoid at all costs.

How Successful Investors Get RICH

Learn everything you need to know in 'The Canadian Guide on How to Invest in Stocks Successfully' for FREE from The Successful Investor.

How to Invest In Stocks Guide: Find 10 factors that make your investments safer and stronger.

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Stock market research: It pays to go beyond the numbers when assessing a company’s goodwill

Even though companies with high goodwill carry a greater risk of writedowns, your investing strategy shouldn’t automatically dismiss these firms. Canada Bread (symbol CBY on Toronto), provides an example of this kind of situation.

Canada Bread has $261.6 million of goodwill on its balance sheet. That’s a high 40.9% of shareholders’ equity of $639.3 million. But it’s a more reasonable 23.4% of the company’s $1.1-billion market cap (the company’s share price multiplied by the number of shares outstanding).

More important, the goodwill was largely added to Canada Bread’s balance sheet from a series of acquisitions the company made in 2002. Most of the companies that Canada Bread bought were small. But they did include its December 2002 purchase of parent company Maple Leaf Foods’ U.S. and U.K. bakeries, including Grace Baking Company, for $262 million.

The companies that Canada Bread bought in 2002 have proven profitable, and are a stable part of its operations, so the chance of a writedown at this point, over nine years later, is small.

When we do our in-depth stock market research for safety-conscious investors, goodwill is just one of the important factors we take into account. To discover more of our comprehensive advice on lower-risk investments, you can start a 1-month FREE trial to Canadian Wealth Advisor today.

Best of all, in addition to the latest issue of Canadian Wealth Advisor, your FREE trial contains 5 in-depth Special Reports and much more. Don’t wait! Click here start your 1-month FREE trial to Canadian Wealth Advisor now.

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