by Ron Carleton | Mar 30, 2012
We often tell our clients that a company does not file for bankruptcy on a particular day because it has too much leverage, or because it has a bad management team, or because it has a competitive disadvantage. All of these factors may eventually drive a company out...
by Ron Carleton | Nov 18, 2010
The Terrible Auto Market With the success of the GM IPO, we may be tempted to forget the terrible decade the U.S. auto industry has just completed. Car sales steadily declined from 2000 through 2007, then collapsed in 2008 and 2009 to a level not seen since 1951. ...
by Ron Carleton | Feb 1, 2010
In our last post, we described how to compare the cost of a floating rate instrument, such as a loan, to the cost of a fixed rate instrument, such as a bond. For one company, Jarden Corporation, we showed that the bond’s cost is 50 basis points higher than the...
by Ron Carleton | Jan 26, 2010
Jarden Corporation (Ticker JAH) is a diversified consumer products company whose brands include First Alert, Holmes, Mr. Coffee, and Sunbeam. On June 30, 2009, it had approximately $2.7 billion of debt outstanding, half of which was in the form of Term Loans due...
by Ron Carleton | Nov 18, 2009
There are lots of measures of liquidity. The classics are the current ratio and the quick ratio, but they’ve fallen out of favor because they don’t include cash flow, a critical component of liquidity. Cash burn is too recent to be classic, even though...