This 1 Metric Shows Why You Should Be Cautious With Tilray Brands Stock

1 hour ago

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While it's often narratives rather than numbers that cause stocks to swing in value, sometimes the most parsimonious way to summarize a company's strengths and weaknesses is to focus on a key quantitative metric or two. Numbers never tell the whole story, but they can often give investors some pretty solid hints about what's coming next.

One figure in particular is especially important to consider for investors who either hold or who are considering buying Tilray Brands (NASDAQ: TLRY) stock right now. Even if you're not usually one for appreciating the numbers behind a stock, it's worth paying attention to this one, so let's dive in.

Companies that can reliably make investments that generate higher returns than the costs associated with financing and making those investments tend to be better stocks to buy than companies that consistently make money-losing investments. That makes sense, because investors won't be incentivized to contribute their capital by buying shares of the stock if they can see that the business previously did not get a good return on its capital. Nor will lenders be apt to offer loans at favorable interest rates if they see that prior loans were difficult to repay.

With that being said, it's reasonable to expect that certain investments take a long time to pay off, losing money until after a critical threshold is reached and the return of the investment goes from the red to the black.

In Tilray's case, investments are exactly the kinds of things you'd expect a multinational cannabis and alcohol business would need to operate. That includes everything from cultivation equipment and greenhouse facilities to distilling and manufacturing hardware, retail locations, vehicles, and distribution facilities, as well as investments in intangible assets like brands and intellectual property (IP). Most of that stuff is purchased outright, and then operated by employees to (ideally) produce value for shareholders when the products are sold.

Alas, Tilray's trailing-12-month (TTM) return on invested capital (ROIC) is negative 5.5%. Its median ROIC over the last three years is even worse, at negative 9.4%. In this case, it is correct to say that such a return has has destroyed shareholder value rather than expanding it. And it's a reason why you should be cautious with this stock.

There's more than one explanation of why the company is struggling to generate more than its costs of capital. One key sign is its operating losses, which totaled $108.3 million in the TTM period.


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