Some Investors May Be Willing To Look Past Hawesko Holding's (ETR:HAW) Soft Earnings

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Soft earnings didn't appear to concern Hawesko Holding SE's (ETR:HAW) shareholders over the last week. We think that the softer headline numbers might be getting counterbalanced by some positive underlying factors.

View our latest analysis for Hawesko Holding

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Zooming In On Hawesko Holding's Earnings

One key financial ratio used to measure how well a company converts its profit to free cash flow (FCF) is the accrual ratio. In plain english, this ratio subtracts FCF from net profit, and divides that number by the company's average operating assets over that period. This ratio tells us how much of a company's profit is not backed by free cashflow.

Therefore, it's actually considered a good thing when a company has a negative accrual ratio, but a bad thing if its accrual ratio is positive. That is not intended to imply we should worry about a positive accrual ratio, but it's worth noting where the accrual ratio is rather high. To quote a 2014 paper by Lewellen and Resutek, "firms with higher accruals tend to be less profitable in the future".

Hawesko Holding has an accrual ratio of -0.18 for the year to June 2024. Therefore, its statutory earnings were very significantly less than its free cashflow. Indeed, in the last twelve months it reported free cash flow of €35m, well over the €5.66m it reported in profit. Hawesko Holding shareholders are no doubt pleased that free cash flow improved over the last twelve months. However, that's not all there is to consider. We can see that unusual items have impacted its statutory profit, and therefore the accrual ratio.

That might leave you wondering what analysts are forecasting in terms of future profitability. Luckily, you can click here to see an interactive graph depicting future profitability, based on their estimates.

The Impact Of Unusual Items On Profit

Hawesko Holding's profit was reduced by unusual items worth €9.8m in the last twelve months, and this helped it produce high cash conversion, as reflected by its unusual items. In a scenario where those unusual items included non-cash charges, we'd expect to see a strong accrual ratio, which is exactly what has happened in this case. It's never great to see unusual items costing the company profits, but on the upside, things might improve sooner rather than later. We looked at thousands of listed companies and found that unusual items are very often one-off in nature. And that's hardly a surprise given these line items are considered unusual. If Hawesko Holding doesn't see those unusual expenses repeat, then all else being equal we'd expect its profit to increase over the coming year.