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Article Title:
==============
An Analysis of Lexmark (LXK)

Article Description:
====================
In 2005, Berkshire Hathaway bought about a million shares of 
Lexmark. I haven't followed this story closely, but I assume the 
stock was purchased by Lou Simpson rather than Warren Buffett.


Additional Article Information:
===============================
1314 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: Tue Feb 14 08:25:22 EST 2006

Written By:     Geoff Gannon
Copyright:      2006
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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An Analysis of Lexmark (LXK)
Copyright © 2006 Geoff Gannon
Gannon On Investing
http://www.gannononinvesting.com



In 2005, Berkshire Hathaway bought about a million shares of 
Lexmark. I haven't followed this story closely, but I assume the 
stock was purchased by Lou Simpson rather than Warren Buffett. I 
have only two reasons for believing this: the total purchase was 
small relative to Berkshire's investable assets and the Lexmark 
purchase is typical of Simpson's investment philosophy (or at 
least, what little I can glean about his investment philosophy 
from his past purchases). Regardless of who actually makes the 
purchases, a new Berkshire holding always draws a lot of 
commentary.

The commentary on Lexmark has been almost uniformly negative. 
Even many value investors have a very dim view of Lexmark at 
these prices. Now, I am not a contrarian investor. Psychology and 
sentiment do not enter into my considerations at all. I've bought 
stocks trading near five year lows, and I've bought stocks 
trading near five year highs. I just try to be rational. I'm 
not afraid to agree with the consensus, if it's an accurate 
representation of reality. Here, it isn't. The model of Lexmark 
that has emerged in my mind over the past few weeks bears little 
resemblance to the Lexmark I've seen described elsewhere.

Most of the negative comments about Lexmark have focused on the 
consumer segment. Yet, more than 75% of Lexmark's profits come 
from the business segment. The business segment is Lexmark's 
franchise. There, the company has managed to build a moat, not 
a very wide moat, but a moat nonetheless. Lexmark is the only 
focused, integrated printing company of any consequence. It 
understands its business customers' needs, and provides specially 
tailored solutions that none of its competitors can offer. 
Worldwide, some very large companies use Lexmark's products for 
some very specialized tasks. Among these are retailers, banks, 
and pharmacies. Lexmark has complete control of their product 
including the printing technology itself and the software used 
to manage its printers (i.e., to interface with the user's 
computer). Businesses that care about getting these specialized 
tasks done right (and getting them done cheap) use Lexmark.

Even Lexmark's competitors have to concede the fact that Lexmark 
knows printing better than anyone else. Lexmark is the only 
company that develops its own ink – jet, monochrome, and color 
laser technologies. It is a vertically integrated printer 
business like no other. The two competitors most often mentioned 
as threats to Lexmark are HP and Dell. While everyone will suffer 
from deep price cuts; I think it's HP and Dell who should be 
scared.

Lexmark has the much stronger competitive position. For years to 
come, it will be launching the best printing products for high 
ink consumption tasks. Lexmark hasn't been focused on competing 
directly with these companies in the consumer segment; that's 
going to change because of the emerging photo printing market.

Lexmark isn't interested in selling hardware. It's interested in 
selling ink. Now that there is real demand emerging for high 
quality printing within the home, Lexmark is going to start going 
after the consumer market. Over the next few years, Lexmark will 
be selling more printers in this segment. A few years after that, 
the company will see strong recurring revenues from ink sales.

Generic ink cartridges are the biggest threat to the high margin 
printing business. However, I believe, of all the players in this 
industry, Lexmark will be the least affected. Its highest margin 
sales are its most insulated sales. Its lowest margin sales, in 
its least dominant businesses, are where generic ink will hurt 
the most.

There is also some concern that Dell could always move away from 
using Lexmark printers. Let them. From what I can see, sales to 
Dell will not be a particularly significant high free cash flow 
margin business. There's no benefit to the Lexmark brand either. 
That brand is going to become stronger over the next decade, 
because the quality is already there. Lexmark simply hasn't been 
that visible to consumers. The Dell deal doesn't help build the 
Lexmark brand. Honestly, I wouldn't be terribly troubled if 
Lexmark's sales to Dell dropped to zero tomorrow. Such an 
occurrence would not materially affect my valuation of Lexmark.

As far as I can tell, Lexmark's management is excellent. They 
understand the printer business better than anyone (they also 
happen to understand the science of printing better than anyone – 
CEO Paul Curlander has a PhD in electrical engineering from MIT). 
Lexmark's management also sees highly profitable opportunities in 
printing long – term, despite a very competitive situation short 
– term. I agree with that assessment.

Within the printer business, there is a real danger of ferocious 
price competition. However, I do not believe there is a real 
danger of prolonged ferocious price competition. Lexmark is the 
company best positioned to weather the storm. It will generate 
tons of free cash flow, none of which has to be siphoned off 
to other lines of businesses, as it does at all of Lexmark's 
competitors. Lexmark's high free cash flow margin recurring 
revenue stream will supply it with more than enough ammunition 
to outlast its competitors. They may be deep pocketed, but 
eventually, they will have to answer to Wall Street. Long – term, 
they can't compete with Lexmark. It will take them some time to 
realize that. But, Lexmark has the time.

That's my assessment of Lexmark on qualitative grounds. How does 
the stock look quantitatively?

The stock is selling for about 15 times earnings and 10 times 
cash flow. Right now, a dollar of Lexmark's stock buys you a 
dollar of sales. I think that's a bargain. Not many companies 
of this caliber sell at a price – to – sales ratio of one.

For the last ten years, Lexmark's return on equity has not fallen 
below 20%. During the same period, the company's return on assets 
never fell below 10%. The free cash flow margin has generally 
been in the 5 – 10% range.

I wouldn't be surprised to see Lexmark's ROE and free cash flow 
fall substantially in the next few years. However, long – term, 
I believe a return on equity of 15 – 20% and a free cash flow 
margin of 8 – 10% are sustainable. In fact, if I was forced to 
pick an exact ROE that Lexmark could sustain I would pick 20%. 
But, I would also caution you not to expect that for the next 
five years or so.

The important estimate is the 8 – 10% free cash flow margin. 
That's the best way to value Lexmark. At one times sales, you 
have an 8 – 10% yield, if you think sales can be sustained. If 
you think sales can grow, you have to factor that into your 
analysis. At present, a discount rate of 8% seems appropriate.

I never do a discounted free cash flow analysis on this blog, 
because I feel the variables that go into are something you have 
to decide on for yourself. I don't want to slap an exact figure 
on the value of a company, because I don't want to suggest that 
kind of precision. But here, you can clearly see how I'd value 
Lexmark. I gave you what I think Lexmark's free cash flow margin 
will be (8-10%), you know what Lexmark's sales are ($5.4 
billion), and I gave you the discount rate I thought was most 
appropriate (8%). The only necessary variable I haven't provided 
is a sales growth estimate, and I'm not going to provide that, 
because I don't want you to think it has anything to do with the 
next five years.

It doesn't. I'm looking at this company well beyond that point, 
and I like what I see. Lexmark will strengthen its brand (with 
consumers), and people will still be printing. So, yes, I am 
projecting revenue growth for Lexmark; and yes, it is enough to 
suggest Lexmark is worth substantially more than $5.5 billion. 



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Geoff Gannon is a full time investment writer. He writes 
a (print) quarterly investment newsletter and a daily value 
investing blog. He also produces a twice weekly (half hour) 
value investing podcast at: http://www.gannononinvesting.com


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