It’s common for many investors, especially those who are inexperienced, to buy shares in companies with a good story even if these companies are loss-making. But the reality is that when a company loses money each year, for long enough, its investors will usually take their share of those losses. While a well funded company may sustain losses for years, it will need to generate a profit eventually, or else investors will move on and the company will wither away.
Despite being in the age of tech-stock blue-sky investing, many investors still adopt a more traditional strategy; buying shares in profitable companies like Chefs’ Warehouse (NASDAQ:CHEF). Even if this company is fairly valued by the market, investors would agree that generating consistent profits will continue to provide Chefs’ Warehouse with the means to add long-term value to shareholders.
Generally, companies experiencing growth in earnings per share (EPS) should see similar trends in share price. That means EPS growth is considered a real positive by most successful long-term investors. Shareholders will be happy to know that Chefs’ Warehouse’s EPS has grown 33% each year, compound, over three years. As a general rule, we’d say that if a company can keep up that sort of growth, shareholders will be beaming.
It’s often helpful to take a look at earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) margins, as well as revenue growth, to get another take on the quality of the company’s growth. Chefs’ Warehouse maintained stable EBIT margins over the last year, all while growing revenue 9.4% to US$4.1b. That’s progress.
The chart below shows how the company’s bottom and top lines have progressed over time. For finer detail, click on the image.
View our latest analysis for Chefs’ Warehouse
In investing, as in life, the future matters more than the past. So why not check out this free interactive visualization of Chefs’ Warehouse’s forecast profits?
It should give investors a sense of security owning shares in a company if insiders also own shares, creating a close alignment their interests. So it is good to see that Chefs’ Warehouse insiders have a significant amount of capital invested in the stock. We note that their impressive stake in the company is worth US$241m. Holders should find this level of insider commitment quite encouraging, since it would ensure that the leaders of the company would also experience their success, or failure, with the stock.
