Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

How False Reporting Made TiVo a Bargain Stock

TiVo took it on the chin thanks to some misreported earnings results. Now it’s a bargain stock - and a Strong Buy in light of the real results.

Right Wrong Sign Choice Cloudy SKy

Bargain stocks can come from just about anywhere. But there’s a new bargain stock that became undervalued due to some truly peculiar circumstances.

TiVo Earnings Confuse

It’s earnings season, and TiVo (TIVO) reported first quarter 2017 results on May 3 after the market closed, which I discussed in a Special Bulletin to subscribers last week. Various financial media reporters looked at the company’s press release, and each proceeded to report various inaccurate numbers to their readers. That’s because TiVo did not report a number for non-GAAP earnings per share (EPS), which is the number Wall Street analysts use to make earnings projections, and to compare results to the company’s recent quarterly and annual performance. However, TiVo did provide the numbers that are used to calculate non-GAAP earnings per share.

[text_ad use_post='129629']

At 5:52 p.m. ET on May 3, Reuters reported a first-quarter loss of (-$0.29) per share, using GAAP basic and diluted EPS numbers. But Reuters never reports GAAP numbers! Reuters reports non-GAAP numbers and makes direct comparisons to the non-GAAP consensus earnings estimates, so that investors can see whether the quarterly results came in above or below estimates.

The Associated Press reported adjusted EPS of $0.30, but news agencies that published the AP story (Yahoo Finance and CNBC) used GAAP numbers in headlines, such as “TiVo Reports 1Q Loss.”

On the evening of May 3, Briefing.com reported EPS of $0.45.

On the morning of May 4, Zacks reported adjusted EPS of $0.22.

On the morning of May 4, the Charles Schwab website posted first quarter 2017 results, but they inadvertently published fourth-quarter 2016 numbers.

Later in the day on May 4, the Charles Schwab website reported first quarter EPS of $0.29.

So what’s the truth? The actual calculation did not seem complicated. TiVo’s press release included all of the following numbers, except non-GAAP EPS, so I did the calculation:

TiVo-earnings

Still, I felt uncomfortable publishing that number in my Special Bulletin to subscribers last week, because it was a simple calculation—it’s supposed to be complicated, right?—yet none of the news reports agreed with it. I was thinking, “What am I missing here?” It turns out that I wasn’t missing anything.

And then I found this on the transcript of TiVo’s earnings conference call from the afternoon of May 3:

Question (from an analyst at an investment firm): “I’ll start off with a housekeeping question to calculate non-GAAP EPS. So I have around $54 million in pretax income and $6 million in cash taxes. And using 120 million in diluted share count, does it direct to $0.40 non-GAAP EPS?”

Answer (from Peter C. Halt, TiVo’s CFO): “That would be the correct calculation.”

So there you have it: $0.40 EPS, everybody reported it wrong, and the share price fell.

TiVo Won’t Be a Bargain Stock for Long

I tend to be relaxed about share price volatility, because everything eventually comes out in the wash. The analysts and institutions that propel the bulk of stock purchases will not misunderstand the company’s financial reports. They will recognize a bargain stock when they see it, and they will drive the share price up.

In the meantime, I just want to encourage investors to buy stocks in financially healthy companies, and be prepared to hold those stocks through volatile time periods, in order to reach the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

As for TiVo: buy, buy, buy. Strong Buy

[author_ad]

Crista Huff is the lead analyst of Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor, where she combines a strict fundamental methodology with technical analysis, to identify growth and value stocks whose charts are turning bullish.