The other day, I was covering Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc. (NASDAQ:CBRL)‘s third-quarter earnings and re-examining the position of one of its largest shareholders: Sardar Biglari of Biglari Holdings Inc (NYSE:BH). Biglari’s Cracker Barrel position has a current market value of roughly $465 million. The total market cap of Biglari Holdings is $587 million. Now, this isn’t a new thesis, as others have asked the question, but are we to believe that Biglari’s other assets, the entire Steak ‘n Shake chain as well as Western Sizzlin’, are worth a combined $220 million? Either there is something missing here, or Biglari Holdings is an undervalued stock.
Can it be?
So, upon seeing this glaring disconnect between Biglari’s market cap and the company’s assets, my first inclination was that I missed something.
To repeat, Biglari Holdings Inc (NYSE:BH)’s Cracker Barrel stake is worth $465 million — today. Taking out cash and adding in long-term debt, you have an enterprise value of roughly $700 million, implying a market value of $122 million for the remainder of Biglari Holdings, and an enterprise value around $220 million.
In the recently ended 16-week period, Steak ‘n Shake and Western Sizzlin’ hauled in $218.74 million. The company generated nearly $19 million in cash flow in the same period. If we annualize Steak ‘n Shake’s free cash flow to, say, $50 million (likely more), Biglari’s restaurant operations are trading at 4.4 times one-year forward cash flow.
As of the end of April, the company had about $20 million in cash and long-term debt of $131 million.
A reason or two
I can understand some mispricing due to the fact that Biglari Holdings Inc (NYSE:BH) is not a household name, and even though its founder modeled the business after Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRK-B) (and has thus far performed in a similar manner), it doesn’t hold near the weight that Berkshire does on the investment scene. The stock is also more than $400 per share, perhaps discouraging would-be investors. But I don’t see any fund managers buying up the stock meaningfully, either. Mario Gabelli holds a decent position, but his investment business is gigantic and not necessarily based on stock picking.
Biglari Holdings Inc (NYSE:BH) angered investors after taking hold of Steak ‘n Shake — he renamed the firm Biglari Holdings, consolidated other operations, and gave himself a hedge-fund-esque salary. I, for one, don’t mind paying a hedge-fund-manager salary if the manager compounds my money at an attractive rate. I especially don’t mind paying it when it appears that I am getting all of the Steak ‘n Shake I want for a bargain.
This is a weak thesis, I agree. The facts that the stock is literally pricey (not valuation wise), that people may not like Sardar Biglari, and that not enough people know what Biglari Holdings Inc (NYSE:BH) is just aren’t enough to warrant the big difference between the intrinsic value of the company and its market equivalent.
Perhaps when Biglari Holdings Inc (NYSE:BH) monetizes the Cracker Barrel position, the market will have no choice but to correct its large discount to Steak ‘n Shake’s operations. Until then, Biglari shares are on sale.
The article When Will Biglari Price Catch Up to Value? originally appeared on Fool.com.
Fool contributor Michael Lewis has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Cracker Barrel Old Country Store (NASDAQ:CBRL).
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