Is Build-A-Bear Workshop (NYSE: BBW) Undervalued or Overvalued?

Written By Wealth Daily Research Team

Updated April 19, 2020

Today is Monday, May 20, 2019 and here’s your daily small cap valuation.

Build-A-Bear Workshop (NYSE: BBW) is a small-cap stock that could have a lot of potential. But it’s hard to value smaller companies like this. Conventional valuation metrics like price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, profit margin, and return on equity (ROE) may not be available for them.

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To get a sense of Build-A-Bear Workshop’s true valuation, let’s compare it to its industry peers — and to itself one year ago. We’ll look at four small cap valuation metrics…

Price-to-Book Value (P/B) Ratio

Build-A-Bear Workshop’s price-to-book value (P/B) ratio of 0.7763 is 90.27% lower than its industry average of 7.982. That’s good. A low P/B ratio indicates that the company has a solid balance sheet — and that based on its balance sheet, the stock is trading for unusually cheap.

Free Cash Flow Yield (FCF/Enterprise Value)

Build-A-Bear Workshop’s free cash flow yield (FCF/EV) of -2.72% is 185.53% lower than its industry average of 3.18%. That’s not good. This metric compares free cash flow (the amount of cash left over after all expenses and capital expenditures have been paid) with enterprise value (a comprehensive alternative to market cap that includes cash and debt).

A low free cash flow yield indicates that a company is performing inefficiently — or that it’s struggling with the debt on its books.

Earnings per Share (EPS) Growth

Build-A-Bear Workshop has not grown its earnings per share (EPS) in the last year. That’s not good. Negative earnings aren’t the end of the world — they’re fairly common among smaller, newer companies — but if earnings are falling over time, that’s definitely a bad sign.

Gross Margin Growth

Build-A-Bear Workshop has not grown its gross margin in the last year. That’s not good. It indicates that the company is making less money from its operations over time.

The Takeaway

Build-A-Bear Workshop scored favorably on 1 of our 4 valuation metrics. With this in mind, we believe the stock is slightly overvalued.

Got another small-cap stock you want us to test with our valuation metrics? Leave the ticker symbol in the comments below.

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