Hey Friends. I hope this weekend’s post finds you doing well! Today, we will do something unusual, namely speak of a specific stock but it is for a specific reason. It is the stock that was identified by my investing approach and included in my book, “Choose Stocks Wisely.”

My book was published in late 2013. In the book, I shared my personal investing approach I had used for years to identify healthy businesses trading at potentially low prices. Further, my approach was shared by illustrating first the filtering process used to screen for deep value companies as defined primarily by balance sheet metrics, and secondly the analysis applied to potential investment candidates revealed by the screener. Analysis was illustrated using my Adjusted Floor Scorecard to examine for financial health and a low price. My approach at the time of book release revealed Rocky Brands, Inc. (RCKY) as a potentially attractive deep value at $11.75 a share or lower.

RCKY had earlier in 2013 initiated a quarterly cash dividend of .10 per quarter and it has paid quarterly dividends until the present with the dividend currently at .14 per quarter. At the time my book was released, RCKY was trading around 14 a share and thus not as deep a value as my approach sought. That’s not to say it wasn’t a good deal at 14 a share. Based on today’s share price, one would have loved to acquire it at 14 back then. However, my approach would not have led to a buy at 14.

I like to get a lot of value for the money — sometimes you miss out altogether. However, in RCKY’s case, it finally got below the adjusted floor price and presented regular opportunities to buy at or below the Scorecard price from October of 2015 through the summer of 2017.

Fast forward — it has retreated some from its high of 69 per share achieved last week on May 6 to close today just below 56 a share. From a low of below 10 (well below the adjusted floor price at that time) a share during October 2016 to a high of 69 a week ago, RCKY turned out to be quite the performer.

My book pointed out that earnings drive stock prices but don’t define a low stock price. A low price starts with proper analysis of the balance sheet. You want a profitable business but the price is unlikely to be bottoming if earnings are growing. So, a profitable business with reason to believe the business could see future growth is an ideal find if the balance sheet equity substantively supports the price you will pay. My method seeks to find such a price. RCKY moved up and down several dollars from the time my book was published until around spring of 2018. Earnings started to pick up then and the share price blasted forward to about 34 a share by September of 2019. During the COVID crash of early 2020, RCKY pulled back deeply like most companies and dipped to about 15 a share then. But earnings growth has continued and at an increasing rate.

So, RCKY proved to be a winner — a stock with a valuable business as defined by the balance sheet and selling for an extended period of time at a significant discount to the balance sheet equity. Now, it trades at multiples of its equity position as earnings growth has put the company on the radar screen of the stock market.

I’ll not address the “sell” issue as it continues to be the abstract (where is high?). If one bought RCKY at or near the Scorecard number, he or she sure would be selling high now in terms of the return achieved whether it continues higher or not.

As you know, all stock stories aren’t the story of Rocky Brands, But, since it was the company highlighted by my book, I thought it was a worthy topic for this blog post.

On an aside, we heard earlier this week about inflation showing up big-time in the data. Yesterday the Fed tried to allay fears about inflation and the market was up big today (Friday, May 14).  But as a dear friend just shared (via an article) with me, one would wonder what other choice does the Fed have than to try and allay fear? If it postures itself that it is concerned over the inflation data in terms of what could be ahead, the fear witnessed in the markets earlier this week would likely be minuscule to the damage in market values we would see.

With investing, never forget the import of the balance sheet dear friends. See you next time.