Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Sustainable Growth====== Sustainable Growth (also known as the 'Sustainable Growth Rate' or SGR) is the maximum rate at which a company can grow its sales and assets without having to raise new money from shareholders or increase its financial leverage (i.e., take on more debt). Think of it as a company’s financial speed limit, dictated entirely by its own profitability and reinvestment decisions. For a [[value investing|value investor]], this is a crucial concept. It helps you quickly gauge a company's self-sufficiency and operational efficiency. A business that can fund its own expansion from its profits is inherently less risky and more robust than one that constantly needs to borrow money or dilute existing owners by issuing new shares. It’s a powerful litmus test for identifying high-quality, durable businesses that can compound wealth for their shareholders over the long term. ===== The Nuts and Bolts of Sustainable Growth ===== At its heart, the SGR connects a company's profitability with its policy on retaining earnings. It answers a simple but profound question: "Based on how much profit we make and how much we keep, how fast can we realistically grow?" ==== The SGR Formula ==== The calculation is surprisingly straightforward and elegant. It hinges on two key performance indicators: * SGR = [[Return on Equity (ROE)]] x (1 - [[Dividend Payout Ratio]]) Let’s break that down: * **Return on Equity (ROE):** This is a powerhouse metric that tells you how effectively a company is using the money invested by its shareholders to generate profits. A higher ROE means higher profitability for every dollar of shareholder equity. * **(1 - Dividend Payout Ratio):** This part of the formula is also known as the [[Retention Ratio]]. The [[Dividend Payout Ratio]] is the percentage of earnings paid out to shareholders as [[dividends]]. By subtracting this from 1, you get the percentage of profit the company //keeps// and reinvests back into the business. //An Example:// Imagine a company, "Sturdy Tables Inc.", has an ROE of 20%. It decides to pay out 30% of its profits to shareholders as dividends. Its retention ratio is therefore 70% (1 - 0.30). Its Sustainable Growth Rate would be: * SGR = 20% x 0.70 = 14% This means Sturdy Tables Inc. can grow by 14% annually without needing to sell more stock or pile on debt. It’s a self-funding growth machine. ===== Why Value Investors Care About SGR ===== The SGR is more than just a formula; it's a diagnostic tool that reveals a lot about a company's quality and management's discipline. ==== A Quality Check for Your Portfolio ==== A healthy SGR is often a sign of a fundamentally strong business, making it a favorite metric for followers of investors like [[Warren Buffett]]. * **Self-Financing Powerhouse:** A company with a consistently high SGR is funding its own future. It doesn't depend on the whims of capital markets, which protects shareholders from the value-destroying effects of [[stock issuance]] (dilution) or the risks of excessive debt. * **A Reality Check on Management:** If a company’s management team is forecasting growth rates that are wildly above its SGR, it should raise a red flag. Where will the cash for that growth come from? This discrepancy forces you to investigate their financing plans. Are they about to take on a mountain of debt? This signals potential risk ahead. * **Identifying an Economic Moat:** Businesses that can sustain a high SGR often possess a durable competitive advantage, or an [[economic moat]]. Their superior profitability (high ROE) and ability to reinvest that profit at a high rate are testaments to a strong market position that competitors find difficult to challenge. ==== Potential Pitfalls and Considerations ==== While powerful, the SGR should never be used in isolation. Context is everything. * **The Growth Trap:** Beware of companies whose actual growth consistently outpaces their SGR. This "growth trap" is often fueled by debt, creating a fragile financial structure that can crumble under pressure. Conversely, a company growing much slower than its SGR might be mismanaged, sitting on idle cash instead of finding profitable ways to expand. * **Look Beyond the Number:** A high SGR is meaningless if the company isn't generating strong [[free cash flow]] or if its earnings quality is poor. Always analyze the SGR alongside other key financial statements, especially the [[balance sheet]] and cash flow statement, to get the full picture. ===== A Practical Example ===== Let's compare two fictional companies to see the SGR in action. * **Company A (The Steady Compounder):** Has an ROE of 22% and retains 60% of its earnings. Its SGR is 13.2% (22% x 0.60). If it aims for annual growth of 10-13%, you can be confident it's growing within its means. This is a sign of a well-managed, sustainable business. * **Company B (The Risky Sprinter):** Has an ROE of 15% and retains 40% of its earnings. Its SGR is a mere 6% (15% x 0.40). However, its CEO is on the news promising 25% annual growth. As a sharp investor, you should immediately be skeptical. This massive gap between ambition (25%) and sustainable reality (6%) suggests the growth will be funded by risky debt or by diluting your ownership. This is a classic warning sign.