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Health Check: How Prudently Does Alto Ingredients (NASDAQ:ALTO) Use Debt?

Simply Wall St·04/22/2025 10:02:36
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The external fund manager backed by Berkshire Hathaway's Charlie Munger, Li Lu, makes no bones about it when he says 'The biggest investment risk is not the volatility of prices, but whether you will suffer a permanent loss of capital.' So it might be obvious that you need to consider debt, when you think about how risky any given stock is, because too much debt can sink a company. We can see that Alto Ingredients, Inc. (NASDAQ:ALTO) does use debt in its business. But should shareholders be worried about its use of debt?

What Risk Does Debt Bring?

Debt assists a business until the business has trouble paying it off, either with new capital or with free cash flow. If things get really bad, the lenders can take control of the business. However, a more frequent (but still costly) occurrence is where a company must issue shares at bargain-basement prices, permanently diluting shareholders, just to shore up its balance sheet. Having said that, the most common situation is where a company manages its debt reasonably well - and to its own advantage. The first step when considering a company's debt levels is to consider its cash and debt together.

What Is Alto Ingredients's Debt?

As you can see below, at the end of December 2024, Alto Ingredients had US$92.9m of debt, up from US$82.1m a year ago. Click the image for more detail. However, it does have US$35.5m in cash offsetting this, leading to net debt of about US$57.4m.

debt-equity-history-analysis
NasdaqCM:ALTO Debt to Equity History April 22nd 2025

How Healthy Is Alto Ingredients' Balance Sheet?

The latest balance sheet data shows that Alto Ingredients had liabilities of US$57.8m due within a year, and liabilities of US$118.6m falling due after that. Offsetting this, it had US$35.5m in cash and US$58.2m in receivables that were due within 12 months. So its liabilities total US$82.7m more than the combination of its cash and short-term receivables.

When you consider that this deficiency exceeds the company's US$61.3m market capitalization, you might well be inclined to review the balance sheet intently. In the scenario where the company had to clean up its balance sheet quickly, it seems likely shareholders would suffer extensive dilution. There's no doubt that we learn most about debt from the balance sheet. But ultimately the future profitability of the business will decide if Alto Ingredients can strengthen its balance sheet over time. So if you want to see what the professionals think, you might find this free report on analyst profit forecasts to be interesting.

View our latest analysis for Alto Ingredients

In the last year Alto Ingredients had a loss before interest and tax, and actually shrunk its revenue by 21%, to US$965m. To be frank that doesn't bode well.

Caveat Emptor

While Alto Ingredients's falling revenue is about as heartwarming as a wet blanket, arguably its earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) loss is even less appealing. Indeed, it lost a very considerable US$20m at the EBIT level. When we look at that alongside the significant liabilities, we're not particularly confident about the company. We'd want to see some strong near-term improvements before getting too interested in the stock. Not least because it burned through US$15m in negative free cash flow over the last year. That means it's on the risky side of things. The balance sheet is clearly the area to focus on when you are analysing debt. But ultimately, every company can contain risks that exist outside of the balance sheet. These risks can be hard to spot. Every company has them, and we've spotted 1 warning sign for Alto Ingredients you should know about.

Of course, if you're the type of investor who prefers buying stocks without the burden of debt, then don't hesitate to discover our exclusive list of net cash growth stocks, today.