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Does Hulamin (JSE:HLM) Have A Healthy Balance Sheet?

Simply Wall St·12/19/2025 04:22:40
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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.' It's only natural to consider a company's balance sheet when you examine how risky it is, since debt is often involved when a business collapses. As with many other companies Hulamin Limited (JSE:HLM) makes use of debt. But should shareholders be worried about its use of debt?

When Is Debt A Problem?

Debt assists a business until the business has trouble paying it off, either with new capital or with free cash flow. In the worst case scenario, a company can go bankrupt if it cannot pay its creditors. While that is not too common, we often do see indebted companies permanently diluting shareholders because lenders force them to raise capital at a distressed price. By replacing dilution, though, debt can be an extremely good tool for businesses that need capital to invest in growth at high rates of return. When we think about a company's use of debt, we first look at cash and debt together.

What Is Hulamin's Debt?

You can click the graphic below for the historical numbers, but it shows that as of June 2025 Hulamin had R1.80b of debt, an increase on R1.50b, over one year. However, it also had R207.3m in cash, and so its net debt is R1.59b.

debt-equity-history-analysis
JSE:HLM Debt to Equity History December 19th 2025

How Strong Is Hulamin's Balance Sheet?

The latest balance sheet data shows that Hulamin had liabilities of R3.38b due within a year, and liabilities of R209.9m falling due after that. On the other hand, it had cash of R207.3m and R1.37b worth of receivables due within a year. So its liabilities outweigh the sum of its cash and (near-term) receivables by R2.01b.

This deficit casts a shadow over the R689.1m company, like a colossus towering over mere mortals. So we'd watch its balance sheet closely, without a doubt. After all, Hulamin would likely require a major re-capitalisation if it had to pay its creditors today.

Check out our latest analysis for Hulamin

In order to size up a company's debt relative to its earnings, we calculate its net debt divided by its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) and its earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) divided by its interest expense (its interest cover). Thus we consider debt relative to earnings both with and without depreciation and amortization expenses.

Weak interest cover of 0.76 times and a disturbingly high net debt to EBITDA ratio of 5.7 hit our confidence in Hulamin like a one-two punch to the gut. The debt burden here is substantial. Worse, Hulamin's EBIT was down 71% over the last year. If earnings keep going like that over the long term, it has a snowball's chance in hell of paying off that debt. The balance sheet is clearly the area to focus on when you are analysing debt. But it is future earnings, more than anything, that will determine Hulamin's ability to maintain a healthy balance sheet going forward. So if you want to see what the professionals think, you might find this free report on analyst profit forecasts to be interesting.

But our final consideration is also important, because a company cannot pay debt with paper profits; it needs cold hard cash. So we clearly need to look at whether that EBIT is leading to corresponding free cash flow. During the last three years, Hulamin burned a lot of cash. While that may be a result of expenditure for growth, it does make the debt far more risky.

Our View

On the face of it, Hulamin's EBIT growth rate left us tentative about the stock, and its level of total liabilities was no more enticing than the one empty restaurant on the busiest night of the year. And even its interest cover fails to inspire much confidence. It looks to us like Hulamin carries a significant balance sheet burden. If you play with fire you risk getting burnt, so we'd probably give this stock a wide berth. When analysing debt levels, the balance sheet is the obvious place to start. However, not all investment risk resides within the balance sheet - far from it. For example, we've discovered 5 warning signs for Hulamin (1 can't be ignored!) that you should be aware of before investing here.

If you're interested in investing in businesses that can grow profits without the burden of debt, then check out this free list of growing businesses that have net cash on the balance sheet.