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STEC, (FRA:XTC) Piotroski F-Score : 0 (As of May. 27, 2024)


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What is STEC, Piotroski F-Score?

The zones of discrimination were as such:

Good or high score = 7, 8, 9
Bad or low score = 0, 1, 2, 3

STEC, has an F-score of 3. It is a bad or low score, which usually implies poor business operation.

The historical rank and industry rank for STEC,'s Piotroski F-Score or its related term are showing as below:


STEC, Piotroski F-Score Historical Data

The historical data trend for STEC,'s Piotroski F-Score can be seen below:

* For Operating Data section: All numbers are indicated by the unit behind each term and all currency related amount are in USD.
* For other sections: All numbers are in millions except for per share data, ratio, and percentage. All currency related amount are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.

* Premium members only.

STEC, Piotroski F-Score Chart

STEC, Annual Data
Trend Dec03 Dec04 Dec05 Dec06 Dec07 Dec08 Dec09 Dec10 Dec11 Dec12
Piotroski F-Score
Get a 7-Day Free Trial Premium Member Only Premium Member Only 4.00 6.00 3.00 6.00 1.00

STEC, Quarterly Data
Sep08 Dec08 Mar09 Jun09 Sep09 Dec09 Mar10 Jun10 Sep10 Dec10 Mar11 Jun11 Sep11 Dec11 Mar12 Jun12 Sep12 Dec12 Mar13 Jun13
Piotroski F-Score Get a 7-Day Free Trial Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only 3.00 3.00 1.00 1.00 2.00

How is the Piotroski F-Score calculated?

* For Operating Data section: All numbers are indicated by the unit behind each term and all currency related amount are in USD.
* For other sections: All numbers are in millions except for per share data, ratio, and percentage. All currency related amount are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.

This Year (Jun13) TTM:Last Year (Jun12) TTM:
Net Income was -15.352 + -17.644 + -19.661 + -23.039 = €-75.70 Mil.
Cash Flow from Operations was -14.022 + -16.26 + -6.687 + -11.662 = €-48.63 Mil.
Revenue was 32.633 + 26.773 + 17.003 + 17.778 = €94.19 Mil.
Gross Profit was 12.07 + 8.614 + 4.549 + 4.975 = €30.21 Mil.
Average Total Assets from the begining of this year (Jun12)
to the end of this year (Jun13) was
(264.812 + 243.152 + 220.806 + 180.821 + 162.646) / 5 = €214.4474 Mil.
Total Assets at the begining of this year (Jun12) was €264.81 Mil.
Long-Term Debt & Capital Lease Obligation was €0.00 Mil.
Total Current Assets was €131.43 Mil.
Total Current Liabilities was €25.50 Mil.
Net Income was 3.522 + -2.725 + -8.092 + -39.529 = €-46.82 Mil.

Revenue was 52.729 + 44.183 + 38.164 + 32.442 = €167.52 Mil.
Gross Profit was 24.145 + 18.145 + 13.696 + 11.867 = €67.85 Mil.
Average Total Assets from the begining of last year (Jun11)
to the end of last year (Jun12) was
(278.824 + 259.033 + 255.802 + 252.426 + 264.812) / 5 = €262.1794 Mil.
Total Assets at the begining of last year (Jun11) was €278.82 Mil.
Long-Term Debt & Capital Lease Obligation was €0.00 Mil.
Total Current Assets was €230.15 Mil.
Total Current Liabilities was €53.81 Mil.

*Note: If the latest quarterly/semi-annual/annual total assets data is 0, then we will use previous quarterly/semi-annual/annual data for all the items in the balance sheet.

Profitability

Question 1. Return on Assets (ROA)

Net income before extraordinary items for the year divided by Total Assets at the beginning of the year.

Score 1 if positive, 0 if negative.

STEC,'s current Net Income (TTM) was -75.70. ==> Negative ==> Score 0.

Question 2. Cash Flow Return on Assets (CFROA)

Net cash flow from operating activities (operating cash flow) divided by Total Assets at the beginning of the year.

Score 1 if positive, 0 if negative.

STEC,'s current Cash Flow from Operations (TTM) was -48.63. ==> Negative ==> Score 0.

Question 3. Change in Return on Assets

Compare this year's return on assets (1) to last year's return on assets.

Score 1 if it's higher, 0 if it's lower.

ROA (This Year)=Net Income/Total Assets (Jun12)
=-75.696/264.812
=-0.28584807

ROA (Last Year)=Net Income/Total Assets (Jun11)
=-46.824/278.824
=-0.16793389

STEC,'s return on assets of this year was -0.28584807. STEC,'s return on assets of last year was -0.16793389. ==> Last year is higher ==> Score 0.

Question 4. Quality of Earnings (Accrual)

Compare Cash flow return on assets (2) to return on assets (1)

Score 1 if CFROA > ROA, 0 if CFROA <= ROA.

STEC,'s current Net Income (TTM) was -75.70. STEC,'s current Cash Flow from Operations (TTM) was -48.63. ==> -48.63 > -75.70 ==> CFROA > ROA ==> Score 1.

Funding

Question 5. Change in Gearing or Leverage

Compare this year's gearing (long-term debt divided by average total assets) to last year's gearing.

Score 0 if this year's gearing is higher, 1 otherwise.

Gearing (This Year: Jun13)=Long-Term Debt & Capital Lease Obligation/Average Total Assets from Jun12 to Jun13
=0/214.4474
=0

Gearing (Last Year: Jun12)=Long-Term Debt & Capital Lease Obligation/Average Total Assets from Jun11 to Jun12
=0/262.1794
=0

STEC,'s gearing of this year was 0. STEC,'s gearing of last year was 0. ==> This year is lower or equal to last year. ==> Score 1.

Question 6. Change in Working Capital (Liquidity)

Compare this year's current ratio (current assets divided by current liabilities) to last year's current ratio.

Score 1 if this year's current ratio is higher, 0 if it's lower

Current Ratio (This Year: Jun13)=Total Current Assets/Total Current Liabilities
=131.427/25.498
=5.15440427

Current Ratio (Last Year: Jun12)=Total Current Assets/Total Current Liabilities
=230.145/53.809
=4.27707261

STEC,'s current ratio of this year was 5.15440427. STEC,'s current ratio of last year was 4.27707261. ==> This year's current ratio is higher. ==> Score 1.

Question 7. Change in Shares in Issue

Compare the number of shares in issue this year, to the number in issue last year.

Score 0 if there is larger number of shares in issue this year, 1 otherwise.

STEC,'s number of shares in issue this year was 46.898. STEC,'s number of shares in issue last year was 46.34. ==> There is larger number of shares in issue this year. ==> Score 0.

Efficiency

Question 8. Change in Gross Margin

Compare this year's gross margin (Gross Profit divided by sales) to last year's.

Score 1 if this year's gross margin is higher, 0 if it's lower.

Gross Margin (This Year: TTM)=Gross Profit/Revenue
=30.208/94.187
=0.32072367

Gross Margin (Last Year: TTM)=Gross Profit/Revenue
=67.853/167.518
=0.40504901

STEC,'s gross margin of this year was 0.32072367. STEC,'s gross margin of last year was 0.40504901. ==> Last year's gross margin is higher ==> Score 0.

Question 9. Change in asset turnover

Compare this year's asset turnover (total sales for the year divided by total assets at the beginning of the year) to last year's asset turnover ratio.

Score 1 if this year's asset turnover ratio is higher, 0 if it's lower

Asset Turnover (This Year)=Revenue/Total Assets at the Beginning of This Year (Jun12)
=94.187/264.812
=0.35567497

Asset Turnover (Last Year)=Revenue/Total Assets at the Beginning of Last Year (Jun11)
=167.518/278.824
=0.60080194

STEC,'s asset turnover of this year was 0.35567497. STEC,'s asset turnover of last year was 0.60080194. ==> Last year's asset turnover is higher ==> Score 0.

Evaluation

Piotroski F-Score= Que. 1+ Que. 2+ Que. 3+Que. 4+Que. 5+Que. 6+Que. 7+Que. 8+Que. 9
=0+0+0+1+1+1+0+0+0
=3

Good or high score = 7, 8, 9
Bad or low score = 0, 1, 2, 3

STEC, has an F-score of 3. It is a bad or low score, which usually implies poor business operation.

STEC,  (FRA:XTC) Piotroski F-Score Explanation

The developer of the system is Joseph D. Piotroski is relatively unknown accounting professor who shuns publicity and rarely gives interviews.

He graduated from the University of Illinois with a B.S. in accounting in 1989, received an M.B.A. from Indiana University in 1994. Five years later, in 1999, after earning a Ph.D. in accounting from the University of Michigan, he became an associate professor of accounting at the University of Chicago.

In 2000, he wrote a research paper called "Value Investing: The Use of Historical Financial Statement Information to Separate Winners from Losers" (pdf).

He wanted to see if he can develop a system (using a simple nine-point scoring system) that can increase the returns of a strategy of investing in low price to book (referred to in the paper as high book to market) value companies.

What he found was something that exceeded his most optimistic expectations.

Buying only those companies that scored highest (8 or 9) on his nine-point scale, or F-Score as he called it, over the 20 year period from 1976 to 1996 led to an average out-performance over the market of 13.4%.

Even more impressive were the results of a strategy of investing in the highest F-Score companies (8 or 9) and shorting companies with the lowest F-Score (0 or 1).

Over the same period from 1976 to 1996 (20 years) this strategy led to an average yearly return of 23%, substantially outperforming the average S&P 500 index return of 15.83% over the same period.


STEC, Piotroski F-Score Related Terms

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STEC, (FRA:XTC) Business Description

Traded in Other Exchanges
N/A
Address
STEC, Inc., was incorporated in 1990 in the state of California. It provides enterprise-class Flash solid-state drives that are designed to increase the performance of enterprise-storage systems and servers that companies use to retain and access their critical data. Its products are designed for storage systems and servers that run applications requiring a high level of input/output operations per second ('IOPS') performance, capacity, reliability and low latency. The Company designs and develops its SSD controllers, enhance them with proprietary firmware and combine them with third-party Flash memory to form high-performance SSDs which provide a level of IOPS performance not currently possible with traditional hard disk drives ('HDDs'). The Company sells its SSDs to global storage and server original equipment manufacturers ('OEMs') which integrate them into storage systems and servers used by enterprises in a variety of industries including financial services, government, transportation, defense and aerospace, and transaction processing. It also manufactures small form factor Flash SSDs, cards and modules, as well as custom high density dynamic random access memory ('DRAM') modules for networking, communications and industrial applications. The Company markets its products to OEMs, leveraging its comprehensive design capabilities to offer custom storage solutions to address their specific needs. A major area of its Flash-based product investment has been applied to SSD technology. It also offers both monolithic DRAM modules and DRAM modules based on its proprietary stacking technology. The Company also offers both monolithic DRAM modules and DRAM modules based on its proprietary stacking technology. The Company's ZeusIOPS SSDs are high performance enterprise-class data storage solutions. Its MACH-class SSDs are small form factor, high throughput storage solutions for mission-critical systems in a variety of industries. The Company's Industrial Grade Advanced Technology Attachment ('ATA') PC Cards are viable alternatives to HDDs due to their high reliability and low cost per useable megabyte. CompactFlash products provide full PC Card ATA functionality but are only one-fourth the size of a standard PC Card. Its flash module products include USB and Serial ATA interfaces and are targeted toward embedded systems where device footprint and low power are critical design parameters. The Company's Secure Digital ('SD') Flash Memory Cards are small, removable and non-volatile flash memory with a high performance interface. Its USB flash drive built upon an industrial-grade flash controller technology has capacity of 1GB to 8GB, its USB Flash Drive couples convenience and portability with performance and reliability. The Company offers DRAM products, including dual in-line memory modules ('DIMMs'), small-outline DIMMs, mini-registered DIMMs, very low profile registered DIMMs ('VLP RDIMMs') and Fully-Buffered DIMMs ('FB-DIMMs'). Its pat

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