By Michael Tsang and Alexis Xydias

Dec. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Stocks have fallen so far that 2,267 companies
around the globe are offering profits to investors for free. That's
eight times as many as at the end of the last bear market, when the
shares rose 115 percent over the next year.

Bank of New York Mellon Corp. in New York, Danieli SpA in Buttrio,
Italy and Seoul-based Namyang Dairy Products Co. hold more cash than
the value of their stock and debt as the slowing world economy wiped
out $32 trillion in capitalization this year. Companies in the MSCI
World Index trade for an average $1.17 per dollar of net assets, the
lowest since at least 1995, and 39 percent sell at a discount to
shareholder equity, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The cash-rich companies allow investors to pay nothing for future
earnings streams, providing opportunities to buyers concerned about
deflation, according to Jean-Marie Eveillard, whose $16 billion First
Eagle Global Fund has beaten 98 percent of competitors this year.
Microsoft Corp. and Novo Nordisk A/S, which generate the most money
compared with debt, can expand even if lower consumer demand erodes
profits.

"Cash is king, not necessarily for the investor but for corporations,"
Eveillard said in an interview from New York last week. His fund holds
both Microsoft and Namyang Dairy. "It's useful to sit on a ton of
cash, No. 1 to survive, as opposed to going bankrupt, and No. 2 to
seize opportunities either to make acquisitions cheaply or to squeeze
competitors."

Wagging the Dog

BNY Mellon is among 50 companies with a market capitalization greater
than $1 billion that hold more cash than the value of their stock and
debt, out of 2,267 overall, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

"Everywhere I look, I see cash," said James Paulsen, chief investment
strategist at Minneapolis-based Wells Capital Management, which
manages $220 billion. "When greed overcomes fear again, value is going
to wag the dog."

Stocks plunged this year after almost $1 trillion in bank losses and
writedowns froze credit markets and pushed the U.S., Europe and Japan
into the first simultaneous recessions since World War II. The 38
percent drop in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index is the steepest since
1937, while the MSCI World's 44 percent plummet is the biggest since
the gauge started in 1970.

The slump left prices in the global measure at 1.17 times companies'
so-called book value, or assets minus liabilities, on Nov. 20, the
lowest on record, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

`Good Cash Flow'

The MSCI World climbed 5.5 percent at 4:32 p.m. in New York, while the
S&P 500 rose 3.8 percent after U.S. President-elect Barack Obama
pledged the biggest investment in the nation's infrastructure since
the 1950s to stimulate the economy. Today's rally lifted the S&P 500
to 909.70, 21 percent above its 11-year low on Nov. 20.

Stagnating growth is heightening the risk of deflation. In the U.S.,
consumer prices plunged 1 percent in October, the biggest drop since
records began in 1947. They may slow next year by the most since 1983,
squeezing earnings, according to the International Monetary Fund in
Washington.

Businesses with reserves will be cushioned from insolvency and may
even benefit from deflation because buying power and the value of
dividends increase as prices retreat, said Arlene Rockefeller, chief
investment officer for global equities at State Street Global
Advisors, which oversees $1.7 trillion.

"You want stocks with good cash flow and are self- funding,"
Rockefeller said in an interview last week. "This is an opportunity
for companies that are large and that do not have a lot of debt to go
out and acquire other companies to gain market share."

Last Bear Market

The firm's SSgA Disciplined Equity Fund held shares of BNY Mellon, the
world's largest custodian of financial assets. The bank had $24
billion in so-called negative enterprise value, or the amount of cash
that exceeds the value of its shares and debt. The stock climbed 26
percent since Nov. 20.

Danieli, Italy's biggest maker of equipment for the steel industry,
has $1.49 billion in cash, or almost 40 percent more than the combined
value of its shares and debt after a 71 percent stock plunge this
year, Bloomberg data show.

Just 276 companies had cash that exceeded the value of their stock and
debt when the S&P 500 bottomed in 2002. Those shares posted a median
total return of 115 percent over the next 12 months, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. That's more than triple the return for the S&P
500 during the same span.

Of the 50 largest companies in the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index of
European companies, Novo Nordisk, the world's biggest insulin maker,
is one of two whose cash exceeds debt by four times.

`Going to Win'

Novo Nordisk Chief Financial Officer Jesper Brandgaard said on Oct. 30
that the Bagsvaerd, Denmark-based company is earmarking as much as $2
billion for takeovers in the next 12 months as the financial crisis
forces biotechnology companies to seek buyers. The company has $1.35
billion and generated $1.83 billion in free cash flow in the first
three quarters of 2008.

"The ones that are going to win are those that can generate cash,"
Horacio Valeiras, who oversees $11.2 billion as chief investment
officer at Nicholas Applegate Capital Management in San Diego, said in
a telephone interview last week. His Nicholas Applegate International
Growth Fund bought shares of Novo in the third quarter, data compiled
by Bloomberg show. The stock has since gained 11 percent, while the
Stoxx 600 slumped 21 percent.

Eveillard at First Eagle increased his fund's position in Microsoft,
the world's biggest software maker, by 83 percent to 8.16 million
shares last quarter.

Microsoft, Apple

The Redmond, Washington-based company is one of only two in the S&P
500 with cash and marketable securities worth more than $20 billion
and less than $2 billion in debt, according to data excluding
financial firms compiled by Bloomberg. Apple Inc., the Cupertino,
California-based maker of iPhones and Macintosh computers, is the other.

Microsoft and Apple outperformed the MSCI World since its low on Nov.
20, posting advances of 20 percent and 24 percent, respectively.

Eveillard's fund is also the biggest overseas shareholder of Namyang
Dairy, which has no debt and $270 million in cash. The cash pile is 44
percent higher than the value of its shares. Reserves at the company,
one of South Korea's biggest dairies, account for 65 percent of its
$418 million in so-called tangible book value, a measure of
shareholder equity that excludes assets that can't be sold in liquidation.

"Cash provides a break against a potential catastrophe," said
Eveillard. "At the end of the day, cash is still worth 100 cents on
the dollar."

Private Equity

That helps explain why investors have rushed to Treasuries this year.
Yields on three-month Treasury bills fell to 0.01 percent last week as
investors paid a premium for the safest, most liquid assets. The level
was the lowest since 1940, according to monthly figures compiled by
the Federal Reserve.

One reason so many cash-rich companies are available now is because
leveraged buyout firms such as Henry Kravis's KKR & Co. and Blackstone
Group LP have been hamstrung by the credit crunch, according to Tom
Rozycki at Principal Global Investors, which held shares of Danieli.

Private-equity deals fell more than 70 percent from last year's record
$727 billion as banks stopped funding takeovers, Bloomberg data show.
The $43 billion buyout of energy producer TXU Corp. by KKR and TPG
Inc. in 2007 was the biggest ever.

"You don't wish for this kind of environment, but it's nice to have
private equity out of the way so we can get some of these bargains
too," Rozycki, who helps oversee $2 billion from Des Moines, Iowa,
said in an interview from New York last week.

`Nothing Wrong'

The Principal MidCap Blend Fund, which he helps manage, has beaten 92
percent of competing funds this year. "For the longest time, a lot of
these companies had premiums in them because people were pointing
around at who's going to be acquired next."

Many stocks are cheap because investors doubt their reported asset
values and ability to generate enough earnings to survive, said Sergi
Martin, who oversees $9 billion as chief executive officer at Credit
Andorra's Credit Invest asset management unit in Andorra La Vella,
Andorra.

"You have to screen very selectively for companies that will survive,
and not for future corpses," Martin said in a telephone interview last
week. "There will be more bankruptcies, and where valuations are
absurd and there is nothing wrong with the company, time will correct
that."

Grahame Exton, a money manager at Tilney Private Wealth Management in
Liverpool, England, says clients want the margin of safety provided by
reserves.

"We have always been paid to look for cash generators," said Exton,
whose firm had $9.9 billion under management at the end of September.
"I just think that now people will put a greater emphasis on them." 


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