Agoracom Blog

Chinese Small-Cap Company Feature: Advanced Battery Technologies Reports Top and Bottom Line Growth From Lithium-Ion Batteries

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:30 AM on Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

As many of you know, we are very bullish on the long-term future of Chinese small cap and mid cap companies for two reasons:

1] The obvious reason – China is the fastest growing economy on the planet and nothing is going to slow down its ascent over the next 50 years and beyond. Investing in growth companies there just makes too much sense.

2] Great Results and Valuations – Many Small Cap Chinese Companies are listing in the US (OTCBB, NYSE Alternext and NASDAQ) with great financial results. Unlike many dubious US Small Cap Companies, Chinese Companies don’t seem to believe in losing money or failing to execute in a business plan. As such, 7-digit revenues and profits are very common.

From a valuation point of view, many Chinese companies became a victim of their own success in Q4 2008 and Q1 2009. Why? When the world needed to start liquidating, one of the first places they looked were China where most investors had significant gains to sell into. This resulted in the proverbial baby being thrown out with the bathwater and some great valuations.

TODAY’S FEATURED COMPANY

Advanced Battery Technologies (NASDAQ:ABAT)

Abat

founded in September 2002, Advanced Battery Technology develops, manufactures and distributes rechargeable Polymer Lithium-Ion (PLI) batteries. The Company’s products include rechargeable PLI batteries for electric automobiles, motorcycles, mine-use lamps, notebook computers, walkie-talkies and other electronic devices.

On November 9th 2009, the Company reported it’s third quarter financial results.

Check out the full details below:

Read Full Press Release

Chinese Stocks TV Segment

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Net income in the third quarter of 2009 was $4.8 million or $0.08 per diluted share, a 10.2% increase from $4.4 million, or $0.08 per diluted share in the third quarter of 2008.
  • Sales Backlog of $67 Million, Including $55 Million Battery Backlog
  • Revenue for the third quarter of 2009 was $17.7 million, a 39.9% increase from $12.7 million in the third quarter of 2008.
  • Gross profit for the third quarter of 2009 was $7.6 million, a 29.6% increase from $5.9 million in the third quarter of 2008.

MY COMMENTS:

Lithium-Ion battery producer, rising and healthy net income, rising top line and a $67 million backlog.  On the valuation side the $0.08 per diluted share puts them on an annual run rate of $.32 per diluted share.  With the company trading around $3.30, a 10X PE on this kind of growth appears cheap.

Definitely one to watch.

As always, these are my own views and conclusions.  Do your own due diligence.  I know this is one company that would benefit from online investor relations.

If you have any comments, I’d love to see them below.

YOUR RESEARCH STARTING POINTS FOR CHINESE SMALL CAP AND MID CAP COMPANIES

We’ve provided investors with two great starting points to research great Chinese small cap and mid cap companies.

1. ChinaSecurities.com – ChinaSecurities.com tracks 250 of the best small cap and mid cap companies trading on North American exchanges. It provides you with the best of the best in two ways. First, the front page lists the best news of the day coming out of the space. It does so by giving you a text view of the best press releases by industry and via Chinese Stocks TV, a 5-minute broadcast every morning just after the open. Chinese Stocks TV is archived, so you can catch up on shows you missed.

Second, if you want to research each of the 250 companies to find candidates for your portfolio, it has a very intuitive directory that lets you quickly review each company on the master list, or parse it out by industry and exchange if you have a particular sector of interest. Cool stuff.

2. Right here on AGORACOM, you can refer to our China category for other featured Chinese Small-Cap Companies. As always, we will disclose any IR relationship with any public company. Given the sheer number of great Chinese Small-Cap Companies out there, you can expect us NOT to have an IR relationship with most of these companies.

Regards,
George

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