To say that investor relationships drive inventory performance ignores everything that happens within the company. It doesn't notice that it is constantly paddling, just as the swans glide along the surface below the surface and beneath the surface. However, increasing the visibility of a company to equity investors remains essential, especially for microcap stocks that are about to emerge from relatively unclear.
For the past three years, Bel Fuse, a global manufacturer of electronic components, has been on its advent journey, as well as its stock. The company's shares were removed from the Russel 2000 index in May 2021, but after a major management and financial transformation, BEL Fuse shares have quadrupled over the past three years (the company continues to pay dividends) ).
As CFO Farouq Tuweiq told the audience two months ago at the Nasdaq Small Cap Forum, increasing value is “simply a result of all the effort.” But it was more than that.
The Wayne, New Jersey-based company focused on Wayne, New Jersey, sells products that connect electronic circuits to power, and received a significant self-evaluation in 2021, resulting in operational and financial institutions. A change has occurred. It includes consolidating facilities, leaving some businesses, expanding executive teams, implementing new ERP systems, changing prices, hiring new salespeople in Europe, and redoing executive comp targets and metrics.
As Bell Hughes' turnaround becomes a better story, data from a more refined, connected ERP system has given executives the ability to give future investors a more sharp, more thoughtful and detailed answer, Tuweiq said the company was engaged as an investor relations consultant.
To raise awareness of the company and its stocks, bel fuse:
Improved visibility. In 2022, Belfuse attended 13 or 14 investor meetings held by financial services companies. “We called all the banks. We called all the tips. [had]. “It just takes us a chance,” he said. “Belhus found an ally. As the margin profile improved, investors began to notice it, Tuweiq says.
It attracted research. Bel Fuse didn't want to pay for an investigation into the stock analyst. Investor Conferences helped us find analysts who wanted a relationship and understood the company's story. “It's important because the analyst community receives a lot of inbound calls from investors to check out the analyst's models,” Tuweq says. “We managed to pick up the research without paying the fee.”
Focusing on reliability. As awareness grew, Bel Fuse executives worked to build credibility with investors. “We had to be transparent and perhaps negligent,” Tuweiq says. In addition to explaining the direction of the company, Tuweiq had to be honest about “what's good, what's bad, what's ugly.” Tuweiq has sparked conversations and investor feedback, including helpful advice such as “we need to disclose this in revenue” and “we will overemphasize this.” CFOs need to view investors as assets, and Tuweiq is because they are valuable sources of markets and competitors.
Changes to Investor Profile
As Bel Fuse built investor interest, the composition of the shareholder base changed. Small retail investors or money managers bought the stocks, ranging from $200 million to $500 million. Usually they wanted to know about the figures for the next quarter or two quarters. “That initial cohort was important because they were quite vocal,” Tuweiq says.
When the company reached a market capitalization of between $500 million and $600 million, the slightly larger amount of funds that led to longer investments were interested. They wanted to hear about the performance of the company looking a year or two ahead. There were exceptions, but these investors tended to “dive into more stories,” Tuweiq says. The focus was on past and future performance, he says.
I then started listening with more funds as the company expanded to around $900 million in market capitalization. These investors call BEL fuses more regularly. “They wanted to understand our transformation, and that was what it was. [question] Second,” Tuweiq says. “The number one is, “What is the company going to do to grow organically and inorganically?”
Addressing investors' demands
From an investor relationship perspective, one of the unexpected challenges Tuweiq encountered when the company's market capitalization increased was the difference in investor demand. The day after Bellhughes tested positive for cash, some investors began asking about stock buybacks. “Then some people said, “No, we want it.” [higher] dividend. 'And we requested a special dividend,” Tuweiq says. Other investors ignored buybacks and dividends and wanted to pursue M&A trading.
Over the past three years, Belhus has pursued various means, but at its own pace. A year ago, the stock was announced. “You can't join a business that pleases everyone. You'll hear that from unfortunate investors,” Tuweiq says. For CFOs, “North Star” [has to be] He is a good manager of improving shareholder value and investing. ”
Belfuse was added to the Russell 2000 Index in September 2024.
Its market capitalization is $1.3 billion, and the company has moved into the SEC's large, accelerated filer category. On February 3, Belhus announced that Tuweiq will become CEO after the shareholders meeting on May 27th.
“The more we grow, the higher our stakes,” Tuweiq says. “It's always evolutionary. You never arrive.”