Avnet’s stock might look cheap, but a deeper dive reveals why the market is skeptical. With significant debt maturities approaching and cash flows under pressure, the company faces tough choices that could weigh on profitability. In today’s FA Alpha Daily, we assess whether Avnet can manage its refinancing challenges or if the market’s concerns are justified.
FA Alpha Daily:
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When using our EEA tool, it’s easy to spot companies that look cheap at first glance. But often there’s a solid reaJuddson behind an apparently low price.
The EEA starts by looking at a company’s current stock price.
From there, we can calculate what the market expects from the company’s future cash flows. We then compare that with our own cash-flow projections.
In short, it tells us how well a company has to perform in the future to be worth what the market is paying for it today.
Avnet (AVT) posted a healthy 13% Uniform return on assets ”ROA” in 2022.

That’s fallen to about 9% last year, and the market now expects profitability to collapse over the next five years.


That skepticism isn’t born from thin air; it reflects very real concerns about the company’s upcoming debt obligations.
Digging into Avnet’s credit structure makes the market’s pessimism easier to understand.
If you map out the timing of the company’s debt maturities, known as debt headwalls, you see a busy stretch of repayments looming in the next few years.
Our Credit Cash Flow Prime (CCFP) shows that Avnet will struggle to generate enough free cash to cover all its obligations without taking drastic steps.


When a business faces that kind of squeeze, the fixes typically hurt profitability.
Refinancing or selling assets all come with costs that flow straight through the income statement.
On the surface, signs of industry recovery are a reason for optimism. Distribution companies tend to rebound when electronics spending picks up.
Quarterly revenue in Asia has seen year-over-year gains for two straight quarters. Design activity in Asia remains healthy, suggesting future order flow, which is a plus for Avnet’s volume‐driven model.
But those positives sit alongside weaknesses in the Americas and Europe, which fell by double digits in the latest quarter.
Management still sees negative growth ahead in North America and EMEA, even in a seasonally strong period.
Even if the top line recovers, the real hurdle is leverage.
Refinancing large debts at today’s interest rates would raise interest expense and squeeze net income.
If the company opts for asset sales to boost liquidity, it risks losing parts of its higher-margin services business.
Avnet’s situation illustrates why credit health matters, even for equity investors.
Surface metrics like price-to-earnings can miss the drag from looming debt repayments and underappreciated leverage risk can turn an attractive valuation into a serious pitfall.
In Avnet’s case, apparent cheapness hides a refinancing challenge that could hold returns down for years.
Best regards,
Joel Litman & Rob Spivey
Chief Investment Officer &
Director of Research
at Valens Research
Today’s analysis highlights the same insights we share with our FA Alpha Members. If you want to an get in-depth analysis of market trends and uncover undervalued stocks, become an FA Alpha Member today.