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Posts tagged ‘portfolio’

CUI Global Second Quarter results – lots of irons in the fire

While I have been reluctant to add to any stock right now and have been weighing any purchases carefully, I did add a bit to CUI Global after the release of their second quarter results.

As a reminder, the company operates in two segments. Their Power and Electromechanical segment sells power supplies, power monitoring and interconnect products, and has recently collaborated with a small start-up called VPS Partners to create a technology for datacenter power management called ICE.  In the Energy segment CUI Global offers their GasPT gas analyzer system, a newly developed odorizer, VE probes for sampling gas and performs integration and engineering project work.

Segment Results

The company had an improved second quarter, mostly due to the Power and Electromechanical segment.  That segment saw a big jump in revenue, from $13.6 million in the first quarter to $18.2 million in the second quarter. The company attributed the jump to an inventory refresh from distributors, a ramp in sales from new distributors, particularly Arrow Electronics, and design wins from 2015 and 2016 that are now ramping into production.

Regarding Arrow, on the second quarter conference call the company said they saw “much more upside” in the relationship with Arrow and that Arrow, which became a distributor early this year, is expanding the CUI Global product line and re-ordering products already.

Revenue continued to lag on the energy segment, coming in at $4.3 million versus $4.1 million in the first quarter.  The company remains held up by tariff issues with Snam Rete, which was the first major customer for the GasPT units.

More on Snam Rete

As the company reiterated on the second quarter call, the Snam Rete contract calls for 7,000 GasPT units and is worth €120 million to CUI Global.  It’s an extremely significant contract.  Snam Rete is installing the GasPT units at the offtakes of major industrial customers, where they will be used to more accurately and quickly measure gas usage by these customers.

CUI Global delivered the first 400 of these analyzers last year before receiving word from Snam Rete that they would not be able to install any more of the units until they received regulatory approval to switch out devices on third party sites.  Bill Clough (the CEO) described the issue back on the fourth quarter conference call as follows:

The plan that [Snam Rete] rolled out to install these device is to buy the installation point from these high-end industry customers. Right now where the customer connects to the gas system is currently owned by the customer and due to EU regulations that come into effect next year, the customer has to upgrade that connection, which is going to be quite costly. Snam is offering to buy that connection point from them and to install our device along with some other upgrades that they are going to do including flow computers and other things. And in order to do that they also need to buy an access or an easement to get in and obviously maintain what they are installing.

There is no problem whatsoever if the customer voluntarily agrees to that, which they believe almost all customers will, as obviously they sell an asset that’s going to cost them a lot of money during next year, and so it’s something that becomes a revenue generator as close to cost. However, the energy authority over there says the problem arises with customers who do not want to just pay. Those customers would be paying the same tariff as the customers who do participate, which they felt was a potential anti-trust violation, or what they what they are having to do is, design and implement a two-tariff system, which they have done in the past.

There has been progress on the Snam Rete bottle neck.  A few days before the quarter announcement I got an email from a friend pointing to a press release from Snam Rete (here).  The release described Snam Rete’s commitment to the “upgrading of measuring systems located at redelivery points of the transportation network through the acquisition of metering systems from final customers”.  The press release outlined a €310 million loan from the European Investment Bank that would be used, in part, to acquire these offtakes.  CUI Global referred to this press release on their conference call.

Also on the call Bill Clough said that Snam Rete had met with the regulatory authority in June, that the meeting was “productive” and that they expected to here back after the August recess.

The issue with Snam Rete still appears to be a delay, and not a permanent impasse.  I would argue that the current share price is reflecting more the latter than the former.  Snam Rete’s schedule on deployment is expected to require 100 analyzers a month.  At €17,000 per analyzer, resumption of this contract alone would more than double Energy segment revenues.  That positive outcome is just not priced in at a $3.50 stock price.

Odorization Orders

The Snam Rete press release linked to above also describes a commitment to the “installation of odorization systems for industrial final customers”.  This is referring to the purchase of CUI Global odorizer product, which is a product that simply mixing in an odorizing chemical with otherwise odorless natural gas.  CUI Global licensed the technology from Engie at the same time that they entered into the relationship with them.

 

On the call management said that Snam Rete is looking at purchasing 1,300 of the odorizers.  They said Engie is also looking at deploying the odorizers throughout their system.  CUI Global said on their first quarter call that odorizers would sell for €7,000 to €10,000. The odorizers are still in the beta phase of development but they are proceeding to field trials (with Snam Rete) in September.

Other GasPT orders

CUI Global is making progress with Engie as well as in North America with a pipeline company in Alberta (TransCanada?).

Regarding Engie, CUI Global submitted a bid on 1,000 GasPT units and 1,000 remote terminal units (RTUs) to be installed by Engie’s subsidiary Endel.  They said on the call that they are the only bidder, and they that have already been spec’d in on the design.  The per unit revenue for the analyzers is in the €17,000 to €20,000 range, and there is similar pricing on the RTUs.  So again, another big opportunity.

In Canada, the company has had their previous Italian testing approved by Measurements Canada, which leaves a final step of a 3 month installation test on a Canadian pipeline.  This is expected to begin in September.

Future Billing Contract

This is a contract with DNV GL to explore the potential of using GasPT units to monitor the delivery of biogases into the delivery system.  The project is in the early stages and won’t result in revenue until 2019 at the earliest.  However it could have big implications if it concludes favorably.  Clough said that if the project is approved and deployed across the network (the UK) it would require in the range of 45,000 GasPT units.  If adopted in other European countries (France, Germany, the Norwegian nations), a similar magnitude of units would be required for each country.  Keep in mind the Snam Rete contract, which is extremely significant in its own right, calls for 7,000 GasPT units.

ICE Technology

The last data point that I will touch on is the ICE technology.  As I mentioned above, this is a partnership with VPS to provide a power optimization solution for datacenters.  CUI Global provides the hardware while VPS has developed the software.

On the second quarter call for the first time management gave a bit more color around the opportunity.

There “is no competing technology in terms of doing peak shaving” to ICE.  The return on investment by implementing an ICE system is significant, as it can unlock 10% to 20% of power capacity.

So far beta and sampling testing have reported good or better than expected results.  They expect small, immaterial revenues in beginning in the fourth quarter.  This will be followed by a pick-up in 2018 and adoption (assuming it occurs) in 2019.

They delineated the revenue opportunity based on data center size.  The smallest scale centers are $750,000 opportunities, the average datacenter is a $2 million opportunity, and the largest scale datacenter is $30 million opportunity.

The overall total addressable market (TAM) is estimated at $700 million to $1.5 billion for North America and 5x that for the rest of the world.  I suspect that these numbers are for the entire ICE product.  As CUI Global delivers only the hardware, and I get the sense that the innovation is really the VPS software, their fraction of the TAM is likely quite a bit less than the total.  Nevertheless, it’s a big market for a little company.  They said that in the mid-term they could see revenue ramping to a few million per quarter and in later years with scaled adoption it could be as much as $15-$20 million.

Overall

At $3.50 CUI Global has a market capitalization of $75 million.  Net debt is about $4 million.  They plan to raise about $4 million cash from the sale of their Washington facility. That cash influx, combined with the better outlook from both the energy and electromechanical segments has led them to cancel the at the market (ATM) share program.  I think a lot of investors looked unfavorably at the ATM program, particularly the uncertainty as to whether the company was helping to beat down its own stock over the last few months (they weren’t).

At the current market capitalization the company trades at 1x revenue.  Given the opportunities outlined above, I think its still a reasonable bet, which is why I added a little last week.

Week 231: Tax Loss Buying

Portfolio Performance

week-231-yoyperformance

week-231-Performance

 

 

See the end of the post for the current make up of my portfolio and the last four weeks of trades

Monthly Review and Thoughts

I didn’t make a lot of trades this month.  I added a couple of beaten down stocks (Dixie Group and Iconix Brands), added to a couple of existing beaten down positions (Acacia Research and Health Insurance Innovations), added to a less than beaten down position (Axia NetMedia) and sold out of a few poorly performing positions in PDI Inc, Nevsun, Independence Realty and Hammond Manufacturing.  I also reduced two of the three out-sized positions that I talked about in my last update, New Residential and DHT Holdings on pops.  At this point the only really uncomfortably large position I have is in Air Canada, a stock that seems to do nothing but go down.

It is my experience that the last three months of the year can be very quirky.  The confluence of redemptions and tax loss selling leads to seemingly endless downward moves.  While its easy to describe this as an obvious opportunity when you limit yourself to generalizations or retrospectives, the reality is that it is not so easy to buy that which has collapsed when it goes down every day.

I have plenty of examples of stocks I am following that are examples of this. Most are either yield stocks or energy names of one type or another.

First the REITs.  I could pick from a litany of REITs here but I’ll focus on Northstar Realty because I know it fairly well.  The stock can’t seem to get out of its own way, having endless down days followed by briefing sharp rallies that are followed by further relentless selling pressure that can’t be overcome by even a 2% up day by the market like we had on Friday.  Northstar has a yield 15%.  The dividend is backed up by real estate assets, mostly healthcare and hotels.  On September 29th the company announced a $500 million buy back.  Given the current market capitalization of a little over $3 billion, this is not insignificant.  On the negative side, the stock is externally managed, something that seems to be the kiss of death right now, and its hotel properties have underperformed lately.  Risks for sure, but at what point are those risks priced in?

Another example is Navios Maritime Partners, a dry bulk/container shipper.  Navios cut their dividend in November from $1.77 to 85 cents.  They operate in an extremely tough market, but at the time of the dividend cut they made a strong case that the current level was fully supported by existing contracts with almost a 9 year period.  This outlook was confirmed in a solid analysis posted in Seeking Alpha.  The stock has went down relentlessly both pre and post dividend cut.  It’s at $270 as of Friday’s close so its about a 30% yield.

A third example that I just started looking at over the weekend is Suncoke Energy Partners.  Suncoke owns three facilities that turn coal into coke for steel making.   The company has a market capitalization of $300 million versus a tangible book value of around $500 million.  Earnings for the first nine months were $1.16 per share and full year estimates are $1.50 per share.  The stock trades at $6.59 at Friday’s close.  The steel industry is hurting and Suncoke’s partners are expected to shutdown mills that Suncoke supplies.  On the other hand Suncoke has take or pay contracts and their customers are large producers: US Steel, ArcelorMittal USA, and AK Steel.  So are they really doomed, as the stock price performance (down from $15 since August) suggests?  Or will the partners pay and this a great buying opportunity for assets that are temporarily impaired?

Here is one from the energy sector.  Surge Energy.  I’ve owned it before, in the late spring/early summer.  They are currently producing around 14,000 boe/d with 80% of their production being liquids.  In the first half of 2015 they generated $85 million of funds from operations with the oil price (including hedges) averaging a little less than $60.  In the third quarter they generated $17 million of funds from operations on an oil price of $41, so about the current price.  Capital expenditures in the third quarter were $17 million.  The company has about $140 million of debt, so less levered than most.  Is oil destined to float around the $40 mark forever, in the process sending basically the entire North American industry into bankruptcy, or will it eventually find a higher equilibrium?  If it does what will one of the survivors, as Surge would surely be, trade at?  At 5x cash flow on $60 oil Surge would be worth more than 50% more than it is today.

And one last one from energy infrastructure.  Willbros Group.  Management has been much maligned and struggled to turn a profit in the past.  This year, perhaps because of the pushing of activist investors, they’ve sold off a number of their divisions, raising cash and paying down debt.  With the recent sale of the Professional Services segment to TRC Solutions for $130 million they have reduced debt to under $100 million and they have cash on hand of $50 million.  With 63 million shares outstanding Willbros has a market capitalization of about $170 million.  They generated $2 billion of revenue in 2014 and this year, even after the sales of multiple divisions and the devastating downturn in the energy industry their revenue run rate is close to $1 billion.  The company will likely not be profitable until oil prices turn, but when they do there is a lot of leverage to margin improvement and incremental contracts.

So there are some names.  None are sure things, all can have cases made for and against.  My point is simply that at this time of year there tends to be real bargains, but pulling the trigger is a lot harder because there are also always real questions, and the answers are rarely clear.

The stocks I’m going to talk about below, with the exception of Axia NetMedia, all positions that fit into this mold.  These are stocks that have been beaten up, that have warts, but that I feel are overdone.  I just hope that I am right in more cases than I am wrong.

Dixie Group

Dixie Group is a company I have owned in the past, followed for a long time but held out from buying until it got to a price that I thought presented very little downside.

Dixie Group is a supplier of commercial and residential carpet.  They have 16 million shares outstanding at $5.50 for $88 million market capitalization.  They have $131 million of debt that consists primarily ($84 million) of a revolving credit facility that comes due in 2019.

Dixie Group has undergone a lot of changes in the last couple of years.  They made a number of acquisitions of high end commercial and residential businesses in 2013 and 2014, and have spent the last year digesting the capacity.

The results so far have been lukewarm.  Sales have shown some slight growth while the rest of the industry has seen slight declines.  But the increased scale has not translated into improved profitability.

Some of this is skewed by continued restructuring and sampling costs, and some of it is because there have been employee and quality issues that have arisen along with the capacity additions.

Revenues in the third quarter was $109 million which is flat year over year and up somewhat from the first half.  Ignoring working capital changes cash flow was in the third quarter was $8.4 million.

Even though the headline showed a big miss on both revenue and earnings, I didn’t think it was a terrible quarter in a lot of ways.

Gross margins were up to 26% which is a little above the 25% I had been hoping for two years ago when I was looking at the stock.  G&A is rising more than it should and this appears to be due to restructuring costs, increased medical expenses, consolidation of offices.  They introduced a number of new brands over the last few quarters and those new brands are requiring higher sampling costs.  So there are lots of one time things.

But I think that it is the quality problems that are holding back the stock the most.  They said the impact to quality in the third quarter was 1% to their gross margins.  While they suggested this would decline in the fourth quarter, they weren’t very specific about how quickly that decline would occur and implied it could persist into the first quarter of 2016.

I don’t think the market likes the uncertainty.  Heading into earnings the stock wasn’t that cheap if it was producing no earnings and EBITDA on a $20 million run rate.  But after the collapse from $9 to $5 much less is priced in.  The stock trades at a little under book value.

In their third quarter earnings presentation Dixie presented the following pro-forma to restructuring 2014 earnings.

proformarestructuringSo if the dust settles you are looking at a $27 million EBITDA company with a $219 million enterprise value.  So about 8x EV/EBITDA.  Its not incredibly cheap but with some growth the equity portion of that enterprise value could quickly grow back to the $9 level.

Now of course this is the carrot not a forecast.  I don’t know if Dixie will regain operating momentum, get past their integration issues, and begin to grow the business.  They have the capacity now to produce $550-$600 million of carpet.  They just need to find the customers.  What I do know is that at the current price their is not much expectation priced into the stock.  I think its worth a position, one of those stocks where if anything good happens its bound to go significantly higher.

Acacia Research Third Quarter

Acacia had a really bad third quarter.   Revenue was $13 million down from $37 million in the third quarter last year and a $44 million average revenue over the prior two quarters.

So the stock got clobbered.  For four weeks it went down almost every day, from the $9 level to almost $5.  Was it deserved?  Well, the thing about Acacia is that revenue is always going to be lumpy and one quarter does not suggest any particular trend.  The company generates revenues primarily through the settlement of patent litigation.  The nature of the business is that the counter-party in the litigation is unlikely to settle until the very last moment, usually right before the trial starts.  So Acacia’s revenue recognition is always at the mercy of court dates and negotiations.

The poor third quarter was due to delays on litigation on a number of their patent portfolios.  This quote, from the third quarter conference call kind of summarizes their thoughts on the quarter:

The third quarter developments created paradoxical outcomes. On one hand, our marquee portfolios were strengthened through Markman inter-parties review and new patent issuance wins, and now have even greater future value. But on the other hand, we experienced a delay in collecting on that value.

In particular, their Adaptix portfolio is going to trial against Alcatel-Lucent and Ericsson but that was postponed by a quarter.  This is because of the introduction of evidence that actually strengthened Acacia’s case but required delays for all parties to review.  They also announced that they had won two infringement cases on their Voiceage portfolio (HTC and LG), but that it would take time for a formal opinion from the German court that would lead to a settlement.  Subsequently, Acacia announced a settlement with HTC on November 17th.

Acacia’s business model is to partner with patent holders, applying their legal expertise in patent litigation to help the patent holder maximize the value of their asset.  On that note Acacia said that in the current environment they expected to be able to partner with other patent holders without putting up their own capital going forward.  The environment was a “buyers market”.

At a little over $5, where I was buying, the company was getting close to its cash level of $3 per share.  Even here at $6 it still doesn’t attribute a lot of value to the patent portfolio.  There are a couple of good SeekingAlpha articles that discuss the stock here and here.

Health Insurance Innovations Third Quarter

Health Insurance Innovations (HII) had a so-so third quarter. The revenue number was a little lower than I expected at $25.8 million versus the $28 million I had been hoping for.

But there are a number of changes going on at HII that make the story interesting enough for me to add to my position.   First is the development of an online insurance portal, AgileHealthInsurance.com.  They have had Agile up and running for a few months now, and reported that it had accounted for 1,300 policies in July and 5,800 policies in Q3 (suggesting it averaged 2,250 policies in August and September).  Second, through the addition of a number of former sales personnel from Assurant, HII has expanded their broker channel significantly.

Overall the business is progressing.  Total policies in force increased in the third quarter to a record 137,000, up 31.7% year-over-year and 21.2% sequentially.

The revenue recognition associated with policies procured online is part of the reason for lower revenue.   Unlike broker or call center procured policies, those come from Agile have revenue recognized over the full term of the policy while the customer acquisition cost is taken up front which in the short run will depress margins.

Going forward HII expects to gain from a shorter ACA enrollment period and the reality that premiums on ACA plans are “rising rapidly”.

On the third quarter conference call management seemed quite upbeat about how well they are doing through open-enrollment:

Our short-term medical, our hospital indemnity plans, they really fit the need and we’re seeing, unlike last open enrollment period, a dramatic increase in our sales. We can’t wait to share with you the fourth quarter results when we get to that point. This is for the first time, we’re really playing offense during open enrollment versus last year, we were playing a bit of defense.

The fourth quarter will be interrupted by the ACA period, which began in November.  Still, I think that if the company can put up a decent showing during this period the market will take notice.  Perhaps we are already seeing the start of that with the recent $1 move up.

Iconix Brands

It’s been a while since I have been drawn into a company with a recent accounting scandal.  And while I am wary that these sort of situations often go down far further than I expect, I also know that in many cases the eventual profit can be quite significant if you can get through the rough waters.

Iconix is a company that essentially rents out the usage of their brands.  They buy the rights of well known clothing and entertainment brands and then for a price licenses the usage of the brand by department stores and manufacturers.  Their portfolio of brands encompasses a wide variety of low to high end men’s and women’s fashions as well as well known entertainment brands like Peanuts and StrawBerry Shortcake.

brands

Its a pretty good business that has consistently generate 30% margins and significant free cash flow.

The company ran into problems earlier this year. In March the CFO resigned.  Two weeks later the COO resigned.  And then the biggie in August, the CEO resigned.  At the same time they announced their second quarter results and said that they would be reviewing the accuracy of past financial statements.

This was followed up on November 5th by a mea culpa by the new leadership team that past financials were not accurate and would have to be restated.  Shares which had already fallen from the $30’s to the mid-teens, got halved again to around $7.

What’s interesting though is that the accounting irregularities revolve entirely around the income statement.  Here is what the interim CEO, Peter Cuneo said on the third quarter conference call.

This review has identified errors regarding the classification of certain expenses as well as inadequate support and estimation of certain revenues, and of retail support for certain licenses. As such, we will restate our historical financial statements for the fourth quarter of 2013 through the second quarter of 2015.

A table detailing these adjustments was included in last Thursday’s press release. What should be emphasized is that the amounts of the restatements have no impact to 2013 net income. They do result in a small reduction of approximately $3.9 million or 2.5% to 2014 net income, and they are slightly positive for 2015 net income.

Further, these changes do not impact cash, do not impact historical free cash flow and do not impact debt covenants or securitized net cash flow as defined in our securitized financing facility. In fact, gross collections for our securitized brands are up 3% for the first ten months of the year, which reflects the strength and stability of the assets in the securitization.

Now that its down almost 80% Inconix, with 48.5 million shares outstanding has a market cap of about $325 million.  Iconix also has a lot of debt,  $1.47 billion.  Included in that debt is a $300 million 2.5% convertible that comes due in June of 2016.  Normally this convertible would not be an issue.  Given the company’s problems they may have to fund its repayment out of cash.  When I look at the cash on hand and cash flow they can generate from operations, they should be able to do that without too much problem.

The bullish story here is simply that once the accounting issues are behind them, what will be left is a company that generates significant free cash and trades at an extraordinarily low free cash multiple.  Iconix issued the following guidance for 2016:

We expect organic growth to be flat to up low single-digits driven by double-digit growth in our international business and U.S. revenue down slightly. We’re including no other revenue in our 2016 forecast.

Reflecting these expectations, our 2016 guidance is as follows: We expect revenue to be in the range of $370 million to $390 million. We expect non-GAAP diluted earnings per share to be in the range of $1.35 to $1.50 and we expect free cash flow to be in the range of $170 million to $185 million.

Free cash of $170 million is $3.50 per share.

There are hurdles to reaching that guidance to be sure.  On the third quarter call they said their mens apparal segment was performing poorly because of poor performance by Rocawear and Ecko, both mature brands that may be reaching end of life.

Also one of their biggest brands is Peanuts which is experiencing some headwinds.  Peanuts accounts for somewhere in the neighbourhood of $100 million of licensing revenue, so 25%.  While the recently released Peanuts movie has done fairly well in the box office and in ratings, it is suffering on the merchandising side because it has to compete with Star Wars for shelf space over the Christmas season.

Nevertheless, even with the debt, even with the accounting issues, it seems too cheap to me.  Unless there is something further that comes out on the accounting front I think the stock has to move higher at some point next year. It could go down more over the next few weeks with tax loss selling, but I can’t see it staying here for good.  The fundamentals, un-obscured by fraudulent accounting, just aren’t bad enough to justify it.

Axia NetMedia

I’ve owned Axia for years now and recently added to my position.  The company has 63.4 million shares outstanding, and at its current price of $3 they sport a $190 million market capitalization.

Axia owns and operates fiber networks in Alberta, France and Massachusetts.  Each of these networks supplies high speed connections to smaller cities and towns throughout the area.

Axia has already built fiber trunk lines that provide high speed connections to the major centers in each of their networks.  Now they are in the process of signing up homes and offices and building out fiber to individual customers (called FTTH and FTTO respectively).  The addressable market is over 1 million homes only counting the 20 largest of the 400 communities that the fiber reaches.

In Alberta they have completed at pilot FTTH in one community (Vulcan) and are in the process of ramping up in Drayton Valley and Lloydminster.  The package they offer (which I believe is via third party providers) is $59 per month for 25Mbps rates.  In Massachusetts they offer 100Mbps rates for $49 per month.

This doesn’t seem to me to be a bad package for small town households that previously were limited to slower cable or satellite connections that was intermittent or experienced outages.  Having lived in a small town and having had first and second hand experience of the existing internet options I can say that the following commitment would be a major step up:

We are confident that Axia provides the most reliable Internet possible. In fact, for business we commit to 99.9% availability and a maximum 4-hour mean time to repair in the rare event of a fibre cut.

You can view the Canadian and US plans here and here.

In France the opportunity for growth is even better than in North America.  Covage, of which Axia has a 50% ownership, has 10,600 km of fiber including 3,400 km of fibre backbone.

covagenetworkIn the third quarter Covage’s customer connections were up year over year 36% for FTTO and 61% for FTTH.  On the third quarter conference call Art Price (the CEO of Axia) said that “Covage has sustained growth on its existing networks and has tangible FTTO and FTTP opportunities that could more than triple Covage’s size.”

Subsequent to quarter end Covage won a large FTTO contract that encompasses an additional 22,000 businesses.  Covage currently has a little over 7,000 FTTO connections.  Bringing on 10-20% of these additional sites would mean a large uptick.

Earlier this year Axia won a contract to provide Fiber to Seine et Marne that will pass through 319,000 homes.  Right Covage has around 7,000 FTTH connections.  So think about that for a second.

Right now they are growing steadily (see chart below) but the profitability of this growth is masked by the continued build outs of networks and connections.

connections

 

 

On the third quarter conference call they had a long discussion talking about the need for capital in the business they are in and what this means the eventual end game has to be.   I think its worthwhile reproducing the response in full:

Well, we’re looking at different options, and the way the company is harnessing the capital markets. I would say in the broad, we’ve been a company that is incrementally growing from a small size to a €200 million market cap size. But now we’re a company that has opportunities in front of us that are multiples of our current market capitalization.

And if we were just going to make the comment that where is this fiber infrastructure ultimately destined in the capital markets, well, clearly this fiber infrastructure is going to end up in billion dollar equity market cap, with capital structure that can issue its own bonds for debt. I mean that’s where this kind of investment ultimately ends up and we all recognize that.

So the question is what’s the path to get to that point? Is that path an incremental path similar to the one we have been on, but moving to a different shareholder class in a different size or is it some other path? And the Board is actively looking at that set of issues and looking at it in the context of the current market and looking at in the context of our investment opportunities having this sort of North American and France character, which some of the capital markets looks together at and other parts of the capital market look at that as segmented.

So we’re in that process, because besides the opportunity in front of us, in order to make those available or actually take those opportunities on, of course there is quite a bit more capital involved and our path is either we line up the company for that capital to rate shareholders’ evolution or we aren’t able to take advantage of the number of opportunities in front of us.

That’s a pretty interesting comment.  It basically says that they see the bottleneck and they are going to figure out what is the best way to address it.  It means they either are going to get the market to buy into the Axia story (and produce much larger share price) or try to find an acquirer with the financial clout to build out the infrastructure that they require to grow.

Either way it seems like a likely win for shareholders.  I think Axia is in the right place at the right time.  I’ve been adding.

Portfolio Composition

Click here for the last four weeks of trades.

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Week 227: No pain no gain

Portfolio Performanceweek-227-yoyperformance

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See the end of the post for the current make up of my portfolio and the last four weeks of trades

Monthly Review and Thoughts

Over the last few months I have been focused on minimizing the fluctuations in my portfolio.   This has kind of worked.  I haven’t had the up’s and down’s that I might have had otherwise, given the volatility.  But I also haven’t had the returns.

The reality is that I very rarely do well without experiencing a lot of pain beforehand.  Let’s look at a few examples to prove that point (I’m going off of memory here so allow me a little leeway in the exact figures):

  1. Tembec and Mercer both fell ~30% from my original purchase price before rallying to be triples.
  2. PHH went from $15 to almost $10 before eventually running into the mid-$20s
  3. I originally bought MGIC at $2.50, watched it fall to almost 50c, before finally selling the stock over $8.
  4. YRC Worldwide fell from $8 to $6 before making its run to $30.
  5. I watched Extendicare go from $7.50 to $6, adding extensively on the way down.  Now its at $9
  6. Every time I buy New Residential it seems to fall incessantly for days or weeks after my first purchase before I finally wind up making a good return on the stock.

Unfortunately, the fall is part of the reason for the gain.  These situations turn out to be big winners is because

A. I get to know the story really well (as the name falls, I worry and fret about whether I have screwed up (because I screw up a lot) and in the process I learn a lot more about the position

B. I add to my position.

I know I say I have a rule that I don’t add to losing positions and I cut positions after a 20% loss.  And that is mostly true.  But its not totally true.  What I actually do is dramatically escalate my level of worry at that threshold, which in most cases leads to nausea and good riddance.  But sometimes I find the story compelling and I get stubborn, and in these cases I add.

The mental capital that I expend in these situations is enormous.  I grump and fight depression as the position falls.  I feel elated when it finally rises only to be sent back into gloom as it falls again. Its a gut-wrenching experience and one that I have come to dread.  But it is, unfortunately, an absolutely necessary part of the process.  I know of no other way to capture returns.

I haven’t been doing this lately.  I have been too scared to take risk.  The consequence is that I have sold a number of stocks way too soon.  I sold Hawaaiian Holdings at $26.  I sold Bsquare at $6.  I sold Apigee at $8 (I realize its back at $8 but that was before going to $10+).  I sold Impact Mortgage at $17.  And so on.  In no case have I been willing to scale up.

This month I decided to change my tack.

First, I took a brief but very large position in Concordia Healthcare in the midst of its free fall.  It may not have been prudent and it was probably born out of frustration as much as anything, but as Concordia dropped to $25 Canadian on October 21st I just kept adding.  At the low, I had a 15% position in Concordia and by 11am, as it hit $25 (I believe that was around $19 US) I had fully reconciled myself with the possible carnage I was risking.

I actually sold half of the position at what turned out to be essentially the low.  But seconds later I felt the fear of copping out at a bottom to be more overwhelming than riding the position all the down.  Or maybe I had a rational moment where I considered that the CEO had just been on BNN basically dispelling any connection to the troubles with Valeant and thinking to myself that maybe its just taking a few minutes for the market to catch on to what he just said.  So I bought the whole thing back and more.  I remember my hands were shaking and I was walking around in a daze.  I put a fork in the microwave at lunch.

Fortunately what appeared to me to be unwarranted actually turned out to be.  The stock moved up slowly then quickly, ending the day at $34 and two days later at $44.

I’d love to say I held the whole stash for the run but I didn’t.  Happy with the relief of turning big losses into reasonable gains, I sold stock at $30, at $34 and again at $38 the next day.  I let go of the rest a few days later at $42.

The event, which quite honestly was harrowing, was another reminder.  I have to be willing to be scared if I am going to make money.  This may have been an extreme example, and looking back on it I don’t think it was probably the sensible thing to do, but nevertheless taking a risk on a situation that doesn’t make sense to me is the essence of what I need to be able to do.

Since that time, having woken up again to the necessity of risk, I made a couple of other bets that are more “risky” than what I would have attempted a couple months ago.  I took two reasonably large positions over the last two weeks; one in Air Canada and one in New Residential.   I took a third on Friday with DHT Holdings.

I actually wrote this part of the write-up earlier last week, on Wednesday, but I had to delete it and write it again over the weekend.  When I wrote on Wednesday, my position in New Residential looked to be under never-ending selling pressure and my position in Air Canada felt like it would never move up.  So I wrote a couple paragraphs about how I was going to stick with these positions because I really thought I was right here and even as I was tearing my hair out and becoming angry at the world I still believed I would prevail in the end.

Fortunately things started to turn around.

What can I say.  I got kicked in the teeth for most of October.  I was literally down 9 straight days at one point.  Not down big mind you, but nevertheless I was down every freaking day.   Keep in mind that this happened as the market roared to new heights.  It felt like a never-ending assault.

Things started to turn last Thursday (the 26th) when Radcom put out a pretty so-so quarter but hinted at some excellent Tier 1 opportunities on the conference call last Thursday.  This was followed up by a solid quarter from Radisys.

Last week was up and down until Thursday when Air Canada reported a quarterly beat and the stock actually held its gains, Mitel reported a solid quarter and was up a buck, Granite Oil showed that someone can make money at $45 oil, raising its dividend and moving up a dollar and New Residential, while pulling in a modest 10c rise, pulled off an intraday reversal and a glimmer of hope.  Friday was even better with big gains from all of the above mentioned names.

I’m hoping its the start of something.  I’ve had enough pain.

New Residential

I’ve taken a fairly large position in New Residential.  At $12, which is where I was really adding, I think it is just too cheap, with a 15% dividend, positive exposure to higher rates, and below the book value of $12.40 which doesn’t even account for the $5-$10 of value that their call right portfolio could eventually yield (more on that below).

I’ve talked about their mortgage servicing portfolio on numerous occasions so I am going to leave that for now.  I’ll focus instead on the two other portfolio segments, servicer advances and call rights.

Servicer Advances

Here’s how it works.  New Residential buys a pool of outstanding servicer advances and with it the base fee component of the related mortgage servicing right (MSR).   The price of the purchase is a discounted cash flow value of the outstanding and future advances and the base fee.

Typically New Residential already owns the excess MSR in these pools.  The base fee they purchase would likely be around 20 basis points depending on the type of mortgage they are servicing.  Nationstar or Ocwen would remain the servicer and perform all the servicing duties in return for a servicing fee that New Residential pays them.  The fee structure of the servicing fee is described in the 10-Q and appears to be quite different for Nationstar than for Ocwen, but the essence of both is that there is a base fee paid and an incentive or profit sharing fee that is made once a return threshold has been reached.

New Residential makes money via the spread between A. the base fee they receive on the MSR and B. the combination of the fees that they have to pay the servicer (Nationstar or Ocwen) and the interest expense that they have to pay on the advances.  They explained it like this on the first quarter conference call:

The way that we get compensated, we receive a portion of the MSR off of the $251 billion UPB of non-agency loans. This compensates us for our advances. Our advances are currently funded with $7.9 billion of debt with an approximate advance rate of 90% and an interest rate of — cost of funds of 2.2%. On our debt, 50% have fixed-rate coupons, which will also help mitigate interest rate risks. And as I pointed out earlier, our life-to-date IRR on our advance portfolio has been 34%.

They also explain the whole process fairly well on slide 10 of their first quarter presentation:

serviceradvancesummary
Here is a table they provided on the same slide showing the advances and UPB of their 3 servicer advance portfolios:
serviceradvanceupb

The way to think about the investment is that its just another way to get at the monthly servicing income.  Instead of paying for the excess servicing right with only up-front capital, you pay for it with a combination of up-front capital and the on-going servicing fee and the interest on the advances.  But the essence is the same; its a perpetual income stream as long as the mortgage is not paid back or delinquent.  So it is pretty similar to the excess MSRs that New Residential is better known for.  I’m not sure whether the investment community sees it that way though, which may present an opportunity once the steady cash flows become appreciated.

Non-agency Call Rights

A call right is the ability to “call” securities once certain criteria have been met. My understanding, which admittedly isn’t perfect, is that the criteria to call for the non-agency securities in New Residential’s portfolio, triggers when the UPB of the underlying loans pays down to 10% of the original balance.

New Residential has been acquiring call rights as part of the private label servicing that they have acquired.  It seems like the call rights have been something of a free-bee thrown in with the mortgage servicing right in many cases.

This means that New Residential’s call right portfolio is not recorded as a significant asset on the balance sheet.  Management drove this point home on the first quarter conference call:

Douglas Harter – Crédit Suisse AG, Research DivisionSo just to be clear: there’s no value on the balance sheet today for those call rights?

Michael Nierenberg – Chief Executive Officer, President and DirectorThat’s….

Jonathan R. Brown – Interim Chief Financial Officer, Chief Accounting Officer and TreasurerThere’s essentially no value on the balance sheet. When we acquired them, we put a small number on, but it doesn’t move with the mark-to-market.

So book value calculations for New Residential ignore the value of the call rights.

Now for a little bit about how it works.

First, New Residential is going to look at the bonds underlying the call right and, where possible, purchase these bonds at a discount to par.   The call right gives New Residential the ability to call the bond at par plus expenses.  When the market is in their favor they do this, and then take the performing loans and repackage these into new securities which they sell at a premium to the par that they called the bonds.   The delinquent loans stay on the balance sheet and New Residential takes interest from these loans and liquidates them as opportunity permits.

To reiterate the process, here is how management described it on the second quarter conference call:
we buy bonds at a discount that accrete to par when we call them. We call the collateral at par plus expenses, we then securitize or sell the loans at a premium. The delinquent loans that we take back are retained on our balance sheet at fair market value and that those get liquidated or modified over time. Since we’ve begun this strategy, we’ve been averaging approximately two to three points of P&L per deal.

New Residential has about $200 billion of UPB in call rights (they said $240 billion UPB in the first quarter but have since then referred to it only as over $200 billion).  Impressively, this amounts to 35% of the outstanding legacy non-agency market.  Right now about $30 billion that meets the 10% UPB criteria to be called.  Therefore it can be called be if New Residential finds that it is accretive to do so, meaning specifically if the market conditions for the new securitizations are favorable.

That $200 billion will amortize over time, so the actual UPB at the time it is called will be somewhat less.  They think the eventual UPB will be in the $100-$125 billion, as they described on the first quarter call:

There is going to be amortization to get to a 10% clean-up call or 10% factor on the underlying deals. So in our best case or our best guess-timate at this point, that $235 billion at the time of call will be between $100 billion and $125 billion.

The economics of the deals were discussed on the first quarter call as such:

Our recent experience when we’ve called deals, the way to think about this, has been we’ve been making approximately 2 to 3 points per deal. Now some of this will be dependent upon rates, but as you think about it, on a $100 billion portfolio of call rights at the time of call, 2 points would be — would correlate to about $2 billion. Thinking about it, with 200 million — 198 million shares outstanding, it should bring in approximately $2 per share.

So I am quite certain Michael Nierenberg, the CEO, misspoke on the $2 per share comment.  This has caused me a bit of consternation because he actually said the $2 comment twice.  But I’ve read a few brokerage reports and the value they are more inline with what the other numbers imply.  Undiscounted the earnings potential here is more like $10 per share.   Piper Jaffrey gave a $5 per share value to the call right portfolio here.  UBS gives a value of $6 per share to the portfolio.

So that is a crazy big number for a company trading at $13.  Its why, even if we get a little run here to $14, I will be reluctant to part with my position.  I need to keep reading and making sure that I am not missing anything, but this feels to me like another one of these fat pitches that I see coming along every so often.  If there is one thing I’ve learned its that you have to take on some risk when these opportunities present themselves.

Nationstar Mortgage

I would not have bought Nationstar had I not had such a big position in New Residential.

I haven’t followed Nationstar closely for a while.  Last year I owned the stock for a short period but exited for a loss after giving up trying to determine how much of their net income would be absconded via a more watchful regulator, and a closing of loop holes like force-placed-insurance.

Fast forward a year.  The company’s earnings have taken a hit, in large part due to the aforementioned scrutiny.  I’ve found at least one lawsuit that they settled regarding force-placed insurance (here).  They paid another $16 million in borrower restitution for in-flight mods, which is where a borrower gets a modification from one servicer even as the loan is being transferred to another.  It looks like some of the executives at Nationstar were even sued on allegations that they did not properly disclose just how large the impact of the regulator crackdown to earnings would be.  The company paid out $13.9 million in the third quarter and $37.3 million in the 9 month period for legal fees and settlements.  Its worth noting that Nationstar still ranks as a below average servicer among customers.

So there are problems.  Nevertheless I bought the stock, primarily because, after listening to the third quarter conference call, I felt there were enough signs of a turnaround in place to warrant at least a bump in the stock price.  Witness the following:

The servicing business had a better quarter, servicing margins were up to 3.6 basis points, which was a 1.3 basis point improvement over Q2.

Nationstar thinks that by the fourth quarter they can get servicing margins up to 5 basis points. 1 basis point of that increase is expected come from improved amortization (which I essentially think means that rates are higher and so they can assume a longer amortization trend) with the rest coming from operational improvements.

For 2016 they are targeting 5-7 basis points of margins.  The average servicing unpaid principle balance (UPB) was $400 billion in the third quarter and they ended the quarter with $408 billion UPB.  A move back to 5 basis points would be $14 million more in pre-tax profits (or 13c).  7 basis points would be $36 million incrementally (33c).

Here is how servicing has trended over the past number of quarters. Note how much of an impact the increased amortization has had.  Amortization is going to look a lot better at higher rates.

servicing

While Nationstar may not be a leading edge servicer, they are starting to see improvement on prepayments (CPR), which dropped 4% in the third quarter.  Delinquency rates have improved from 10.6% to 7.2% over the past year

 servicingstats

Net of recapture CPR was down to 13.3% from 14.1% in the second quarter. The overall recapture rate was 28%

In October Nationstar signed a $50 billion sub-servicing agreement with “a major financial institution”. That is 15% growth to their existing UPB.  The company said in response to questions that this new UPB will add $30-$40 million of income once fully boarded in 2016.

Also interesting were the comments made around their online home selling platform, Xome.  Xome’s results were somewhat underwhelming, revenue was down from $122 million in the second quarter to $109 million as they sold less units than in the second quarter:

xome

But if you parse through the data the decline was generated entirely by REO units sold. So Xome actually saw year over year growth in third party transactions. Third party revenue was up 34% year over year an makes up 37% of revenue now.  And its third party transactions that will ultimately determine the value of Xome.

In response to a question regarding the strategic process to find a partner for Xome, Nationstar said that the valuations they were getting from prospective buyers were in the $1 billion range

Overall, earnings right now are in the $1.20 range adjusted for mark to market adjustments of the MSRs.  You get a possible upside when value is realized on Xome and you get potentially improved servicing margins as rates rise.  Its not a sure thing but there is upside potential.

Patient Home Monitoring

Patient Home Monitoring (PHM) has been beaten up over the past few months.  When I bought it in the mid-50 cent range I thought I was getting into the stock as it moved off the bottom.  This unfortunately proved to be premature, and it has since slumped back down to the lows.

PHM owns a variety of healthcare businesses that revolve around home based services for patients with chronic conditions.   They provide home sleep testing to patients that sleep apnea, home medical equipment such as oxygen nebulizers, and mobility devices, they have a complex rehab business, a pharmacy business – special programs to Medicare Part B programs, and a post acute respiratory care business.

They brought these businesses together via acquisitions, so they are a roll-up strategy, which has become a four-letter word over the past few months and which is partially responsible for the poor stock price performance.

The strategy is that you buy these smallish, single shop operations at an accretive price and then take advantage of their patient database to cross-sell the other products in your portfolio.  The former CEO, Michael Dalsin, described it as such in an interview last year:

a lot of these new devices and new technologies and new reimbursement codes are not immediately adopted by the large multi-billion dollar companies in our space. They are adopted by the entrepreneurs who are usually the sales reps of the device company, sometimes doctors themselves think they can make more money doing this care coordination than being a physician. So it’s small little companies all around the country – $10-20 million in sales, usually highly focused on one disease space. So they might only service pulmonology disease. And the reason they do that, ultimately, is because they know that market. They know the sales reps, they know the doctors, they can get prescriptions, they know pulmonology. And as they start developing their market, they become a little bit profitable – they make a couple of million dollars a year – but for us, the most important part of that acquisition is the patient database

Lets take a look at some of the acquisitions.  In September they closed their acquisition of Patient Aids for $23 million.  They expect Patient Aids to generate $17 million of revenue and $6 million of EBITDA annualized.  Patient Aids is a supplier of home health products and services in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky.  Product lines include things like power mobility equipment, vehicle lifts, nebulizers, oxygen concentrators, and CPAP and BiPAP units.

Before Patient Aids PHM made its largest acquisition, Sleep Management.  Sleep Management provides ventilators to patients with Chronic Pulmonary obstruction.  The management of Sleep Management took on senior positions at PHM after the acquisition was complete.  Note that this transition has been partially responsible for the decline in the stock price, as investors were surprised by the CEO shuffle and the fact that the former CEO, Michael Dalsin, sold his stock upon his departure.   But according to an interview with Bruce Campbell I listened to on BNN, Sleep Management has grown by 100% over the past three years.   This was a $100 million acquisition that they expect will generate $18 million EBITDA annually.

Prior to Sleep Management there were a number of smaller acquisitions.

There was Legacy Oxegyn, which they paid a little over $4 million for and of which they are expected to generate $750,000 of EBITDA.  They have a business similar to Sleep Management, offering home-based medical equipment and services for patients with chronic pulmonary conditions in addition to wheel chairs, hospital beds, and other mobility aids.  They operate in Kentucky and Louisiana.

Before that was Blackbear Medical, which operates in Maine and provides home medical equipment like canes, crutches and walkers.  West Home Healthcare provides a similar set of products in Virginia.

All of these acquisitions are expected to cross-sell the array of PHM products over time.  I cobbled together the following table of pre and post-acquisition revenues.  They have a reasonably good track record of increasing sales from the businesses they acquire.

acquisitions

I don’t think there is any magic to these businesses.  They are basic product and services businesses that generate fairly low (10-15%) operating margins.  Those margins can potentially increase after they are brought into the fold and higher margin products, like COPD, are added to the product/services mix.  Meanwhile the stock seems pretty reasonable at around 4.5x EBITDA.  At this point its basically a show-me story where the operating performance over the next few quarters will determine how well the stock does.

Concordia Healthcare

Last month when I wrote up my reasons behind Concordia Healthcare I kind of rushed through it at the last minute and didn’t do a very good job.  The problem with these write-ups is they take time, and trying to write consistently every fourth week doesn’t always line up well with life schedules.  For example the weekend of my last write-up was Canadian Thanksgiving.

So I don’t own Concordia right now.  I think, however, that there is a good chance I will own Concordia in the future.  Given that Concordia is complicated and given the absolute roller-coaster ride the stock has been on it seems that a more thoughtful write-up is appropriate.

As I tried to make clear in my original write-up, Concordia is not a perfect stock.  It has the following problems:

  1. They have taken on a lot of debt with recent acquisitions.  Currently at a 6x Debt/EBITDA multiple
  2. They are labeled baby-Valeant by the financial press which means that every bit of bad news for Valeant is conferred to them
  3. They have relied at least partially on price increases in the past to boost revenues and lever returns from acquisitions

With those three negatives understood, Concordia also has a number of positives.

  1. They generate a tremendous amount of free cash from their portfolio of pharmaceuticals
  2. The product portfolio consists mostly of older drugs that have stable to slightly declining revenues but with predictable future revenue profiles
  3. At the current stock price the stock trades at a very attractive free cash flow multiple of around 5x
  4. They are less than 1/10th the size of Valeant, so the potential to continue to grow by acquisitions remains, even if one of the models of that growth, acquisition + price increases, is no longer viable

Concordia’s Acquisition History

Concordia hasn’t been around that long.  Their acquisitions started small and grew larger, with the biggest being the recent acquisition of AMCo.  Below is a table of all of Concordia’s acquisitions pre-AMCo.

acquisitionsLet’s go through each of these acquisitions in chronological order.

Kapvay, Orapred and Ulesfia

These three drugs were acquired May 2013 from Shionogi.  Concordia paid $28.7 million including a $2.3 million inventory adjustment.  There was also a pay-out clause that if revenue of Kapvay exceeds $1.5 million per year in the first 18 months Concordia would have to pay 30% of incremental revenue.  It looks like they had to pay at least some of that amount.

Kapvay is used to treat ADHD.  Ulesfia used as topical treatment for head lice.  Orapred is an anti-inflammatory used in the treatment of certain pulmonary diseases such as asthma.

Kapvay and Oraped face generic competition.  Both only became generics after Concordia acquired them.  Kapvay started to have generic competition in fourth quarter 2013 while Oraped first faced generic competition in fourth quarter 2014.  Ulesfia does not face generics yet.

Two of the three drugs experienced price increases by Concordia after they were acquired. From the 2014 AIF: “since acquiring Kapvay, Ulesfia and Orapred, the Corporation has increased such product prices by 52%, 43% and 10%, respectively, without any adverse prescription volume effect.”  All of these drugs appear to have prices inline with competition:

kapvay-orapred-ulesfiapricing

Here are sales of each drug:

 

kapvay-orapred-ulesfiaIts worth noting that Kapvay sales did plummet once the drug was exposed to generic competition in the fourth quarter of 2013.

kapvay

Photofrin

Photofrin was acquired in December 2013 for $58 million that consisted of $32.7 million of cash and 5 million shares at $5.63 per share.  Photofrin is used to treat Esophageal Cancer, Barrett’s Esophagus and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

Photofrin is kind of an interesting treatment.  The drug itself, which is called Photofrin, is administered intravenously.  This is followed up by a laser treatment focused on the tumor.  The laser reacts with the drug, oxidizing it and the tumor in the process.

I believe that pre the Covis transaction Photofrin was the only drug in Concordia’s “orphan drug division”.  Because of the unique combination of drug and device, they do not expect Photofrin to face generic competition.

Prior to being acquired Photofrin had $11 million of revenue in 2011 and $13 million of revenue in 2012.  The orphan drug division as a whole had $10.7 million of revenue in 2014, presumably all attributable to Photofrin.  In the first half of 2015 orphan drug division had $5.9 million of revenue.  Overall Photofrin appears to provide a steady revenue stream.  I don’t see any evidence of price increases on Photofrin.

Zonegran

Concordia acquired Zonegran for $91.4 million in cash including approximately $1.4 million for purchased inventory.  I believe that what was purchased was specifically the agreement to market the drug in the US and Puerto Rico.

Zonegran is an epilepsy treatment.  According to pre-acquisition financials Zonegran has $12.4 million of revenue in the first half of 2014 and $22 million of revenue in 2013:

zonegranrevsAccording to spring presentation in 2014 Zonegran revenue was 8% of Concordia’s $309 million of total revenue or about $25 million.

zonegranhistoryThe essentially flat revenue suggests hasn’t been much in the way of price increases for Zonegran.  It looks like Zonegran is inline with the costs of other Epileptic treatments.

Donnatal

Donnatal was purchased in May of 2014. This was the biggest acquisition Concordia had made at the time  Before the Covis acquisition Donnatal made up 41% of Concordia’s revenue, or about $150 million.

Donnatal treats irritable bowel syndrome and has been around for more than 50 years.  Therefore it predates the current FDA approval process, it is not a reference listed drug, and, according to the 2014 AIF: “at this time there is no defined pathway for approval of a generic competitor to Donnatal”.  Though to qualify this, there are a number of other irritable bowel drugs on the market that compete directly with Donnatal.

Donnatal is probably the most notable example of price increases.  The CEO of Concordia admitted as much last week during a BNN interview (segments one and two here and here).  What’s interesting is that while Concordia did raise the price of Donnatal significantly after acquiring the drug, similar cost increases appear to have been made even before the acquisition.  Also worth noting  is that Donnatal is well within the price range of its competition:

donnatalcomp

Here is Donnatal prescription volumes over past few years:

donnatalvolumesCovis

Covis was acquired for $1.2 billion on April 21 2015.  Things begin to get more complicated here, because Covis is a big acquisition with many drugs.   Covis added 18 branded or generic products.  Here is a list of what they got:

covisproductsOf these products Concordia focuses on the following four as being the most important:coviskeyproductsWhat’s key about most (but not all) of these products is that they are old, they have generic competition, and they have stable or falling demand profiles.

I haven’t been able/had time to dig up information on the individual drugs.   As a whole, Covis had revenue of $47 million to $52 million in the fourth quarter of 2014, so just before acquisition.   2014 revenue as a whole was was estimated by Concordia to be between $140 million to $145 million at the time of acquisition.

Post-acquisition, Covis had revenue of $38.7 million in the second quarter.   Given that the acquisition closed on April 21st, that revenue accounts for 68 of the 91 days in the quarter, so pro-forma over the full quarter revenue would have been $52 million, which inline with the fourth quarter results.

Amdipharm Mercury

Concordia sells the Amdipharm Mercury acquisition as a way to increase the diversity of their revenue and expand the overall platform, which sets them up to more easily compete in future acquisitions.  The acquisition is a departure from past acquisitions, which targeted either a drug or portfolio of drugs, as Amdipharm is a complete company purchase.

This wasn’t a cheap acquisition.  The total price at the time of the stock offering was $3.5 billion.  Concordia paid around 12x EV/EBITDA based on a little less than $300mm EBITDA for Amdipharm.  This included the assumption of $1.4 billion of Amdipharm debt.  They also issued 8 million shares at $65 USD.  The acquisition is closer to 10x EBITDA for those of us looking at the stock now with the shares having depreciated significantly.  But that is no consolation for the folks that bought at $65.

The company describes the acquisition as accretive to earnings, and I believe that’s true based on my own number crunching, but you have to realize that its accretive because they are taking on so much debt.  The debt is roughly $3 billion of the $3.5 billion acquisition price.  The accretion is because this is a very profitable drug portfolio, so even after subtracting interest costs there is significant earnings remaining on the bottom line.  The downside is that it made Concordia very levered up.

The benefits are diversification, as Amdipharm was primarly in the UK and Europe.  Concordia is now only 40% exposed to the US and 10% exposed to state funded plans, a global footprint, which Concordia suggests will make it easier for them to cross-sell their existing pharmaceuticals and expand with further acquisitions.  AMCo also appears to have a fairly stable product base, most of them have been off-patent for a long time, many of them are difficult to manufacture, and 88% of the portfolio have two or fewer competitors.  Of course cynically you could look at these points and say what a great portfolio to implement price increases on…

Amdipharm has 190 products, which makes it a lot more difficult for me to analyze.  Here are the top ten by revenue:

amcotop10products

Valuation

What continues to make Concordia tempting is that on a free cash basis they trade extremely cheaply.  The company’s guidance for cash earnings is $6.29 to $6.77 per share.  It looks to me like cash earnings has followed closely to free cash flow.

But I’m nervous about the debt and the short-selling.  Total debt is around $3.5 billion.  Given the company’s EBITDA estimate of $610-$640 million for 2016, Concordia trades at about 8x EV/EBITDA.  On a pure enterprise value basis that leaves them somewhat undervalued compared to other pharmaceutical companies (which seem to go for around a 10-11x EBITDA multiple).

Clearly there was short-selling involved that caused the precipitous drop to the teens a few weeks ago.  That they have their sights on Concordia is cause for concern for owning the stock.  As long as Valeant is in the headlines Concordia is at risk whether its warranted or not.

Other Adds: Alliance Healthcare, Nevsun Resources, Northstar Realty, Acacia Research

I bought Alliance Healthcare because I thought that at $8 it was getting just a little to cheap.  At $8 the market capitalization was only a little more than $80 million.  While the company’s debt remains enormous ($507 million) they continue to generate a lot of free cash ($40 million in the first nine months of the year, though this is before minority interests so the actual number attributable to the company is somewhat less than this).  The stock has been under pressure since their major shareholder, Oaktree Capital Management, sold their shares at $18.50 to Fujian Thai Hot Investment Company.  Thai Hot now has a majority interest in the company but as part of the deal has agreed to make no further purchases of shares, which essentially prohibit it from supporting their position.  The whole thing is weird, but at $8 I have to think most of the damage is done.

I bought Northstar Realty and Nevsun for similar reasons.  Northstar is a hated property REIT mostly operating in the healthcare and hotel sectors that has been beaten down to a 15% yield.  I don’t see anything particularly wrong with their property portfolio, and I suspect that the incessant selling has more to do with year-end and being a former hedge fund darling.

Nevsun is an $800 million market capitalization (Canadian dollars) copper miner with almost $600 million of cash on the books.  While the low copper price has hurt them, they are still generating free cash.  They operate one mine, called Bishna, in Euritania.  While I admittedly haven’t had time to go through the third quarter data, I bought the position off of the second quarter numbers where they showed $97 million of cash flow from operations and $53 million of capital expenditures, meaning decent free cash generation.  I also like that they are transitioning from being a primarily copper miner to a copper and zinc miner in 2017.  The supply/demand outlook for zinc looks pretty interesting and so they may benefit from higher zinc prices right around the timeI’ll try to talk about these positions in another post, as this one is already way, way too long.

Acacia Research partners, a patent litigation firm that partners with patent owners to realize the value of their patents, got creamed on a pretty terrible headline quarter.  I bought after the carnage had appeared to run its course.  So we’ll see if that’s the case.  At the current price the company has a $330 million market cap and $168 million of cash on the balance sheet.  The thing here is that a bad quarter doesn’t necessarily mean anything about future performance.  Acacia has a portfolio of patents that they are moving towards litigation.  The companies that they are litigating against generally hold-out against settlement until the very last minute.   The poor revenue number this quarter (it was $14 million, versus $37 million last year in the third quarter and an average of $37 million the last two quarters) simply reflects delays in a few of their cases, some of which were actually brought about by evidence that strengthened Acacia’s case.  From the third quarter conference call:

The third quarter developments created paradoxical outcomes. On one hand, our marquee portfolios were strengthened through Markman inter-parties review and new patent issuance wins, and now have even greater future value. But on the other hand, we experienced a delay in collecting on that value.

This is a stock that is going to whipsaw up and down on what will always be very lumpy results.  I think you have to buy it when the whipsaw down is extreme.  There is a very good writer on SeekingAlpha (he also has his own blog) who follows the stock closely and wrote a good piece on the company here.

What I sold

I reduced my position in the few gold stocks I bought after the latest Federal Reserve view on the economy came out.  I still hold a couple small positions here because for the miners outside of the US, even as the price of gold falls their costs are falling just as fast and in some cases faster.  The market doesn’t care about margins yet though, so there is no point fighting the headwind too hard.

I bought and sold Digirad within the month for a gain.  I bought Digirad on the morning of their takeover of DMS Health for $35 million.  The acquisition was accretive and after doing some quick math, on the morning of the acquisition the combined entity had a $77 million enterprise value and a 4.5x EBITDA multiple.  I thought this was likely too low so I bought, but the stock has risen since to a more respectable level and so I have since sold my shares.

I bought and sold Enernoc for a loss.  I played the swings from $7 to $9 on Enernoc successfully a couple of time an then got burnt when they released quarterly earnings.   Fortunately while it was pretty clear that the earnings were awful, the market gave a small window first thing in the morning to get out in the $6’s.  I took that opportunity.

I sold Gilead for a loss when I clearly shouldn’t have.  I did this before I made the decision to hold to my convictions a bit more firmly and I got spooked out on a dip below $100 that was clearly more of a buying opportunity in retrospect.

And of course I sold Valeant, for a loss, but thankfully well before things really got out of hand with the stock.  Better to walk away when things begin to smell bad.

Portfolio Composition

Click here for the last four weeks of trades.

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Week 79: From Chaos to Order

Portfolio Performance

week-79-performance

Summary

I am going to try to keep to a shorter update but given my track record with brevity we will see how that pans out.  The reason I want to keep it brief is that I am attempting to write a Visual Basic program this weekend that will allow me to paste my transactions into an excel spreadsheet and automatically spit out a list of the closed positions, the open positions, and the relevant transaction parameters.  I want a better solution than a snapshot of the RBC Practice Account portfolio holdings page;  I have no ability to come up with graphs and charts of performance with my current snipit method, the practice account summary has a bug that screws up the book value and gain/loss numbers every time you make a partial sale of a position, which is a real pain, and I want to be able to post a consolidated list of all my closed positions along with their gain and loss, something that is not possible from the practice account (my current method, which has been to post every one of my updates on my portfolio page, is getting to be a little too long).

On the Cliff

The market was a real yo-yo over the last couple weeks but I didn’t really panic much.  I have been known to do violent purges in the midst of chaos, but not this time.  I was pretty confident that something would get done, either at the deadline or as a result of the steep fall that would occur after it was passed.  As it was, things turned out just about in-line with my expectations. Read more