Showing posts with label declining companies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label declining companies. Show all posts

Friday 5 June 2015

Investing in decline


British American Tobacco (BATS) published a gargantuan number this week: CAD$15.6bn (£8.2bn). Unfortunately, this has nothing to do with its financial results - the group made pre-tax profit of £4.8bn last year - but is instead the amount awarded to smokers by a Canadian court for "moral and punitive damages". BATS' Canadian subsidiary is liable for two-thirds of the sum.
Shareholders need not fret yet: the legal battle has already been rumbling on for 10 years, and the three tobacco companies inculpated will challenge the judge's ruling. The public smoking bans and tax increases introduced in countries ranging from Brazil through the Philippines to Turkey are of more immediate consequence. Manufacturers used to rely on emerging markets to offset falling volumes in Europe and North America, but this growth engine has stalled.
The latest government crackdown is in China, the world's largest cigarette market. On the same day as the Canadian legal judgement, Beijing banned smoking in restaurants, public transport and offices - the strictest restrictions yet introduced in the country. The direct impact on BATS and Imperial Tobacco (IMT) will be limited, as the Chinese market is virtually monopolised by China National Tobacco Corporation (although BATS did launch a joint venture with CNTC in 2013). But the move does highlight the direction of travel across the developing world.
But the fascinating thing about tobacco companies is just how successful they have been at managing decline. In 2006, BATS sold 691bn cigarettes and was worth £29.6bn on New Year's Eve. In 2014, it sold 667bn fags and attracted a year-end market valuation of £65.2bn. The figures for Imperial Tobacco show the same pattern. For investors, this is a very instructive contradiction.
Tobacco groups have wrung growth out of a shrinking market in three ways. 
1.  Firstly and most importantly, they have continually increased prices. This has worked because demand for cigarettes is infamously 'inelastic': consumers pay up even if prices rise. Moreover, in many countries the price of a packet of cigarettes consists mainly of tax. In Britain a full 77 per cent of the typical price of a premium packet is paid to the government, according to the industry lobby group. Mathematically, that means manufacturers can increase their prices by 5 per cent without pushing the total packet price up by much more than 1 per cent.
For example, in the first quarter BATS reported a particularly disappointing 3.6 per cent decline in volumes, led by shrinking markets in Brazil, Russia and Vietnam. Yet revenues at constant exchange rates rose 1.7 per cent, "driven by strong pricing, in part due to price increases in high-inflation markets".
There is a parallel here with the big brewers, notably SABMiller(SAB). Investors need not be too concerned by flat volumes, because consumers pay up for beer in the same way they pay up for cigarettes. SAB's lager volumes showed no underlying growth in the year to 31 March, but the company still delivered organic top-line growth of 5 per cent.
2.   The second key strategy for countering industry decline is consolidation. The most recent mega deal is the acquisition of Lorillard, the number three cigarette group in the US, by Reynolds, the number two. To placate the anti-trust authorities, the companies agreed to sell various brands to Imperial Tobacco, the number four, for $7.1bn (£4.7bn). The regulator finally blessed this ménage à trois last month, although the deal has yet to formally complete. Lower-profile 'bolt-on' acquisitions are more common. BATS this week announced the purchase of TDR, the market leader in Croatia and a player in other Balkan states, for €550m (£395m).
Such deals are a vehicle for cost-cutting, which boosts profits even if top-line growth is sluggish. Imperial Tobacco in particular has a strong track record for extracting value from deals. Thanks to a seemingly endless programme of cost savings - aided by advertising bans - the operating margin in its tobacco business reached an astonishing 44 per cent in the six months to March.
3.   Finally, cigarette companies have been buying into new technology: cigarette alternatives. In 2013 BATS launched the UK's first e-cigarette brand, Vype, while the Reynolds-Lorillard merger will bring Imperial Tobacco blu, a rival brand. Here the parallel is with the oil majors and their flirtations with clean energy. This month the key European players tried to stress their green credentials by writing a high-profile open letter to the UN in support of a carbon-pricing system.
Cigarette and oil alternatives make headlines and allow producers to brag about corporate social responsibility and growth. But they are a very, very long way from paying for the dividends that have long underpinned the investment case for Britain's largest companies. Fortunately, the lesson of big tobacco is that decline can be managed successfully for much longer than one might think.


 By Stephen Wilmot , 03 June 2015
http://www.investorschronicle.co.uk/2015/06/03/comment/chronic-investor-blog/investing-in-decline-g0QBVswahNlGhiO1XtymXK/article.html

Tuesday 6 December 2011

Deriving Value from a declining company

Accept Kuok Brothers takeover offer, Jerneh Asia shareholders told
Written by Chua Sue-Ann of theedgemalaysia.com
Thursday, 01 December 2011 20:59


KUALA LUMPUR (Dec 1): JERNEH ASIA BHD []'s shareholders have been advised to accept the takeover offer by the group's major shareholder, Kuok Brothers Sdn Bhd, for a quicker way out of the cash-rich company that has been without a core business for a year.

OSK Investment Bank (OSK IB) Bhd, which is the independent adviser to the Kuok Brothers' offer, said on Thursday the takeover offer was preferable compared with the "uncertainty and lengthy" procedure of receiving proceeds via the route of asset disposals, capital repayment and winding up.

In arriving at its recommendation, OSK IB said it considered that Jerneh Asia was classified under PN16 and PN17 status given that it was without a core business, having disposed off its insurance business.

Last December, Jerneh Asia sold its 80% equity interest in Jerneh Insurance Bhd to ACE INA International Holdings Ltd last December for RM523.2 million cash and had distributed the proceeds in the form of dividends and capital repayments.

To recap, Kuok Brothers had on Oct 31 launched a conditional takeover offer of RM1.45 cash per share for all remaining Jerneh Asia shares it does not own and for all new Jerneh Asia shares which may be issued arising from the exercise of the outstanding warrants.

Kuok Brothers, which holds a direct 37.71% stake in Jerneh Asia, was also looking to acquire the remaining 2.96 million warrants for 45 sen apiece. Kuok Brothers and persons acting in concert (PACs) hold a combined 41.81% equity interest in Jerneh Asia, comprising 102.02 million shares.

Based on a simple calculation, Kuok Brothers — the vehicle of tycoon Robert Kuok Hock Nien — will have to fork out about RM207.19 million for the deal.

Jerneh Asia shares yesterday closed unchanged at RM1.43.


http://www.theedgemalaysia.com/business-news/197145-accept-kuok-brothers-takeover-offer-jerneh-asia-shareholders-told-.html

Read also:

Characteristics of Declining Companies and their Value Drivers


Asset divestitures: If one of the features of a declining firm is that existing assets are sometimes worth more to others, who intend to put them to different and better uses, it stands to reason that asset divestitures will be more frequent at declining firms than at firms earlier in the life cycle. If the declining firm has substantial debt obligations, the need to divest will become stronger, driven by the desire to avoid default or to pay down debt.

Big payouts – dividends and stock buybacks: Declining firms have few or any growth investments that generate value, existing assets that may be generating positive cashflows and asset divestitures that result in cash inflows. If the firm does not have enough debt for distress to be a concern, it stands to reason that declining firms not only pay out large dividends, sometimes exceeding their earnings, but also buy back stock.

Monday 5 December 2011

Characteristics of Declining Companies and their Value Drivers


Characteristics of Declining Companies

            In this section, we will look at characteristics that declining companies tend to share, with an eye towards the problems that they create for analysts trying to value these firms. Note again that not every declining company possesses all of these characteristics but they do share enough of them to make these generalizations.

1.     Stagnant or declining revenues: Perhaps the most telling sign of a company in decline is the inability to increase revenues over extended periods, even when times are good. Flat revenues or revenues that grow at less than the inflation rate is an indicator of operating weakness. It is even more telling if these patterns in revenues apply not only to the company being analyzed but to the overall sector, thus eliminating the explanation that the revenue weakness is due to poor management (and can thus be fixed by bringing in a new management team).
2.     Shrinking or negative margins:  The stagnant revenues at declining firms are often accompanied by shrinking operating margins, partly because firms are losing pricing power and partly because they are dropping prices to keep revenues from falling further. This combination results in deteriorating or negative operating income at these firms, with occasional spurts in profits generated by asset sales or one time profits.
3.     Asset divestitures: If one of the features of a declining firm is that existing assets are sometimes worth more to others, who intend to put them to different and better uses, it stands to reason that asset divestitures will be more frequent at declining firms than at firms earlier in the life cycle. If the declining firm has substantial debt obligations, the need to divest will become stronger, driven by the desire to avoid default or to pay down debt.
4.     Big payouts – dividends and stock buybacks: Declining firms have few or any growth investments that generate value, existing assets that may be generating positive cashflows and asset divestitures that result in cash inflows. If the firm does not have enough debt for distress to be a concern, it stands to reason that declining firms not only pay out large dividends, sometimes exceeding their earnings, but also buy back stock.
5.     Financial leverage – the downside: If debt is a double-edged sword, declining firms often are exposed to the wrong edge. With stagnant and declining earnings from existing assets and little potential for earnings growth, it is not surprising that many declining firms face debt burdens that are overwhelming. Note that much of this debt was probably acquired when the firm was in a healthier phase of the life cycle and at terms that cannot be matched today. In addition to difficulties these firms face in meeting the obligations that they have committed to meet, they will face additional trouble in refinancing the debt, since lenders will demand more stringent terms.



Declining companies: Value Drivers

Going concern value

To value a firm as a going concern, we consider only those scenarios where the firm survives. The expected cash flow is estimated only across these scenarios and thus should be higher than the expected cash flow estimated in the modified discounted cash flow model. When estimating discount rates, we make the assumption that debt ratios will, in fact, decrease over time, if the firm is over levered, and that the firm will derive tax benefits from debt as it turns the corner on profitability. This is consistent with the assumption that the firm will remain a going concern. Most discounted cash flow valuations that we observe in practice are going concern valuations, though they may not come with the tag attached.
            A less precise albeit easier alternative is to value the company as if it were a healthy company today. This would require estimating the cashflows that the firm would have generated if it were a healthy firm, a task most easily accomplished by replacing the firm's operating margin by the average operating margin of healthy firms in the business. The cost of capital for the distressed firm can be set to the average cost of capital for the industry and the value of the firm can be computed. The danger with this approach is that it will overstate firm value by assuming that the return to financial health is both painless and imminent.

Likelihood of Distress

A key input to this approach is the estimate of the cumulative probability of distress over the valuation period. In this section, we will consider three ways in which we can estimate this probability. The first is a statistical approach, where we relate the probability of distress to a firm's observable characteristics – firm size, leverage and profitability, for instance – by contrasting firms that have gone bankrupt in prior years with firms that did not. The second is a less data intensive approach, where we use the bond rating for a firm, and the empirical default rates of firms in that rating class to estimate the probability of distress. The third is to use the prices of corporate bonds issued by the firm to back out the probability of distress.
a. Statistical Approaches: The fact that hundreds of firms go bankrupt every year provides us with a rich database that can be examined to evaluate both why bankruptcy occurs and how to predict the likelihood of future bankruptcy. One of the earliest studies that used this approach was by Altman (1968), where he used linear discriminant analysis to arrive at a measure that he called the Z score. In this first paper, that he has since updated several times, the Z score was a function of five ratios:
Z = 0.012 (Working capital/ Total Assets) + 0.014 (Retained Earnings/ Total Assets) + 0.033 (EBIT/ Total Assets) + 0.006 (Market value of equity/ Book value of total liabilities) + 0.999 (Sales/ Total Assets)
Altman argued that we could compute the Z scores for firms and use them to forecast which firms would go bankrupt, and he provided evidence to back up his claim. Since his study, both academics and practitioners have developed their own versions of these credit scores.  Notwithstanding its usefulness in predicting bankruptcy, linear discriminant analysis does not provide a probability of bankruptcy.
b. Based upon Bond Rating: Many firms, especially in the United States, have bonds that are rated for default risk by the ratings agencies. These bond ratings not only convey information about default risk (or at least the ratings agency's perception of default risk) but they come with a rich history. Since bonds have been rated for decades, we can look at the default experience of bonds in each ratings class. Assuming that the ratings agencies have not significantly altered their ratings standards, we can use these default probabilities as inputs into discounted cash flow valuation models. What are the limitations of this approach? The first is that we are delegating the responsibility of estimating default probabilities to the ratings agencies and we assume that they do it well. The second is that we are assuming that the ratings standards do not shift over time. The third is that table measures the likelihood of default on a bond, but it does not indicate whether the defaulting firm goes out of business. Many firms continue to operate as going concerns after default. 
c. Based upon Bond Price: The conventional approach to valuing bonds discounts promised cash flows back at a cost of debt that incorporates a default spread to come up with a price. Consider an alternative approach. We could discount the expected cash flows on the bond, which would be lower than the promised cash flows because of the possibility of default, at the riskfree rate to price the bond. If we assume that a constant annual probability of default, we can write the bond price as follows for a bond with fixed coupon maturing in N years.
Bond Price = 
This equation can now be used, in conjunction with the price on a traded corporate bond to back out the probability of default. We are solving for an annualized probability of default over the life of the bond, and ignoring the reality that the annualized probability of default will be higher in the earlier years and decline in the later years. While this approach has the attraction of being a simple one, we would hasten to add the following caveats in using it. First, note that we not only need to find a straight bond issued by the company – special features such as convertibility will render the approach unusable – but the bond price has to be available. If the corporate bond issue is privately placed, this will not be feasible. Second, the probabilities that are estimated may be different for different bonds issued by the same firm. Some of these differences can be traced to the assumption we have made that the annual probability of default remains constant and others can be traced to the mispricing of bonds. Third, as with the previous approach, failure to make debt payments does not always result in the cessation of operations. Finally, we are assuming that the coupon is either fully paid or not at all; if there is a partial payment of either the coupon or the face value in default, we will over estimate the probabilities of default using this approach.

Consequences of Distress

Once we have estimated the probability that the firm will be unable to make its debt payments and cease to exist, we have to consider the logical follow-up question. What happens then? As noted earlier in the chapter, it is not distress per se that is the problem but the fact that firms in distress have to sell their assets for less than the present value of the expected future cash flows from existing assets and expected future investments. Often, they may be unable to claim even the present value of the cash flows generated even by existing investments. Consequently, a key input that we need to estimate is the expected proceeds in the event of a distress sale. We have three choices:
1.     Estimate the present value of the expected cash flows in a discounted cash flow model, and assume that the distress sale will generate only a percentage (less than 100%) of this value. Thus, if the discounted cash flow valuation yields $ 5 billion as the value of the assets, we may assume that the value will only be $ 3 billion in the event of a distress sale.
2.     Estimate the present value of expected cash flows only from existing investments as the distress sale value. Essentially, we are assuming that a buyer will not pay for future investments in a distress sale. In practical terms, we would estimate the distress sale value by considering the cash flows from assets in place as a perpetuity (with no growth).
3.     The most practical way of estimating distress sale proceeds is to consider the distress sale proceeds as a percent of book value of assets, based upon the experience of other distressed firms.
Note that many of the issues that come up when estimating distress sale proceeds – the need to sell at below fair value, the urgency of the need to sell – are issues that are relevant when estimating liquidation value.


Ref:
The Little Book of Valuation
Aswath Damodaran

Monday 25 January 2010

The Company when It's Old (3): Why you might invest in these?

By now you might be wondering what's the point of investing in a stodgy old company such as IBM, GM, or US Steel? 

There are several reasons you might do this. 
  • First, big companies are less risky, in that they generally are in no danger of going out of business.
  • Second, they are likely to pay dividend.
  • Third, they have valuable assets that might be sold off at a profit.
These corporate codgers have been everywhere and seen it all, and they've picked up all sorts of valuable property along the way.  In fact, studying an old company and delving into its finances can be as exciting as rummaging through the attic of a rich and elderly aunt.  You never know what amazing stuff you'll find stuck in a dark corner.

Whether it's land, buildings, equipment, the stocks and bonds they keep in the bank, or the smaller companies they've acquired along the way, old companies have a substantial "break-up value."  Shareholders act like the relatives of that aged rich aunt, waiting to find out who will get what.

There's always the chance an old company can turn itself around, as Xerox and American Express have been doing in the past couple of years.

On the other hand, when an old company falters or stumbles as badly as these companies did, it may take 20 or 30 years before it can get itself back on track.  Patience is a virtue, but it's not well rewarded when you own stock in a company that's past its prime.

The Company when It's Old (2): Alcoa, GM & IBM

There's a lesson here that may save you some grief in the future.  No matter how powerful it may be today, a company won't stay on top forever.  Being called a "blue-chip" or a "world-class operation" can't save a company whose time is past, any more than Great Britain was saved by having the word "Great" in its name.

Long after Great Britain had lost its empire, the British people continued to think of their country as stronger and mightier than it really was, the same as the shareholders of US Steel.

International Harvester, the dominant force in farm equipment for an entire half-century, peaked in 1966 and never came back, even though it tried to change its luck by changing its name to Navistar.  Johns-Manville, once number one in insulation and building supplies, topped out in 1971. 

The Aluminium Company of America, better known as Alcoa, a Wall Street darling of the 1950s when the country was discovering aluminium foil, aluminium siding, and aluminium boats, rose to $23 a share in 1957 (adjusted for splits), a price it didn't see again until the 1980s.

General Motors, the dominant car company in the world and the bluest of the automotive blue chips, reached a peak in October 1965 that it wouldn't see again for nearly 30 years.  Today, GM is still the largest company in the US, and first in total sales, but it's far from the most profitable.  Sometime in the 1960s, its reflexes began to slow.

The Germans came ashore with their Volkswagens and their BMWs, and the Japanese invaded with their Toyotas and Hondas.  The attack was aimed directly at Detroit and GM was slow to react.  A younger, more aggressive GM might have risen to this challenge more quickly, but the older GM was set in its ways.

It continued to make big cars when it could see that small foreign cars were selling like crazy.  Before it could build new models that could compete with the overseas models, it ad to overhalul its outmoded factories.  This cost billions of dollars, and by the time the overhaul was complete, and small cars were rolling off the GM assembly lines, the public had switched back to bigger cars.

For three decades the largest industrial company in the US has not been largely profitable.  Yet if you had predicted this result in 1965, when GM was riding the crest of its fame and fortune, nobody would have believed you.  People would sooner have believed that Elvis was lip-synching.

Then there's IBM, which had reached middle age in the late 1960s, about the time GM was in decline.  Since the early 1950s, IBM was a spectacular performer and a great stock to own.  It was a top brand name and a symbol of quality - the IBM logo was getting to be as famous as the Coke bottle.  The company won awards for how well it was managed, and other companies studied IBM to learn how they should run their operations.  As late as the 1980s, it was celebrated in a best selling book, In Search of Excellence.

The stock was recommended by stockbrokers everywhere as the bluest of the blue chips.  To mutual fund managers, IBM was a "must" investment.  You had to be a maverick not to own IBM.

But the same thing happened to IBM that happened to GM.  Investors were so impressed with its past performance that they did not notice what was going on in the present.  People stopped buying the big mainframe computers that wer the core of IBM;s business.  The mainframe market wasn't growing anymore.  IBM's personal computer line was attacked from all sides by competitors who made a less-expensive product.  IBM's earnings sank, and as you probably can guess by now, so did the stock price.

By now you might be wondering what's the point of investing in a stodgy old company such as IBM, GM, or US Steel? 

The Company when It's Old (1): Woolworth & US Steel

Companies that are 20, 30, 50 years old have put their best years behind them. 

You can't blame them for getting tired.  They'd done it all and seen it all, and there's hardly a place they can go that they haven't already been.

Take Woolworth.  It's been around for more than 100 years - several generations of Americans grew up shopping at Woolworth's.  At one point, there was a Woolworth's outlet in every city and town in America.  That's when the company ran out of room to grow.

Recently, Woolworth has suffered a couple of unprofitable years.  It can still make a profit, but it will never be the spectacular performer it was when it was younger.  Old companies that were great earners in the past can't be expected to keep up the momentum.  A few of them have - Wrigley's, Coca-Cola, Emerson Electric, and McDonald's come to mind.  But these are exceptions.

US Steel, General Motors, and IBM are 3 prime examples of former champions whose most exciting days are behind them - although IBM and GM are having a rebound.  US Steel was once an incredible hulk, the first billion-dollar company on earth.  Railroads needed steel, cars needed steel, skyscrapers needed steel, and US Steel provided 60% of it.  At the turn of this century, no company dominated its industry the way US Steel dominated steel, and no stock was as popular as US Steel stock. It was the most actively traded issue on Wall Street.

When a magazine wanted to illustrate America's power and glory, it ran a picture of a steel mill, with the fire in the furnaces and the liquid metal poureing like hot lava into the waiting molds.  We are a nation of factories then, and a good deal of our wealth and power came from the mill towns of the East and the Midwest.

The steel business was a fantastic business to be in, and US Steel prospered through both world wars and six different presidents.  The stock hit an all-time high of $108 7/8 in August 1950.

This was the beginning of the electronic age and the end of the industrial age and the glory of steel, and it would ahve been the perfect time for investors to sell their US Steel shares and buy shares in IBM.  But you had to be very farsighted and unsentimental investor to realize this.  After all, US Steel was classed as a blue chip, Wall Street's term of endearment for pretigious companies that are expected to excel forever.  Hardly anyone would have predicted that in 1995, US Steel stock would be selling for less than it sold for in 1959.

To put this decline in perspective, the DJIA was bumping up against the 500 level in 1959, and it's gone up more than 4000 points since.  So while stocks in the Dow have increased in value more than 8 times over, US Steel has gone downhill.  Loyal shareholders have died and gone to heaven waiting for US Steel to reclaim its lost glory.