Monthly Archives: April 2012

Magic Sixes: Follow up Iren SpA

In November, I had a quick look at Iren SpA, an Italian company which would have qualified as a “Magic Sixes” company.

My summary was the following:

For me, the combination of a large debt pile, negative free cashflows and a significant portion of non-tangible book value makes Iren SpA more or less uninvestible. Based on the pure financials without any further analysis there doens’t seem to exist any Margin of Safety despite qualifying as “Magic Sixes” stock. For the time being, Iren will not be analyzed further as there seem to be more attractive “targets”.

Yesterday, Iren SpA announced that due to “one off effects”, they will actually show a loss for 2011 and the dividend is cut down to 1 cent per share.

The stock now is down almost 50% from when I wrote the post:

Interestingly, by just looking at “momentum” one would have come to the same conclusion. Both in absolute terms and relative terms, the stock started underperforming from October.

Or maybe “momentum” for low P/B Stocks (and magic sixes) maybe is a shortcut to detect weak balance sheets ? I don’t know but something to keep in mind.

Nevertheless, I will keep Iren SpA on my radar screen in order to learn more about the Italian market. In theory Iren would be a prime take over target.

Gruppo Sol SpA (ISIN IT0001206769) – only hot air or hidden moat company (part 1) ?

Grupo Sol SpA is an Italian company, which accoding to its homepage is active in

the production, applied research and marketing of industrial, pure and medicinal gases as well as being involved in the home care and in the welding markets. Today, SOL is an Italian based multinational company present in 20 European countries and in India and it has over 2,100 people employed. The annual revenue is 518 million Euro (2010 consolidated figures).

At a first view,the company doesn’t look that exciting and will most likely not show up on any screener with multiples like this:

Market Cap ~380 mn EUR
P/E 12.0
P/B 1.1
P/S 0.7
Div. Yield 2.4%
EV/EBITDA 5.7
P/E (10) 12.5

So neither expensive nor cheap and why bother ?

A quick view to the stock chart doesn’t look that convincing either:

After almost regaining the ATH in 2011, the stock dropped significantly and only regained a little since then.

The reason I got interested was the fact, that Sol SPA is one of the biggest Italian positions of Tweedy Browne’s international value fund. They hold around 7.4% of all shares. Additionally Bestinver, a Spanish value shop which portfolio I track is also invested with a 5% position.

Tweedy normally prefers companies which have almost no debt and relatively large free cashflows. However if we look at historical numbers, both, Sol’s debt position which is constantly increasing and its patchy free cash flow generation are not overly convincing.

debt/assets fcf per share
31.12.1999 17.4012 -0.05
12/29/00 18.5842 0.08
12/31/01 18.5484 -0.06
12/31/02 24.0896 -0.22
12/31/03 22.0988 0.12
12/31/04 22.8246 -0.05
12/30/05 23.4384 -0.08
12/29/06 24.0223 -0.15
12/31/07 25.8941 0.03
12/31/08 28.702 -0.09
12/31/09 29.0258 0.19
12/31/10 29.5759 0.0041

However some other historical stats are more interesting:

GJ EPS Net Margin Op Margin ROE
1999 0.12 5.6% 11.6% 6.6%
2000 0.14 6.1% 10.9% 7.4%
2001 0.15 5.5% 9.6% 7.2%
2002 0.17 5.8% 10.6% 8.1%
2003 0.17 5.1% 11.1% 7.4%
2004 0.20 5.5% 11.4% 8.1%
2005 0.19 5.0% 10.5% 7.4%
2006 0.19 4.2% 10.7% 6.7%
2007 0.30 6.3% 10.8% 10.1%
2008 0.38 7.6% 9.7% 12.0%
2009 0.28 5.4% 10.8% 8.1%
2010 0.35 6.1% 11.5% 9.6%

Although the business seems not not to be extremely profitable, Net Income margins and returns are very stable and EPS grows along increasing sales nicely over the 12 years from 1999-2010. Interesting so far, but what else ?

If one looks in to the (english) annual report 2010, the really interesting stuff is hidden in the notes on page 58 which shows the break down of the 2 main segments, industrial gases and “home care”.

It’s relatively easy to see that home care shows ~50% higher margins than industrial gases.

The differences between the two segments become even clearer if on looks at the history of the two segements. I have compiled some ratios for both segments from past annual reports:

2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005
Homecare            
Sales 222 191.2 167.1 150.1 121.9 106.5
Operating profit 31 27.7 24.8 22.8 21.5 14.6
in % 14.0% 14.5% 14.8% 15.2% 17.6% 13.7%
Net assets 157 145 134 118 84 53
Net income 18.3 17.4 17.1 14.4 12.9 6.6
NI margin 8.2% 9.1% 10.2% 9.6% 10.6% 6.2%
ROA 11.7% 12.0% 12.8% 12.2% 15.4% 12.5%
             
Gas            
Sales 331 304 319.5 304 286.7 257.2
operating profit 28.6 22.1 26.7 23.1 13.7 21.5
in % 8.6% 7.3% 8.4% 7.6% 4.8% 8.4%
Net assets 301 289 276 256 269 225
Net Income 20.3 13.8 21.7 12.4 3.6 10.6
NI margin 6.1% 4.5% 6.8% 4.1% 1.3% 4.1%
ROA 6.7% 4.8% 7.9% 4.8% 1.3% 4.7%

Business model:

Industrial gases is a relatively simply business model. One can think of it as a kind of unregulated local utility business model. Technical gases are usually difficult and expensice to transport over longer distances, so competitive advantages exist to a certain extent at a local level. If one operates a industrial gas plant in an indusstrial zone, barriers to entry are one one hand relatively high, as competition has to built a gas plant first. Transport over a longer distance from a gas plant in another country are very difficult to achieve.

On the other hand, pricing power is not unlimited, because if prices get too high in a region, competitors might just built a new gas plant if the margins are high enough. Technologically this is not so difficult, o its mostly a matter of capital and return on capital

Sol SPA seems to have a nice market share (~15%) in the Italian technical gas market. Sol’s profitablity ratios compares pretty well for instance with European market leader Lide AG, which also shows NI margins of between 5-8% and ROCE or ROA of around 6-8%. So a smaller regional player seems to be able to earn similar returns in this business like the undisputed market leader, which is a sign for at least some local competitive advantages in this field.

The much more profitable Home Care business is very interesting in itself. Sol SpA is running this through its subsidiary called “Vivisol“.

They offer different services for home care patients, however the “core service” seems to be the delivery of liquified oxygen to patients who are at home and need respiratory assistance. So this is basically a nice “repeat” business as the liquid oxygen has to be replaced on a weekly or daily basis.

In general, patients with a oxygen deficency need additional oxygen for the rest of their life. For stationary patients, a kind of “oxygen compressor” can be used, however for “mobile” patients, liquid oxygen is the only practicable way of carrying enough oxygen around.

As one can imagine, it is not really an option to order liquid oxygen online at Amazon or Ebay, as on the one hand, certain medical standards have to be fullfilled (inc. licences) and on the other hand liquid oxygen has to be kept at temperatures of -190 degrees celsius. So “disintermediation” through the internet seems to be not a danger.

Vivisol seems to have expanded above the pure liquid oxygen delivery into similar areas like sleep therapy, wound care etc.

As with technical gases, competitive advantages seem to exist on local levels. As it doesn’t make sense to ship around liquid oxygen thousands of kilometers, on a daily or weekly basis to hospitals or home care patients, once a local production capacity and a local distribution system is intstalled, it will be quite difficult for any competitor to enter into this local market.

One could also argue that in contrast to technical gases this creates a sort of network effect if further patients are added within a distribution area.

Competition

Major competitors in both areas are mostly the large Industrial gas players, especially Linde, Air Liquide and Air Products. Howver as discussed before, a dominant position in one market does not automatically generate a big competitive advantage in another area, as the business seems to be highly localized.

I didn’t really find market share data for home care. However in the wake of the recent acquisition of the Air Porducts homecare business by Linde, the following was stated:
e

An industry observer who declined to be named said the acquisition — one of Linde’s biggest since it bought UK-based BOC for 12 billion euros ($15.3 billion) five years ago — would make Linde a strong No. 2 in the homecare business after French group Air Liquide SA (AIRP.PA).

In this German article they say that Linde had 280 mn EUR in home care sales in 2010.

So we don’t know how mach sales Air Liquide has in home care, but I assume that SOL SpA will be either number 3 or 4 on Europe with its ~240 mn EUR home care sales in 2011. So in this niche market they seem to have a quite nice market share which they have built more or less organically.

We have therefore a limited amount of competitors, however the more important point seems to be that it is not so easy to simply enter the market from scratch.

Valuation: Sum of parts

Normally, I could start now with a bottom up DCF analysis. Howver in this case we have a very nice public transaction and we can do a quick (and dirty) sum of parts valuation.

As quoted before, the Air Products business had almost identical size than the Vivisol business (210 mn Sales against 240 mn) and was valued at 590 mn EUR, a whopping 2.8 multiple on sales. Although I have no further info on profitability, this multiple would represent a 2.8*2.40 mn = 672 mn EUR valuation for Vivisol alone. If we deduct a 20% control premium from the purchase, this would give us a non-control value of around 540 mn EUR for Vivisol assuming profitability is close to the Air Products division.

For technical gases, competitors Linde, Air Liquide and Air Products trade at ~9 x EV/EBITDA, so if we apply a 20% discount, a multiple of 7 seems to be reasonable. Based on available 2010 EBITDA for the industrial gases of 70 mn EUR, we would get a EV of 490 mn EUR for the technical gases.

Added together, we would get a theoretical EV of (540+490) = 1.030 mn EV for Sol, compared to actual EV of around 550 mn EUR as of today, which would leave a lot of upside for the company at current valuation levels.

So lets summarize at this point:

+ the business model of Sol SpA looks interesting. Local competitive advantages seem to exist and one part of the busienss seems to be very profitable and growing nicely based on a “repeat business model” including some networ effectss

+ a quick and dirty “sum of part” valuation based on a recent competitor deal shows a significant potential upside

Enough to look further into the company in a follow up post including a more detailed DCF computation and a review of qualitative factors.

Portfolio Performance March 2012 & comments

In March 2012, again the portfolio slightly outperformed with +1.2% against +0.4% for the Benchmark (50% Eurostoxx 50, 30% Dax, 20% MDAX). The outperformance for March was basically created on the last day of March, when there were significant jumps both in Hornbach and Draeger Genußscheine. This might be also the result of some quarter end “window dressing” for Hornbach, Draegerwerke continue to perform well.

YTD, the portfolio is now up +11.7% against +14.9% for the benchmark, since inception (01.01.2011), the protfolio is up +7.2% against -1.0%.

Bench Portfolio Perf BM Perf. Portf. Portf-BM
2010 6394 100      
2011 5509.87 95.95 -13.8% -4.1% 9.8%
           
Jan 12 5972.48 99.27 8.4% 3.5% -4.9%
Feb 12 6275.00 105.90 5.1% 6.7% 1.6%
Mrz 12 6329.66 107.22 0.9% 1.2% 0.4%
 
YTD 12 6329.66 107.22 14.9% 11.7% -3.1%
 
Since inception 6329.66 107.22 -1.0% 7.2% 8.2%

Portfolio activity:

Portfolio activity was relatively limited in March. As posted, Autostarda was sold completely which turned out to be a good decision as the shares dropped a further -20% after I sold them. Tonnelerie was increased to a full position.

So the current portfolio as of MArch 30th looks like the following:

Name Weight
Hornbach Baumarkt 5.3%
Fortum OYJ 5.0%
AS Creation Tapeten 3.7%
BUZZI UNICEM SPA-RSP 5.8%
EVN 2.9%
Walmart 4.0%
WMF VZ 3.8%
Tonnellerie Frere Paris 4.8%
Vetropack 4.8%
Total Produce 5.0%
OMV AG 2.4%
Nestle 2.2%
Piquadro 1.1%
   
Drägerwerk Genüsse D 9.3%
IVG Wandler 2.3%
WESTLB 6.9% 5.6%
DEPFA LT2 2015 3.3%
AIRE 5.5%
HT1 Funding 4.9%
EMAK SPA 5.4%
DJE Real Estate 4.4%
   
   
Short: Kabel Deutschland -2.1%
Short: Green Mountain -1.5%
Short Ishares FTSE MIB -1.0%
Terminverkauf CHF EUR 0.2%
   
Tagesgeldkonto 2% 12.9%
   
Summe 100.0%
   
Value 50.8%
Opportunity 40.7%
Short -4.4%
Cash 12.9%

Further comments & outlook

My biggest position, Draegerwerke Genußschein now approaches the 10% portfolio weight which is usually a threshold where I will take a explicit decision either to hold or to cut down. At the moment I am inclined to hold, as the “catalyst” has brought even more attention to this interesting situation.

The portfolio itself in the moment is very stable, as a lot of the investments are hardly moving at all. Economically, especially WestLB is basically a cash position now. So the “economic” cash portion is now already 18.5% which is a little too high.

In general, it is relatively hard to find “value” in German stocks these days, but in my opinion there are lots of interesting companies in France and the PIIGS, also the UK seems to be becoming more interesting. Of course some of those companies are a lot more risky than “normal” shares so I still think of adding a “basket” of some 1% PIIGS recovery opportunites as well as a “French” basket with some relatively illiquid samll caps.

So as Peter Cundill would say “there is always somthing to do”…..

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