Posts tagged ‘LTD’

Trimming the long-term corporate debt position

15 April, 2010 | Sacha Peter | No Comment

Although not a huge fraction of my portfolio, I have trimmed some of my long-term corporate debt position in Limited Brands 2033 bonds, at a yield to maturity of 7.8%. I will be trimming more if the yield goes down to around 7.6%, and eliminate it entirely if the yield goes down to around 7.4%.

The risk-free rate (US government treasuries) for a 23-year maturity is about 4.5%, so the yield spread of 3.3% is not sufficient compensation in my eyes for the level of risk taken.

Limited Brands is a company that is in excellent shape after the 2008-2009 recession. They have about $2.7 billion in debt, compared to $1.8 billion cash on the balance sheet, and yearly free cash flow of about $900 million. Their “big name” store is Victoria’s Secret and they also operate Bath and Body Works. Although they have excellent prospects looking forward in terms of liquidity and solvency (and they have announced they will be giving out a $323M special dividend and a share buyback program, which is not good for bondholders although it speaks to the financial capability of the company to make such a move), I will lower my exposure to their debt as prices continue to rise and look elsewhere to get a better risk/reward ratio for my capital.

I think there is a good a chance as any of US bond yields rising considerably over the next few years, so this trade is also an adjustment with respect to my macroeconomic view of the world. It does lower the yield of my portfolio, but I am happy to keep the cash. It will stay as cash until such a time where I can determine where to deploy it in an efficient manner. Given what I see out of the markets, I don’t anticipate this will be a quick process.

Limited Brands Reports Q3 results

18 November, 2009 | Sacha Peter | No Comment

I will begin this post by saying I don’t understand the shopping mall experience. Perhaps because of my gender, I just don’t understand why people, usually women, like to “go shopping”.

However, I can understand what goes before my eyes, and that is people shop. I might not understand fashion retail, but I understand the economics of it – something about the marketing works. It gets people to pay more for a product that inherently has very low marginal cost to purchase. The embedded marketing costs, however, are huge.

Earlier this year, I invested in some corporate debt of Limited Brands (NYSE: LTD) – the 2033 series of debentures, which has a coupon of 6.95%. Investors back then assumed that retail was going to get thrown out the window along with the rest of the economy and especially for a discretionary retail shop like Limited Brands (their primary brand name is Victoria’s Secret), droves of people would be not shopping for lingerie. Or will they? According to their last quarterly report, they are on track to bringing in about $500-600M in free cash flow, depending on how the Christmas season works out.

For 35 cents on the dollar, I figured that the debt would be a good buy. It was tough to rationalize how being rewarded 20% interest a year (plus another 4% capital appreciation) under the assumption that Limited Brands would not blow up could lose money. And indeed, it has not lost capital – the same debt is trading for around 71 cents if you shop around carefully. This will still net you 10% a year in coupon payments, and about 1.5% a year capital appreciation compounded over the next 23.8 years.

If you look at their balance sheet, they have about $2.9 billion in debt, covered by $968M in cash, and positive earnings. Although I have no idea whether the retail chain over the next 23.8 years will survive, at least right now it is looking quite good.  The following is the debt maturity schedule from the Q2-2009 SEC filing, which shows they have staggered out their debt financing fairly well:

15. Long-term Debt

The following table provides the Company’s long-term debt balance as of May 2, 2009January 31, 2009 and May 3, 2008:

May 2,
2009
January 31,
2009
May 3,
2008
(in millions)
Term Loan due August 2012. Variable Interest Rate of 5.18% as of May 2, 2009 $ 750 $ 750 $ 750
$700 million, 6.90% Fixed Interest Rate Notes due July 2017, Less Unamortized Discount 698 698 698
$500 million, 5.25% Fixed Interest Rate Notes due November 2014, Less Unamortized Discount 499 499 499
$350 million, 6.95% Fixed Interest Rate Debentures due March 2033, Less Unamortized Discount 350 350 350
$300 million, 7.60% Fixed Interest Rate Notes due July 2037, Less Unamortized Discount 299 299 299
$300 million, 6.125% Fixed Interest Rate Notes due December 2012, Less Unamortized Discount 299 299 299
Credit Facility due January 2010 15
5.30% Mortgage due August 2010 2 2 2
Total 2,897 2,897 2,912
Current Portion of Long-term Debt (7 )
Total Long-term Debt, Net of Current Portion $ 2,897 $ 2,897 $ 2,905

Another similar corporation that is debt-free is Abercrombie and Fitch (NYSE: ANF), which seems to defy everybody’s expectations during recessions by coming back from the financial netherworld to make insane amounts of money. I can see the appeal of Victoria’s Secret – sex sells – but Abercrombie? When walking into the two stores to do some ‘consumer research’, I just don’t understand what keeps these names afloat in the retail fashion world.

However, I can at least invest and make some cash off of it while the going is good. Will I know when it is time to liquidate? Who knows.