Circumstances behind forced selling

Something to always keep in mind is that whenever you see a transaction, it represents a price that a buyer and seller agree to. When the price is lower than the previous trade, media and people alike state that “the stock has been sold off”, when more precisely it means that “the price that people are willing to sell it at is lower than those willing to purchase”. The number of shares outstanding after a trade is the same with the exception of a primary offering (a company offering shares directly to the public, which can also come in the form of option exercises or restricted share vesting) or a share buyback.

When can an investor get the lowest price? There are a couple circumstances that come to mind, both which are somewhat intertwined. One is that the sentiment for the underlying company is at a low – sometimes the reasons for this is legitimate (e.g. the business model went bust, such as what we are seeing in the marijuana sector at present), but sometimes the lowering of sentiment is transient – for instance when a poor two or three quarterly earnings results comes but the underlying business is still solid (yet stock traders cannot see the underlying strength). This happens all the time in investing, and one advantage of investors with smaller portfolios is that they can jump in and out of these circumstances.

The second circumstance where an investor will be able to capitalize on a low price is if there is forced selling, but these opportunities are transient. There are several situations where selling can be forced and I will outline them.

a) Index selling. For instance, if a stock is delisted from a major stock index, there will be a point in time where mechanical index funds will be forced to liquidate such stock, causing an increase in supply usually resulting in a lower price. Another variant of this is that the underlying ETF containing the stock is contracting its assets under management and the stock is required to be sold. This is one of the residual fears of passive investing – if ETFs are invested in financial products that are inherently illiquid, it will cause more price volatility. A nimble trader can take advantage of such downswings, although be forewarned there are many algorithmic traders looking exactly for these types of price dislocations – once you see it, it’s likely too late to act on it.

b) Fund policy required liquidations. For instance, if a bond fund is required to hold investment grade bonds, but a rating agency downgrades an issuer’s corporate debt into junk, the bond fund in question will be forced to liquidate the bonds, usually after some grace period to avoid a stampede to the exit. Another example are dividend funds that have a mandate that requires their funds to be invested in dividend-bearing securities – if a company decides to change its capital allocation strategy and cut dividends to zero, I usually wait a little bit before investing because there is usually a period of time where funds try to dump supply of such companies into the market. Another interesting variant we are starting to see is ESG-related divestitures, such as the divestment of fossil fuel companies in funds, or thermal coal divestment.

c) Margin liquidations. During significant market downturns, leverage forces leveraged funds to liquidate, which causes price decreases, which in turn requires them to liquidate more, etc. An extreme example of this were volatility ETF fund liquidations that occurred in February 2018 (thinking about the XIV ETF).

d) Required financing raises. This is where a company is floated on the market because the underlying entity requires capital. Two examples of this are Genworth MI (TSX: MIC) which was performed to raise money for Genworth Financial post-economic crisis, and AltaGas Canada (TSX: ACI) which I already wrote about being one of my worst misses that I did not take a stake in.

Ultimately if you want to capitalize on anything on the above, the supply pressure created by forced selling has to be in sufficient quantity and in a short enough timeframe to occur at a velocity that will create a low price. We saw a lot of this in the 2008-2009 timeframe, and more closer to present, in early 2016 and late 2018. When these forced liquidations occur, being on the opposite side of the trade at the right time can result in significantly excessive returns. As always, timing is important, and doing your research in advance and having a ballpark notion of valuation greatly assists in reducing the fear factor when you see a very ugly stock chart.

In particular, if a company has fundamental strength but is being subject to forced selling (which in itself could be caused by excessively negative sentiment), it can create highly profitable circumstances. Watch out for these situations.

Updates on TSX Traded Debentures list

I have been keeping the TSX traded debentures list actively updated for my own investment purposes and hopefully you find it useful as well. A few mistakes here and there slip into the spreadsheet, and when doing a sweep, there were enough changes to note:

1. Premium Brands first two debentures issues were initially listed as non-convertible, but I noticed that PBH.DB.E was trading at a negative yield to maturity and I was wondering what was going on, and indeed their debentures are all convertible. What had happened was when reading the financial statements it is not entirely clear they were convertible, nor their annual information form, but I had to dredge up the press releases in the 2016 offerings to get the proper conversion prices. Fixed!

2. I completely missed Polaris Infrastructure’s debenture offering (TSX: PIF.DB), which was done in April of 2019 and up-sized in May 2019 to its present $25 million size.

Sweeping the list, many marijuana-related entities’ debt are trading at discounts, but I am not finding any compelling value with anything I see. Perhaps any of my readers see things differently?

Pier 1 Imports

Pier 1 Imports (NYSE: PIR) is a retailer of home furnishings. It’s a stock I check up on once in awhile but never considered buying it.

In a classic case of “do not confuse consumer markets preferences with your own”, almost every time I walk into the place (which is usually once a year to see what sort of junk I do not want in my living room) I walk out thinking to myself how this place exists as an entity. This thought of mine has been for nearly a decade. The company has defied my expectations for quite a long time.

From the 10-K: “During fiscal 2019, the Company sold merchandise imported from many different countries, with approximately 60% of its sales derived from merchandise produced in China, 16% in India and 17% collectively in Vietnam, the United States and Indonesia.”

60% of its sales derived from China? Uh-oh, watch out for those cost of goods sold rising!

It looks like it finally might be happening – their last quarterly result for the November 30, 2019 quarter was very lacklustre. Gross profits were 31% of revenues, but SG&A expenses were 42%, which translated into a $59 million dollar hole for the quarter when factoring in depreciation and interest expenses.

They then came to the realization they need to close down half their stores to cut costs.

On November 4, they also appointed their CFO to replace the old interim CEO. I’m sure the executive suite is having a lot of fun right now.

A year ago, PIR had just over $600 million in the “retained earnings” line item on their balance sheet. That is down to $295 million. Current assets are less than current liabilities, and the company is drawing down its revolving line of credit – currently $96 million is borrowed, and they can take out another $158 million – until April 30, 2021 when a separate term debt facility matures.

So this is clearly a race against time – about 15 months – they need to shut down unprofitable stores, and get to the point where they can start building credit again to extend their credit facilities.

In terms of raw valuation, PIR only has 4.1 million shares outstanding, so when doing the math on their $5 stock price, you’re betting on them simply not Chapter 11-ing themselves out of their situation, which is a very high probability outcome at their current trajectory. Leases and debt commitments have to be honoured, and Chapter 11 must look awfully alluring for management.

Back in the glory days, the year ended February 2016, they generated over a hundred million in free cash flow. In February 2017, it was $72 million. In February 2018 that went down to $13 million. When fashion goes against you, watch out!

I would then make a contrast with the company that used to be known as Restoration Hardware (NYSE: RH) that somehow managed to become a $200 stock because they successfully realized that retail is either about the upper-upper end (just click on their “RH New York” video and contrast with PIR), or the lower end (think Dollarama and Walmart!) and anybody inbetween will get killed, like Pier 1.

Or, you might get lucky with Pier 1 just because the valuation is so cheap at present – sort of like a Francesca’s (Nasdaq: FRAN) when the stock quadrupled after an unexpectedly profitable quarterly report.

Arch Coal

Nothing has been derided in media as being as being more environmentally dirty as coal. The mantra is that coal pollutes (mostly mitigated these days with acid scrubbers and other emission systems in coal plants), causes climate change (everything causes climate change), and is the worst of all fossil fuels (it is if you just flat-out burn it, but otherwise is very useful, and critical for steelmaking, which you can’t do with oil or gas). Renewable energy resources (wind, solar) are considered to be sexy and do not contribute to climate change (never mind the fact that you have a huge capital outlay and maintenance expenses that tend to escalate with the age of the power generator).

One big issue about power generation that most media reporters (and seemingly government policymakers) do not focus on is availability versus raw cost per megawatt. Wind has an intermittent profile that needs to be continually balanced with sources that can be turned on and off with the touch of a dial (in this event, that is “peaker” gas turbines, and also hydroelectricity). Solar is somewhat more predictable (cloud cover weather forecasts are somewhat more reliable than wind schedules), but solar delivers its peak power loads in the middle of the day and tapers off at the times when you generally need it. For example, in California, in the winter solstice, solar maxes out between 830am to 230pm, and in the summer solstice, it maxes out between 730am to 630pm. On a typical summer day, demand peaks at 630pm, and tapers off around 930pm.

As a result, excessive reliance on intermittent power sources on a grid can be detrimental to the overall grid. If you throw in a few wind or solar plants, it is not going to cause ripples in the grid too much, but there is a scale issue – you cannot have too much power generation with intermittent sources before it becomes more expensive to provide energy availability rather than raw capacity. Indeed, when various governments around the planet have attempted to convert more ‘conventional’ base load sources (such as coal and nuclear) and convert them into “renewable” energy, the results have been fairly consistent – you pay a lot more for the power, simply because the renewable power isn’t there when you need it.

Despite what Elon Musk might claim, energy storage technologies are not very efficient dealing with large-scale (gigawatt) operations. The battery powering your iPad or cell phone is great for its purpose, but there are serious scale issues when one has to deliver power at a million times higher magnitude. The best technology available is pumped storage, which comes with a 25% energy hit, but it requires specialized geography to implement. Don’t get me wrong, however – there are smaller scale uses for battery storage (especially on isolated grids with excess base power generation), but it isn’t with large scale power grid delivery.

Large-scale hydro the most valuable of power generation sources – you get loads of power, and most importantly, you get to choose when you have the power. In British Columbia, BC Hydro has made millions of dollars exporting power during the 6pm to 10pm peak time, and then shutting the dams for the rest of the time (and buying midnight energy abroad for a couple cents per kilowatt hour).

We come back to coal, which provides a base load of power. It is a very well understood industry that has existed for centuries, and an energy source that still produces just under 40% of the world’s energy. In North America and Europe, coal is being phased out for aforementioned reasons (it’s “bad and dirty”), but it will still continue being a very prominent source of energy generation. In particular, natural gas has displaced coal because of abundant shale gas, but this may, and likely will change in the future when such natural gas resources become exhausted (and thus less competitive in price).

(Update, January 2, 2020: I’d like to make a clarification here. On most large coal power plants, the output generation can be varied in accordance to the typical trend in power demand in a day, but it cannot be dialed up and down at the speed of wind changes or sudden clouds blocking solar panels!)

Coal can be divided into two categories, thermal coal, which is used primarily for power generation, and coking coal, which is used for the manufacturing of steel. While there exists other methods of steelmaking that do not require (or require less) coking coal, they are not economical at large scales. Coking (metallurgical) coal sells for much higher prices than thermal coal. As there is less of it, it is more expensive to mine, but for most companies it is much more profitable.

The USA and Canada are self-sufficient in coal manufacturing. As a result, there is a huge export market available, especially in Asia (China and India) where there are large expectations of growth, primarily economically driven.

In early 2016, due to pricing and leverage of most companies involved, there was a huge washout of publicly traded coal companies, with many recapitalizations.

In Canada, the largest publicly traded coal manufacturing company, by far, is Teck (TSX: TECK.A / TECK.B). They also have significant copper and zinc operations, but the plurality (just under 50%) of their revenues are from coking coal. Much of the coal they generate is produced for export to Asia through the Westshore Terminals (TSX: WTE) complex, which is a very profitable entity controlled by the Jim Pattison group. (I will leave aside political commentary about how the government finds it acceptable to mine coal and export it for Asia where it will be burned off, when they are so negative on the consumption of any fossil fuels – the lobbyists must be doing good work to keep this obvious divergence in stated policy in the shadows). Notably at the beginning of 2016, Teck crashed down to under $5/share but has since recovered as well as most of the coal industry. Teck’s market cap is CAD$12 billion and financially is in reasonable shape (the $4.2 billion in debt they have is a small amount in relation to their entire operation). In the past two years, they have produced a lot of cash flow, but this has gone up and down like a yo-yo with their underlying commodity markets.

In the USA, there are a few more publicly traded coal entities of relevance (which I will define as having a market cap of greater than US$500 million): ARCH (both types), ARLP (thermal), BTU (both), HCC (coke), SXC (coke). Notably, ARCH and BTU went through Chapter 11 recapitalizations in 2016, which alleviated their balance sheets of billions in debt. HCC effectively originated from a recapitalization in 2015 and became public in 2017. ARLP is a MLP that is currently giving off a distribution yield of about 20%. SXC used to be a MLP and converted. By virtue of not going through Chapter 11, they are in the worst financial shape of the various companies listed here.

Notably, after a huge period of pain (culminating in 2015/2016), all of these companies are making money.

What’s even more interesting is that despite making money, these companies are having huge difficulties raising capital. On September 16, 2019, BTU attempted to refinance its 2022 and 2025 notes with a senior secured debt issue (maturing on 2026) and it was unsuccessful. Perhaps bondholders have sour memories of recapitalizations of past yore! In any other industry this would have been a done deal. BTU, as a result, is forced to de-leverage and stockpile cash to protect itself – they were more confident earlier in 2019 when they executed on a stock buyback, but at around $30/share, this decision looks foolish in retrospect (they are now trading at $9/share).

What this all suggests is that there are higher competitive barriers to entry in the coal industry, at least in the domestic side of the North American market. This is somewhat reminding me of the economic dynamics of airlines, where most of the participants have been flushed out and the last players standing are able to absorb a larger degree of economic profits to be had. I am aware that this analogy is by no means perfect.

I will focus on one of these companies, Arch Coal.

They produce thermal coal in primarily in Wyoming, in the Powder River Basin. They produce coke in West Virginia. By revenues, roughly 40% of revenues is metallurgical coal, 40% of revenues comes from Powder River, and the rest of it elsewhere. Out of all the coal, about half is exported, and out of that half, about half of it is to Europe and half to Asia. In 2019, it was announced that the Powder River Basin assets will be combined with BTU’s Powder River assets in a 33.5/66.5% joint venture which should allow for considerable cost savings. The large new capital project of metallurgical coal is Leer South, which will cost about $360-390 million and be operating at the end of 2021. At $120/ton, this is expected to have a 48 month payback – invested capital has the capacity of making fairly large returns.

The rest of the businesses operate on maintenance capital expenditures, including the thermal coal business, which all generate a lot of cash. In 2017 and 2018, the company generated about $330 million in operating cash minus capital expenditures, which was mostly ploughed back into share buybacks. After emerging with 25 million shares after Chapter 11, their share count currently is 15 million shares (or 40% of the shares have been repurchased off the market). Thus, looking at the chart is a little deceptive as one has to compensate for the rapid amount of shares that were repurchased since 2017:

Arch Coal - Shares Outstanding and Net Debt

Date (ending)Shares O/S (M)Net debt (Cash)MarketCap ($M)
Q1-201725,021(213,141)$1,757
Q2-201724,310(212,072)$1,849
Q3-201722,119(131,796)$1,690
Q4-201721,070(103,313)$1,897
Q1-201820,663(113,840)$1,670
Q2-201819,703(84,794)$1,667
Q3-201818,832(93,901)$1,806
Q4-201817,831(109,751)$1,571
Q1-201916,959(70,471)$1,645
Q2-201916,262(86,754)$1,450
Q3-201915,095(46,778)$1,191

(Market cap at US$70/share at Q3-2019 share levels: $1,057 million).

Putting a long story short, the company trading at its Q1-2017 market capitalization would be worth about $116/share today. On an EV-adjusted basis, $105/share. The gross debt outstanding after Q3-2019 is $305 million, most of which is in a term facility due March 2024 (interest rate Libor plus 275bps). Operating cash flows for the first 9 months of 2019 is $334 million minus $137 million in capital expenditures (net approximately $200 million). This number will likely decrease in the upcoming year as coal prices have softened.

This becomes a bet on a few fronts. One is that the commodity coal retains some sort of pricing power. On a supply basis, this appears to be the case as capital available for the purchase of new mines is limited – new projects are generated from internal cash flows, such as the case of the Leer South project. It does not appear that any thermal coal projects are proceeding forward. On a demand basis, there seems to be a better argument that thermal coal is going the way of the do-do, but I would expect the trajectory to slow down as natural gas inevitably starts to ascend and making that power source less viable, at least in North America. All indications otherwise suggest that coal, especially in East Asia and India, continues to ascend. Although North American producers have shipping constraints to getting product the market, Westshore and Long Beach appear to be viable export points.

Sentiment in the industry is horrible. Everybody believes coal is dying. Few people (unless you know the industry) appreciate the industrial usage of coking coal. University endowments and various funds are feeling public pressure to get rid of anything fossil fuel related or anything relating to climate change out of their portfolios. Since the calendar year is almost over, I would also guess there was a supply dump in December to get these offending companies out of portfolios. Finally, since China is a large buyer of coking coal, the relative instability of trade (and indeed their domestic economy) brings up questions of coking coal demand.

A few years ago ARCH managed to recapitalize its way out of $5 billion in debt, and also managed to retain a significant tax shield ($1,384 million of gross federal net operating losses, $73.3 million of alternative minimum tax credit and $64.5 million of capital loss carryforwards following the bankruptcy). Their cost structure is in the lower quarter of the various players, and should be able to withstand a downturn in commodity pricing.

Even at half the cash generation capacity, they still will be producing a lot of excess cash that they will be dumping into share buybacks – why bother investing in any coal mines when you can just buy your own shares that generate $25/share in operating cash flow for $70? They do give out a 45 cent quarterly dividend, but the net cash for that is insignificant compared to the cash that goes towards buybacks (and indeed is probably designed to get the stock automatically purchased for dividend ETFs).

I bought a few shares at US$70. It is not a large position. I would expect downside in the event of a continued metallurgical coal decline would be around US$50, but upside will be around to US$150-200/share. If the industry starts receiving any hint of love again, multiples will expand from the present 4x to something resembling a more stable and mature industry – perhaps 8x or so. When you add the fact that there were the massive share buybacks, coupled with future earnings power, there’s quite a bit of leverage to be had. It would also not surprise me if a larger mining conglomerate decided to take out the entity. You’re buying a company that has clear capacity to generate about $300 million in cash a year for a billion in enterprise value, and that $300 million figure is if things look worse than they have been in the past 9 months. The thermal coal business will be in decline, but there are precedents in the past for when such businesses are still very profitable (Competition Demystified talks about the leaded gasoline additive market as being an example).

(Some background information on the industry at large – IEA report on Coal, 2019)