Air Canada / Air Transat / Westjet

A tale of market timing…

Air Canada (TSX: AC) was going to buy out Air Transat (TSX: TRZ) for $18/share, but of course COVID-19 hit. They will instead do so for $5/share, and also with shares instead of cash (the details of this were not clear from the press release, but a typical provision is for people to elect to take cash up to a certain aggregate amount and after they will receive cash). The shares option has Air Canada equity valued at a level that is higher than Friday’s closing trading price.

Financially, Transat is not in terrible condition, with a whole bunch of cash and equivalents that are paid in the form of customer deposits (good luck getting those ticket refunds, customers!). They are still bleeding cash by virtue of their revenues going down to nearly nothing, but Air Canada is striking while the iron is hot (or rather, while the Covid craze is hot) and removing a future source of competition. The implied value in international ticket pricing they will gain will probably be a lot higher than the immediate costs of the costs they are paying.

We contrast this with Onex’s acquisition of Westjet, which closed in December 2019 for $31/share in cash (or $5 billion, debt included). Air Canada’s equity took a 3/4 haircut after Covid, and there wouldn’t be much reason to believe that Westjet would have fared any better had they still been public. Onex is a huge entity so their financial solvency is nowhere threatened, but still, they probably took an implied $3 billion haircut if they were to float Westjet to the public again.

This, and also an examination of Cineplex’s proposed takeover (at CAD$34/share), goes to show you that timing is everything.

I don’t buy airlines, nor do I particularly care for the sector as a whole. Almost everything associated with the retail side of commercial aviation is miserable. Other components of the industry have somewhat more promise.

Late Night Finance with Sacha, Episode 7

Late Night Finance with Sacha, Episode 7

Date: Tuesday, October 6
Time: 8:00pm, Pacific Time
Duration: Projected 60 minutes. Could go longer.
Where: Zoom (Registration)

Frequently Asked Questions:

Q: What are you doing?
A: You will get a brief commentary on some other things I did not reflect upon in my quarterly report. I’ll answer some questions from the /r/CanadianInvestor sub-reddit. Finally, I will review potential 2020 year-end tax-loss selling candidates on the TSX.

Q: How do I register?
A: Zoom link is here. I’ll need your city/province or state, and if you have any questions in advance just add it to the “Questions and Comments” part of the form. You’ll instantly receive the login to the Zoom channel.

Q: Are you trying to spam me, try to sell me garbage, etc. if I register?
A: I can hardly manage a mailing list without breaking my own website, what makes you think I will spam you? No, if you register for this, I will not harvest your email or send you any solicitations. Also I am not using this to pump and dump any securities to you, although I will certainly offer opinions on what I see.

Q: Why do I have to register? I just want to be anonymous.
A: I’m curious who you are as well.

Q: If I register and don’t show up, will you be mad at me?
A: No.

Q: Will you (Sacha) be on video (i.e. this isn’t just an audio-only stream)?
A: Yes. You’ll get to see me.

Q: Will I need to be on video?
A: I’d prefer it, and you are more than welcome to be in your pajamas. No judgements!

Q: Can I be a silent participant?
A: Yes.

Q: Is there an archive of the video I can watch later if I can’t make it?
A: No.

Q: Will there be a summary of the video?
A: A short summary will get added to the comments of this posting after the video.

Q: Will there be some other video presentation in the future?
A: Yes.

Entertainment purposes only – Nasdaq

A week ago I posted this speculation:

Today, it’s basically a continuation of this. My guess is that there will be a “flush”, a pretty significant one under that red line, will occur (let’s say to around 9800-9900). Especially in light of the president election dominating the course of the next couple months, prepare for a wild ride!

Again, a caution: this post is purely for entertainment value. My capital is far from these high-flyers that dominate the index (in rank order, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Facebook, Tesla, Google, Nvidia, Adobe, Paypal, Netflix).

Leverage and “assured safety” doesn’t end up well

BMO and its advisors are getting sued by clients. In the article, it claims the advisor in question in 2017 and the first half of 2018 traded on behalf of clients a leveraged short treasury, long preferred share strategy.

Both client groups allege that throughout 2017 and the first half of 2018, Mr. Liu recommended a new investment strategy that “assured safety” of their principal and provided “reasonable” investment returns.

Shortly after, clients allege they were instead placed in a high-risk strategy that involved short-selling bonds – particularly Canadian government bonds – to purchase long positions in preferred shares, many of which had variable rates or rates that reset based on interest rate movement.

According to court documents, Mr. Liu further advised the clients to begin trading on margin – investing using borrowed money – in order to purchase a larger amount of preferred shares. In some instances, clients allege Mr. Liu engaged in this strategy without informing them or seeking their permission.

I’d love to read the court documents.

I’m guessing the pitch was that you could borrow around 1.5-2.0% (short treasuries) and re-invest the proceeds in (relatively high quality rate reset) preferred shares yielding around 5-5.5%. Just throw in some cash and we can leverage this thing 5:1 and earn you a cool 15% return on equity. Sounds great!

Canada’s 5 year bonds in the first half of 2017 spent most of their time around 100-125bps, and the second half around 150-175bps. In the first half of 2018, they were at 200-225bps. So this pair of the trade would have surely lost money, but it would have been more than offset by appreciation of the preferred shares. In fact, during 2017, the trade would have looked really good and I would not be shocked if clients added more money to it:

The second leg of the trade (preferred shares) didn’t do that badly until about the fourth quarter of 2018, where preferred shares lost about 15% of their capital value. The bonds during this time would have appreciated somewhat, but depending on the amount of leverage employed, the trade would have been a significantly losing one. By the third quarter of 2019, the preferred shares would have declined another 10%.

I’m guessing it would have been after the 4th quarter in 2018 that clients came asking why they were seeing negative returns in their accounts. “Oh, don’t worry, these are normal market fluctuations, just look at the yields you’re getting!”. By the time the third quarter in 2019 came along, it looks like client losses would have been another 10% times whatever leverage factor they engaged in.

Back in June 2019 I mused about this, but it looks like others actually engaged in this trade, which is a classic example of leveraged yield chasing! It rarely ends up well unless if you close out the trade when you least want to – when the trade is working.