Rogers Sugar – Example of diversification not going well for shareholders

When a company dominates its product or service space, it has two choices – either stick with it and be very vigilant to ensure that whatever competitive moat you have continues to exist, or start to expand and diversify.

In many cases, expansion and diversification can end up consuming far more money and mental capital of management than otherwise warranted.

Rogers Sugar (TSX: RSI) is a good case example. By virtue of trade protection, the refined sugar domain in Canada is dominated by Rogers (and its other label, Lantic). The only Canadian competitor is Redpath Sugar (privately held and ironically owned by American Sugar Refining), which is a distant second in terms of volumes sold, and geographical presence (their operations are mainly around the Toronto area, while Rogers has a presence across most of Canada).

I have been tracking Rogers Sugar for well over a decade. In fact, at one point (during the economic crisis) it was my largest portfolio position since their units (back then they were an income trust) were trading at such a ridiculously low level given their rock-solid business. I still follow it and would love to get back in at the right price.

In 2017, Rogers decided to purchase a maple producer (L.B. Maple Treat Corporation – located in Quebec and Vermont) for $160 million, paid with a mixture of cash raised in equity ($69 million raised at $5.90/share) and debt. Later in the same year, they purchased a bottler and maple producer, Decacer (also located in Quebec), for another $40 million (paid by the credit facility). Subsequent to the acquisitions there has been further capital investment in the maple unit, but for the purposes of this post I will ignore these expenditures.

It is nearly two years later, and Rogers is still having difficulty with their maple acquisitions. Was this the correct decision?

The sugar industry in Canada can be described as very mature. Rogers can generate about $80 million a year of EBITDA with the sugar segment, and this is stable. It takes approximately $20 million a year in capital investment ($17 million in FY2017, $23 million in FY2018) to sustain this, so sugar is a cash machine in Canada. There is a very high barrier to entry in the marketplace given the total size of the market. The sugar market only grows in relation to the population size. There are substitutes available (high fructose corn syrup) that keep a lid on prices for industrial customers.

A $60 million a year cash stream ($80 million EBITDA minus $20 million CapEx) is approximately $44 million after taxes. Since the sugar business is so bond-like, an unlevered firm in today’s interest rate environment would probably go for a 7-8% perpetual discount, or approximately $580 million (at 7.5%). Indeed, one can make an argument that the sugar industry deserves an even lower discount when looking at comparators such as Keg Royalties Income Trust (TSX: KEG.UN – with 6.8% at a 100% payout ratio) or the grossly over-valued A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund (TSX: AW.UN – a ridiculous 3.4%!). Both of these entities have nowhere close to the competitive moat that Rogers Sugar has.

Rogers is capitalized entirely by debt financing – tangible book value is negative $19 million, and total debt is $362 million (face value) consisting of secured bank loans and unsecured convertible debentures (TSX: RSI.DB.E and RSI.DB.F) for low rates of interest (the debentures are roughly at 5% and the credit facility is at LIBOR plus 20 to 200bps depending on financial ratios – blended interest expense, ignoring financing costs is 3.6%).

Completely ignoring Rogers’ sugar adventures into maple syrup, the debt completely self-sustains the entire company for a cost of $13 million a year. Even if interest rates doubled, the sugar entity would be very profitable.

As such, the enterprise value of Rogers is about a billion dollars. The equity pays a 36 cent/share dividend or about a 6.4% dividend yield – not too bad given some comparators above.

After the close of August 1, 2019, they released their 3rd quarter results. It is quite apparent that as of right now, their expansion in Maple has yielded sub-par results.

In fiscal year 2018 (the first full fiscal year after the maple acquisitions), the adjusted EBITDA on maple was $18.6 million – and depreciation was about $5 million and $1.9 million in “non-recurring” costs, but we will ignore the latter costs for the sake of argument. After taxes, this is approximately $10 million a year – or 5% on the original $200 million invested in 2017. Definitely a worse outcome than what is going on in sugar – and barely enough to keep up with the cost of capital it paid.

One might be able to understand that in the first full year after an acquisition there will be growing pains before things get “back to expected”, but this is not happening as of the 3rd quarter of 2019.

For the first 9 months of the June 2018 reporting period, the maple division had adjusted EBITDA of $13.9 million, while the same period in 2019 was $12.1 million, or a 13% decline. Management now expects a $16 million adjusted EBITDA result for the full fiscal year and additional capital expenditures to increase the efficiency of the maple operation. The cited reason for the decline in profitability is “heightened competitiveness in the marketplace and, to a lesser extent, some operational inefficiencies related to the plant footprint optimization.”

It does not take a CFA to figure out that the maple acquisition is turning out to be a negative decision for the company, given how much was actually paid.

Despite the fact that the decision to get into the maple market had logic to it (sugar and maple syrup are both sweeteners; the company has its major operating headquarters in Quebec and some French-speaking executives; the company has vast experience in manufacturing and distribution of food products; etc.) – the capital invested is clearly earning a sub-par return, despite the company’s operational expertise.

This is a pretty good lesson that moving from a competition-protected domain (sugar) into a business that has less protection (maple syrup), no matter how similar, conducted at the wrong price will end up destroying shareholder value. I am guessing the board, management and public shareholders didn’t see this one coming.

I expect the stock to trade lower on August 2, 2019.

Genworth MI Q2-2019 – surprisingly good quarter

Genworth MI (TSX: MIC) yesterday announced their quarterly results. If there was one figure in the report that was surprising, it was the following:

I do not think many people would have expected year/year quarterly growth in transactional premiums growing. This is a fairly strong result, and would suggest that Q3-2019’s number will also be up around 10-12%. In the MD&A, it is cited that it is “primarily due to a modestly larger transactional mortgage originations market”.

With a combined ratio (loss ratio plus expense ratio) of 35%, Genworth MI makes 65% pre-tax margins on their written premiums – assuming that residential real estate market conditions don’t change.

With interest rates now being held low by central banks, this is a reasonable proposition.

The number of delinquencies also remains relatively steady, down to 1,701 from 1,760’s previous quarter – which is white noise given the 2.17 million units of real estate they have on the insurance books.

For Genworth MI, the good news has gotten even better. I thought this would be a story of ‘steady as she goes’, but things are surprisingly good. This probably is the reason why the stock is up some 7% at present.

However, all of this is overshadowed by parent Genworth Financial (NYSE: GNW) which is now actively trying to unload their 57% stake in the Genworth MI subsidiary. My original post speculated that they’d not get more than $50 from a transaction, but given today, I’ll shade this higher to around $55/share.

Kinder Morgan Canada / Q2-2019

Skimming the Q2-2019 financial results of Kinder Morgan Canada (TSX: KML) –

Entity is 30% owned by the public (roughly 35 million shares outstanding) while Kinder Morgan (USA) owns roughly 81 million shares.

Because the public only owns 30% of the operating entity, even if the company reports $10 million in earnings, the public effectively receives $3 million. The $7 million is a “minority” interest (of course, this is no longer a minority!).

When looking at the first half of the year, we have the following (and I have highlighted the relevant area in a box).

The entity is pleasantly profitable – $43 million in net income for the first half.

However, the preferred shareholders (entirely held by the public) get the first slice of income. Their take is $14.4 million. This leaves $28.5 million for the entire entity. Kinder Morgan’s slice is $19.9 million. This leaves $8.6 million left for the 34.9 million shares that are publicly trading on the TSX – about 24 cents per share for the half.

Do some quick math – 48 cents a year for a stock now trading at CAD$12, which is a net return of 4%. It’s obvious this isn’t strictly about income, there is some pricing potential in the assets.

The preferred shares are at around 5.6%, and also get priority when KML finds a buyer at an acceptable price for their Canadian assets. The CAD$550 million is a drag on KML’s balance sheet, but they are virtually first-in line (as KML got rid of most of their debt after the Trans Mountain Pipeline sale).

For the most part, the income stream is stable. There will be some reductions in 2020, but otherwise they will easily cover the preferred shares.

I bought some preferred shares in early June as a cash parking vehicle. This is a very low risk, low reward type situation where you can watch paint dry for a maximum upside of par – and in the meantime, you can clip your coupons.

Ray Dalio / Paradigm Shifts / Gold

Ray Dalio doesn’t need much description, but his latest post (which can generally be summarized as: the party is changing tone, buy gold) gives one consideration.

Why just gold?

In theory, if dollar devaluation is the name of the game, then I would think that any natural resources that have future demand would be eligible for consideration – especially since most of these companies (thinking fossil fuels) have huge debt loads. The debt becomes cheaper due to the dilution of underlying currency, and the underlying commodity becomes more valuable in nominal terms.

The post would also suggest that the low rate environment will continue and asset prices will continue to be pushed higher (and yields lower) – hence, if cash is trash, leveraging via margin would be opportunistic (one could have made this argument right after the economic crisis as well).

I would also think firms with in-demand fixed infrastructure (e.g. wireless telecoms) will reasonably retain value in such an environment.

Interactive Brokers – Sports Betting

Interactive Brokers (IEX: IBKR), in terms of their competitive positioning, has always been a cut above the mainstream retail brokerages. Their advantage in technology and automation (which results in significantly reduced costs) has been whittled away over the past decade by competition (indeed, commission-free trading has enabled most retail brokerages to rip off their customers on execution slippage yet give the appearance of cheapness), but they continue to find ways to experiment with new ways of finding new markets.

One is broaching the connection between sports betting and securities trading – there are characteristics in common with both branches.

A press release on July 1st announces that IB has a sports exchange where people can trade (imaginary money) futures on sport event outcomes.

“We expect this promotion to attract customers who may be new to the Interactive Brokers platform, and who are more familiar with spectator sports than they are with the financial markets,” said Thomas Peterffy, Chairman of Interactive Brokers.

“Our intention is to teach people about the probabilistic nature of markets, trading and investing. We are illustrating this by our Simulated Sports Betting Exchange where each winning bet pays 100. A player who assesses a team’s chances to win at, say 40% may want to buy a bet at less than 40 or sell it at more than 40. As more information emerges and as the event gets under way, these odds will change and the price of the bet will begin to fluctuate, similar to the price of a stock,” Peterffy said.

“By partaking in this promotion, our players will learn about our platform, how to trade and make investments and how to keep track of their finances, all while being entertained. We are betting that many of these participants will also try our free demo brokerage account and that eventually many will become Interactive Brokers’ clients,” he added.

People that are successful in the virtual sports betting will be able to receive an IB account with up to $1,000 in commission credits (first million people to do that). They are given a virtual account of USD$1,000 in currency, and if they accumulate USD$1,000 in virtual profits they can use that to offset commissions in a future IB account.

It is a fascinating promotion, to say the least. I’d expect nothing less from IB.

I don’t do sports betting but I can easily see the connection between the two.