Miscellaneous Tidbits for the week

When you have no time to research in the market, forcing trades is a great way of gambling. You might get lucky, but you probably won’t.

The last two weeks has been the most positive in the markets in quite some time. This came to a halt on Friday when the market reacted heavily on some US data concerning jobs and employment, but the new economic paradigm is that human labour is expensive and businesses that attempt to automate all processes to avoid the human element will do better than those that are labour intensive. There are a lot of industries with labour costs that can not be automated (e.g. full service restaurants) and they will continue to become more and more expensive as government continues to raise the cost of labour.

Arctic Glacier (TSX: AG.UN) gave their unitholders the mother of all dilutions when they announced that they will be allowing their convertible debentures to mature into units. While this will allow the company to avoid creditor protection, their market capitalization is currently $12.7 million on a 32.5 cent unit price, versus the $90.6 million of debentures that are to be redeemed. Doing some simple mathematics says that unitholders will be holding 11.7% of the original company. Ouch!

Keep solvent, readers! The broad markets continue to be choppy.

Petrobank / Petrobakken – How to play Petrobank

I noticed that one of the most bullish people on Petrobank (TSX: PBG) / Petrobakken (TSX: PBN) that I know of on the internet has stated they have “Caved to a moment of weakness” and increased the concentration of their PBG holdings to 40% of their equity portfolio. This is as close as you can get in finance to an “all-in” bet without actually going all-in.

I wrote about portfolio concentration in a previous post, and if your portfolio size is a sufficiently small fraction of your annual income, then making concentrated bets is not only acceptable, but ideal.

PBG owns 59% of PBN, so PBG is joined at the hip with PBN’s performance. Indeed, looking at the consolidated financial statements of PBG is quite challenging since one has to mentally sort out what PBN is doing away from the main figures and this takes a bit of work. They do some segmenting in the management discussion and analysis, but the relevant component is that PBG’s business unit does not make any revenues and spent about $54M in Q1 for capital expenditures. Also, when subtracting the market capitalization of PBG’s ownership in PBN, PBG’s price is around $40M. If you believe PBG’s operations have any value at all, it would make PBG the better bet between the two companies.

A very relevant issue for PBG is that they depend on PBN’s dividend stream to provide approximately $100M/year of cash. PBN’s dividend level is at a point where I would expect it to be dropped at some point in the future. PBG also has a mostly untapped $200M line of credit at its disposal and it has the option to selling more of its PBN stake, although I am sure management would not want to press down PBN further from current levels.

A believer in PBG’s operations (but not PBN) would likely be better served by going long PBG and shorting PBN. Calculating the ratio is an exercise in arithmetic: an investor purchasing 100 shares of PBG can offset the PBN ownership by shorting 104 shares of PBN.

Encana – PetroChina deal fallout not that bad

I notice natural gas titan Encana (TSX: ECA) traded a bit lower after they announced that their previously announced joint venture with PetroChina for a shale gas field fell through.

I do not view this as being too adverse an event – Encana’s management has typically been quite long-range viewing and they are dealing with a very difficult situation in the natural gas market, with spot prices currently CAD$4.30ish and typical marginal costs of extraction higher than this. They have frequently stated that they believe the natural gas marketplace is artificially low and the best thing for resource companies with plenty of reserves on the ground is to wait for higher commodity prices before drilling. My guess is that PetroChina’s management had more of a short term focus.

Back in fiscal 2008, spot natural gas went well above $10 and Encana had a banner year on earnings, reporting over $8/share (note the 2008 number is not a direct comparison with the present company because the company split off Cenovus in 2009 which also benefited from $150 crude oil). If we ever see higher natural gas prices, Encana should be well positioned to capitalize. Currently with shale gas drilling there is a huge supply glut in the marketplace.

In 2010 the company earned $2/share on an average spot natural gas price of about $4.25 per mmBtu. Encana at present values appears to be a fairly good “grandmother” type stock that should retain its value even in adverse market conditions. Even in the depths of the 2009 economic crisis (which is generally what I use to gauge maximum downside) the stock did not trade lower than 20% below existing market values.

It is an interesting comparison to look at a company like Microsoft and ask oneself whether it is likely in the medium range future whether licenses for Windows and Office will be more or less valuable a commodity than natural gas.