A few miscellaneous observations

The quarterly earnings cycle is behind us. Here are some quick notes:

1. There is a lot more stress in the exchange-traded debenture market. Many more companies (ones which had dubious histories to start with) are trading well below par value. I’ve also noticed a lack of new issues over the past six months (compared to the previous 12 months) and issues that are approaching imminent maturity are not getting rolled over – clearly unsecured credit in this domain is tightening. There’s a few entities on the list which clearly are on the “anytime expect the CCAA announcement” list.

Despite this increasing stress in the exchange traded debenture space, when carefully examining the list, I do not find anything too compelling at present.

2. Commodity-land is no longer a one-way trade, or perhaps “costs matter”. I look at companies like Pipestone Energy (TSX: PIPE) and how they got hammered 20% after their quarterly release. Also many gold mining companies are having huge struggles with keeping capital costs under control. Even majors like Teck are having over-runs on their developments, but this especially affects junior companies that have significantly less pools of financial resources to work with (e.g. Copper Mountain).

3. This is why smaller capitalization commodity companies are disproportionately risky at this point in the market cycle – we are well beyond the point where throwing money at the entire space will yield returns. As a result, larger, established players are likely the sweet spot on the efficient frontier for capital and I am positioned accordingly. I note that Cenovus (TSX: CVE) appears to have a very well regulated capital return policy, namely that I noticed that they suspended their share buybacks above CAD$25/share. The cash they do not spend on the buyback will get dumped to shareholders in the form of a variable dividend. While they did not explicitly state that CAD$25 is their price threshold, it is very apparent to me their buyback is price-sensitive. This is great capital management as most managements I see, when they perform share buybacks, are price insensitive!

4. Last week on Thursday, the Nasdaq had a huge up-day, going up about 7.3% for the day. The amount of negative sentiment baked into the market over the past couple months has been extreme, and it should be noted that upward volatility in bear markets can be extreme. This is quite common – the process is almost ecological in nature to flush out negative sentiment in the market – stress gets added on to put buyers and short sellers and their conviction is tested. Simply put, when the sentiment supports one side of a trade, it creates a vacuum on the other side and when there is a trigger point, it is like the water coming out of a dam that has burst and last Thursday resembled one of these days. In the short-term it will look like that the markets are recovering and we are entering into some sort of trading range, but always keep in mind that the overall monetary policy environment is not supportive and continues to be like a vice that tightens harder and harder on asset values – and demands a relatively higher return on capital.

I suspect we are nowhere close to being finished to this liquidity purge and hence remain very cautiously positioned. My previous posting about how to survive a high interest rate environment is still salient.

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While they did not explicitly state that CAD$25 is their price threshold, it is very apparent to me their buyback is price-sensitive. This is great capital management as most managements I see, when they perform share buybacks, are price insensitive!”

CVE’s latest financials indicate book value is just over $14/share. A large chunk of book value is the value of their resources, which is marked to strip pricing shown in their AIF. Major moves in prices from there will move book up or down, depending.

I think it is dubious to buy commodity companies at prices above book value. There is some cognitive dissonance in doing so since the present value of future reserves is already reflected in book value. Therefore, paying more than book implies that the buyer thinks that the company’s own valuation of future profits is too conservative. This applies to buy backs.

Any commodity company buying back its own shares above book is probably destroying shareholder value.

Great answer Sacha.