Some history – last year, Yellow Pages announced a $100 million share buyback at a set price and shareholders almost unanimously agreed to a pro-rata buyback at $12.58 per share. They bought back 7,949,125 shares and at June 30 they had 26,607,424 shares outstanding. I wrote a little about it here.
Fast forward to today, and we have the following announcement:
Yellow Pages Limited (TSX: Y) (the “Company”), a leading Canadian digital media and marketing company, today announced that the Board has approved a distribution to the Company’s shareholders (the “Shareholders”) of approximately $50 million by way of a share repurchase from all shareholders pursuant to a statutory arrangement under the Business Corporations Act ( British Columbia ). The arrangement will be effected pursuant to a plan of arrangement (the “Arrangement”) which provides that the Company will repurchase from Shareholders pro rata an aggregate of 4,440,497 common shares at a purchase price of $11.26 per share, which represents the volume weighted average price for the five consecutive trading days ending the trading day immediately prior to October 19, 2023.
Yellow has 18,658,347 shares outstanding as of June 30, 2023, so this share buyback will result in a reduction of 23.8% of shares outstanding and bring them to about 14.2 million shares. At June 30, 2023 they had $64 million of cash on the balance sheet.
In the past four quarters, they have been able to generate $90 million in adjusted EBITDA, or about 1.6 times EV/EBITDA. The ITDA is about $10 million and the large cash drain has been the maintenance of the corporate pension plan which is still listed as a $37 million net liability, but this is slowly getting rectified.
Here is the really interesting proposition – the dividend is currently a $3.55 million quarterly cash outflow. The company is easily generating enough cash to cover the dividend. After the buyback is concluded, the 20 cent quarterly dividend could be raised to 26 cents per share and be cash neutral. At 26 cents per share, the company trades at a 9.2% yield. This is going to be difficult for algorithmic traders to avoid especially considering that the “melting ice cube” business is not melting nearly as quickly as one would expect, considering it is the Yellow Pages, after all.
If Yellow manages to generate another $80 million adjusted EBITDA over the next four quarters (this is not a given – my own model has them closer to $75), about $55 million of that will be pure cash flow and they’d be able to repeat this same maneuver again in 2024. If their stock price doesn’t move from there, another $50 million buyback would render the dividend yield at 13% – would the market be able to resist?
The funny thing is that there is a low enough price that one would actually want to purchase more Yellow Pages. Good luck, however – it takes about 2,000 shares of trading to move the stock price 70 cents per share!
I have had countless amusement and bewilderment, not to mention immediately dismissive and credibility-destroying reactions when telling people this is my longest lasting investment currently in my portfolio. For good memories, read my coming out of the Yellow Pages closet here.
Sacha,
What’s the implication of their re-purchase for the shareholders? Is it the dreaded scenario where it is a deemed dividend or it counts as a sale?
It is a bit of both. From last year’s buyback from the management information circular:
So assuming the paid up capital is still the same amount, somebody owning 10,000 shares of Yellow on a 23.8% reduction would have a deemed dividend of 2380 * (11.26-6.36) = $11,662 and a capital gain/loss on a sale price of $6.36/share.
Sacha,
Just want to clarify, when you mention 1.6times EV. Do you mean EV/EBIDTA = 1.6?
Thanks.
Yeah, this is correct, I corrected the article, thanks.