Atlantic Power – good quarter

Other than Atlantic Power’s (TSX: ATP) Cadillac biomass plant blowing up on September 22, 2019 (see my writeup here), it was a very good quarter for the company.

The quantification of the Cadillac power plant situation is the big news of the quarter. Most notable is that while this incident took the stock price down about 25 cents per share (my worst estimate was 39 cents per share, present value, for a complete write-off of the whole project permanently), the actual impact has been quantified by management as approximately $3 million as insurance will pick up the reconstruction bill in excess of a $1 million deductible and business interruption will cover the cash flow shortfall at an expense of 45 days deductible. Dividing this by 109 million shares outstanding gives an estimate of about 3 cents per share of damage that this accident caused.

It’s pretty obvious since playing defence since 2015 (which consisted of a major de-leveraging and expense reduction campaign by new management), they have been making smaller acquisitions here and there that will likely contribute to 15%+ returns on investment. In Williams Lake, BC, the company struck a 10 year deal with BC Hydro to operate their biomass plant in non-peak snowmelt season. While management has not quantified the exact impact on the financial returns on this (citing procurement of fuel costs and other competitive aspects) reading between the lines it appears this will contribute reasonably well to the bottom line after some initial start-up costs.

As the company has been busy using discretionary capital to fund future 15%+ acquisitions, they have been lighter on share repurchases. There has been a nanoscopic amount of share buyback activity (2,067 shares) at US$2.27/share, while they bought back 12,000 preferred shares (AZP.PR.B) which continues to chip away at the cash burn from those financial instruments. The company still has $24 million in discretionary cash – if they choose to do nothing, this will continue to build while the debt gets paid off.

Eventually the equity market will start to ramp up the share price to reflect this. I don’t know whether it will be tomorrow, next month, or next year, but the 5 year stock chart is very deceptive and not a reflection of where the stock should be (which is higher than the prices in the past 5 years). Yield investors can also do well by buying the preferred shares, but why settle for a volatile 8% yield when you can get a probable 50% in the next couple years on the equity?

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Really enjoy reading your posts. You should take a look at Tidewater Midstream (TWM:TO) if you haven’t already.

I wonder, if they might be interested in buying Biomass Plant from Conifex: https://www.conifex.com/main/bioenergy/conifex-power/
Conifex is primary in forest business and kind of struggling right now.
Might be beneficial for both companies.

Considering your interest in ATP, have you looked at all at Polaris Infrastructure (PIF)?

They have diversified into Peru and are working on building out their resources in that country. That would explain the increased leverage.
As far as the geopolitical risk I believe it is overdone. Yes, Nicaragua is not the greatest place (risk wise) but it is in the best interest of the people and the ruling party that their renewable energy resource keeps running. With the involvement of the World Bank and other global lenders Daniel Ortega would be shooting himself in the foot by trying to nationalize this resource.
Without the perceived geopolitical risk this would be a $20 plus stock.

Hi Sacha
On your last 3 posts I’ve tried signing up for comment notification (subscribe without commenting) As in the past after leaving my email address I get

“Thank you for using our subscription service. In order to confirm your request, please check your email for the verification message and follow the instructions.”

The verification message(s) have not been forthcoming??

I’ve sent you a private reply, but for the benefit of anybody else using this, apparently emails are not being sent to external servers. I’ve tried to fix it on my own but couldn’t. We’ll see if my webhost has any better luck.

“why settle for a volatile 8% yield when you can get a probable 50% in the next couple years on the equity?”

Great coverage of ATP as usual Sacha. In answer to your question above, consider the following. The spread (yield above the GoC 5 year) demanded by the market at reset (on December 31st) for the B series (AZP.PR.B) is 6.4%. As the market begins to reflect the improvements in the company that will lead to a higher common share price, so will the market reflect improved credit metrics for the company. This ought to lead to a lower spread. If the spread drops to 5.0% coincidentally with your SP spike, the B’s will be priced 35% higher than Friday.

So an answer to “why?” is that we can earn 7.9% (after reset in December for the next five years based on Friday’s price) while we wait for a 35% lift (or better if the spread falls further) that ought to accompany an increase in the price of the commons. The downside protection if we are terribly wrong about ATP is also better and the cash along the way is very nice if this process takes far longer than we hope.

I’d go even one step further and suggest that in increase in the common share price will be predicted by downward movement in the spreads of the preferreds – i.e. the prefs will reflect better conditions first.

Sacha,

Do you think they will leave the AZP.PR.A (and other pref) outstanding or offer less than par if they accept a takeover bid?

If there is a par offer, it’s a pretty big premium to the recent price of AZP.PR.A plus the dividend of course but perhaps some higher risk of disappointment.

I appreciate that, I just was wondering what you thought they would do. The BOD would know they are leaving pref shareholders in a poor position if they were to sell to private equity without getting a tender offer for the preferred. The could come with an offer below par like with the recent Rona transaction.

Safety – a quick scan of today’s INK Insider report for ATP reveals that only Gilbert Samuel Palter (a Director) owns any preferred shares and not many at that. So we can possibly infer that insiders don’t give much of a hoot about preferred shareholders, except of course for their general fiduciary duty to them.

My working assumption is that they would live on after an acquisition. If the acquiring entity has a higher credit rating, the market price would go up. Retirement/extinguishment of the preferred shares would then be at the unknowable pace/discretion of the new owner.

I think if PE buys it, the prefs are going to remain (check out CSE A, whose common got taken out by PE around the same time as Rona)
I remember the reason Rona prefs got taken out is that Lowes didn’t want any Canadian reporting obligations.

Gil can be very persuasive