Somewhat disappointed by Enbridge buyout offer

I’ve been writing about Enbridge (NYSE: ENB) and their process of re-acquiring their daughter entities, including EEP, EEQ and ENF. They already formalized the arrangement with Spectra Energy Partners (NYSE: SEP), which I wrote about earlier.

For EEP, I was anticipating a slightly higher exchange ratio (0.35 vs. the 0.335 offered).

I own call options in EEP. Valuation-wise they should trade like call options in Enbridge, with a minor dividend differential (EEP will declare one more $0.35 distribution for the quarter which option holders will effectively receive by virtue of the exchange arrangement, which will be offset by Enbridge’s quarterly dividend).

Enbridge is getting a steal of a deal on EEP – once the Line 3 expansion project becomes operational (scheduled for 2019 and unlike Trans-Mountain, the regulatory way has already been cleared for construction), the amount of cash flows available will be even more immense than the existing $6.6 billion/year they are currently doing (just eyeballing their June 30, 2018 financial statements). Once stripped of all the politics and drama of pipeline construction, it is a pretty boring company to analyze, but one that is a reasonably valued blue chip component in anybody’s portfolio. The fact that there is so much protection in the industry will assist, in addition to them being able to raise rates at the rate of inflation, while paying down their debt in nominal dollars.

Enbridge is also the type of company that would be able to survive an economic recession – as long as the oil flows. And oil will be flowing for a very long time.

I’m holding onto my call options in EEP. They expire in 2019 so I am in no rush to liquidate the position – as ENB appreciates (and it will), the call option position will also reflect this. I can see ENB heading to around CAD$48-50/share by the end of the year which would put EEP at around $12.60 with a 0.77 CAD/USD. Once I’ve squeezed another dollar out of the position I’ll probably sell the options.

Spectra Energy Partners / Enbridge

Enbridge has sweetened its offer for Spectra Energy Partners (NYSE: SEP) from the initially proposed 1.0123 shares of Enbridge per SEP to 1.1 shares of Enbridge (a 9.8% increase).

Enbridge common shares are down 2% as a result, but SEP is up 3% as a result of the increased consideration. It appears the market baked in about half of the expected appreciation over the prevailing 1.0123 share ratio:

A factor quoted in the press release was the July 18, 2018 FERC Order – and you can also see this implied increase in value on the SEP:ENB chart above.

I will note that this is a fait accompli as the salient sentence in the press release is the following:

As the majority SEP unitholder (83% of total SEP common units outstanding), Enbridge’s approval by consent will constitute the requisite SEP unitholder vote required to approve the transaction.

Unitholders were more or less in it for the ride and short of a minority shareholder oppression lawsuit, it was going to get done at any “reasonable” price.

What is interesting is that Enbridge is concurrently attempting to consolidate its other master limited partnership, Enbridge Enterprise Partners (NYSE: EEP) and related entity (NYSE: EEQ). I have written about EEP in a previous analysis.

An argument by analogy (not air-tight by any means but does have merit) is that if SEP receives a 10% boost in consideration, EEP should be receiving the same, especially considering that EEP, in addition to the July 18, 2018 FERC ruling order, has under its belt a major positive ruling with the Line 3 expansion in Minnesota – one that was received after the initial proposal of 0.3083 shares of ENB per EEP unit. The other factor is that EEP unitholder approval is not guaranteed – EEP requires 2/3rds unitholder approval and Enbridge controls about a third of the vote.

A lot of Canadians are also invested in Enbridge Income Fund (TSX: ENF) which is also affected by this. However, Enbridge has an 82% interest in ENF so they will have to take whatever they are offered, within reason. ENF also does not have the benefit of having the July 18, 2018 partial reversal of the FERC ruling as it is mostly about Canadian operations (where the FERC doesn’t apply). I do not believe ENF holders that are waiting for a boost in the exchange ratio will end up with a happy outcome. Right now ENF:ENB is trading at 0.732 while the proposed exchange ratio was 0.7029.

My general expectation is that EEP unitholders will be offered 0.35 shares of Enbridge, or about a 14% boost-up from the existing offer. As Enbridge is likely to shade down in price as a result of the increased consideration for merging, I would expect the EEP price upon transaction announcement to settle around the $12.10 range. This is a relatively thin value play. I had a not inconsiderable amount of call options on EEP after the initial FERC announcement, but I added slightly to my position today – the downside risk is quite limited.

Enbridge Enterprise Partners MLP

Enbridge Enterprise Partners (NYSE: EEP) is an MLP that owns two oil pipelines – The Lakehead Pipeline system (primarily Line 3), which connects the Northern USA (via a Canadian pipeline) to Chicago/Sarnia, ON and a partial ownership in a smaller feeder pipeline that connects the North Dakota Bakken shale to the aforementioned line. Strategically it is a very important pipeline for Canadian oil distribution. They also own a storage facility. EEP is controlled by Enbridge (as general partner), and Enbridge owns (through a moderately convoluted structure) about a 1/3rd economic ownership in EEP. They did a restructuring of the partnership in 2017, and the new structure gave the GP 13% of distributions above $0.295/quarter to $0.35/quarter and 23% above this in the form of Class F units. The GP receives a flat rate of 2%. The current distribution is $0.35/quarter.

When reading the chart below, it is instructive that EEP reduced distributions from $0.583/quarter to $0.35/quarter on April 28, 2017. The big drop in January 2017 was the announcement that initiated the strategic review. Before this point, EEP was trading at about a 11% distribution yield and after the April 28, 2017 announcement it was trading at about 9% (incorporating the reduced distribution). These yields should be taken into context of a flat-growth entity.

EEP was a dumping ground for some US-based assets for Enbridge and a logical candidate for the MLP structure. This has become less “politically correct” in the financial realm as now the US has enacted a significant corporate tax decrease and also the FERC rulings that I have been writing about earlier.

The large risk for EEP was the approval of its aging Line 3 pipeline in the state of Minnesota. It is an aging pipeline and without state approval to replace it, EEP would have been in serious trouble especially considering the existing line runs across a (hostile to Enbridge) US Native Indian Reservation on a land-lease that expires in 10 years. The new proposed pipeline skirts the reservations. The big hurdle for this pipeline was cleared on June 28, 2018, which the market was pricing considerable risk due to the obvious politics of pipelines and also an administrative judge’s ruling that the pipeline should be replaced along its present route rather than what the company proposed (and Enbridge should be quite relieved that the Minnesota Utilities Commission rejected that ruling when making their decision).

That said, after the initial March FERC ruling, EEP units have crashed even further than its previous valuations. They were as low as $8.50/unit (or about 16% yield on distribution) but now are trading at a more reasonable 12.5% yield on distribution.

I will point out that retail MLP investors are typically focused on distributions and not total return. MLPs that retain earnings in excess of distributions are effectively passing on that extra retained income to their unitholders – i.e. unitholders pay income taxes on that income, but they do not see the cash from the investment (unless if they sell units in the market). This is not dissimilar from dividend equity investors – if the company retains earnings instead of issuing dividends, the shareholder in theory can “create” a dividend for him/her self by just selling the appreciated stock and nobody is for the worse if you ignore taxes.

On May 18, 2018, EEP announced they received a proposal from ENB to take over EEP for 0.3083 shares per unit of EEP. The announcement was made on the morning of May 17, 2018 by ENB. They are trying to take the Line 3 system for a much cheaper valuation than it has been trading at historically. Looking at the existing trend of trading since then, we have the following ratio of ENB to EEP:

What’s interesting here is that one would think that the internal valuation of EEP is higher after the Line 3 approval. Most certainly if Line 3 was rejected ENB would likely get their desired 0.3083 ratio. The market is slightly speculating that ENB will sweeten – currently the ratio is 0.315, or about a 2-3% sweetening. This doesn’t sound like too much.

The question is now speculation on whether ENB will sweeten the offer as they need to receive at least 2/3rds approval of the partnership in order for the vote to proceed. Since ENB already has a third of the vote, they still need to convince a significant minority that the offer is worthwhile.

Valuation-wise, EEP generated $616 million cash through operations in the first half of the year and spent $333 million in capital expenditures. Distributions totaled $260 million. This can be annualized to roughly approximation of the going-rate for the existing entity (the Line 3 approval will allow for more oil to flow thorugh the pipeline starting 2019 and hence would improve financial results considerably – ENB knows this and wants to take EEP out before this will happen). Units outstanding was 428 million, hence the entity is producing about $2.90/unit in cash or roughly less than 4x operating cash flow. Accounting-wise this is a somewhat misleading positive story because of the non-controlling interests involved in the parent entity’s balance sheet. I will spare the reader the agony of the technical details of what “non-controlling interest” is, but just say that represents the amount that EEP has consolidated on its own books, but is not owned by EEP. This stems from the funding structures how ENB has provided financing to EEP to construct these various projects.

EBITDA on their liquids business for the first half of the year was $793 million. Since the “I” in EBITDA is significant, it should be noted that most of roughly $7.5 billion in debt is financed through various bond offerings with medium to long term duration, plus a term loan facility that is backed by Enbridge. (Note 13 of their last 10-K contains a handy table).

Balance-sheet wise, EEP has net equity of approximately $16/unit, mainly consisting of pipeline construction costs. EEP has agreements with ENB concerning the financing and EEP does have very good access to credit. There is no distress situation at play financially.

Another negative was that the revised FERC ruling will take EEP’s cash down about $90 million on an annualized basis.

The speculation here is that ENB is underpaying for EEP, especially considering that Line 3 revenues are going to be much higher after it is expected to be operating in 2H-2019. Just on distributions alone EEP is trading at 12.5% yield, but there is a lot more potential in the MLP post-Line 3 construction. It is no wonder why Enbridge wants to take EEP over right now.

Back to the valuation, if EEP was to trade at 11% of distributions, they would be priced at $12.70/unit. The level of distributions, however, is an artificial construct. More accurately, it should be judged on the basis of future cash available for distribution. Management has significant discretion to “create” this number (retaining capital for construction, etc.) but the published number for the first half was $325 million (noting actual distributions were $260 million for the same time period). Annualizing this and subtracting $90 million for FERC, if EEP were to trade at 11%, this is a $11.90 valuation. This does not factor in future gains in cash after the new Line 3 becomes operative – i.e. if the MLP is actually a growing entity, it should deserve a higher valuation.

The question then becomes – how desperate is ENB willing to fold everything back into the parent entity, and how willing are EEP investors willing to play a game of financial chicken with their general partner?

On balance, the 0.3083 ratio probably represents a floor and not a ceiling. The offer was made during the depths of the Line 3 regulatory approval uncertainty and having this lifted will probably mean ENB has to pay up a little further to get it done – I’m guessing around $12-13/unit.

TC Pipelines MLP – Q2-2018 analysis – post-FERC

Both entities listed (NYSE: TCP, parent TSX:TRP, NYSE: EEP, parent TSX:ENB) got hit badly with the March 2018 FERC ruling. TCP got hit the worst (as measured by the percentage decline in market value) out of all of the MLP pipeline companies affected by the FERC ruling.

Initially in their Q1 release, they stated that the FERC ruling could have an adverse revenue impact of up to US$100 million. In light of their US$546 million in revenues in fiscal 2017, this was not a trivial impact. As a result, they dropped distributions from $4/unit/year (about US$292 million) to $2.60/unit/year (about US$190 million). This was a reduction of 35% in distributions.

The interesting element is that because it is structured as an MLP, the company can retain the cash and use it to pay off debt while the unitholders face the income taxes payable even though they never see the cash-in-hand (directly). Reducing distributions is a very effective strategy to paying down debt.

TCP’s MLP units were trading at about $48 before the FERC announcement. After the 35% distribution drop, the MLP units dropped more than half over the subsequent two months.

While there was an economic substance to the reduction in unit price (the FERC announcement did have a genuine impact on future distributable cash flows), the impact to the unit price was overblown (perhaps due to inflammatory language by the parent saying that TCP was “non-viable” and a sudden fear that they would not be able to obtain credit, etc.).

On July 19, 2018 the FERC provided some clarifications with respect to the future billing rates of natural gas pipeline MLPs and the taxation basis that they can charge customers. The stock market initially launched the unit price from $26 to $35, but that has tapered down as there is a realization that the new pronouncements are a partial backpedaling of the original March announcement.

Today, TCP announced their Q2 results and quantified the results of the revised FERC ruling to $40-$60 million. I’ve read management’s presentation and listened to the conference call for some additional colour. $40-60 million is still a significant amount of revenue to be lost, but not as bad as previously thought. There was still considerable uncertainty as to the exact number and also the future state of governance – the initial obvious route was conversion of the MLP to a C-Corporation, but now that does not appear to be attractive. The other obvious decision is a re-acquisition of TCP within TRP, similar to how Enbridge Energy Partners (NYSE: EEP) has a proposed re-acquisition by Enbridge back on the table.

Right now, pre-FERC, looking at 2017, TCP has revenues of $546 million (transmission revenues plus equity earnings), and about $445 million in operating cash flows (approx. $6.20/unit). Distributable cash is $310 million ($4.35/unit).

The impact of the FERC decision will start to hit the financial statements at the end of 2018, so 2018 will still be a relatively “clean” year. The excess of cash generated over distributions will be used to pay down debt – At the beginning of the year, the balance on their credit facility was $185 million, and on August 2, was paid down to $90 million. By the end of the year, it should be around $40 million or so. The coupon rate of this debt is very low (linked to the short-term US rate – about 3% at the end of June 2018) so there won’t be much of an interest expense savings.

The remainder of the debt profile of the company is at a low interest rate and can be extended without pressure given the investment grade credit rating (in 2019, $55 million, in 2020, $270 million, in 2021, $375 million, in 2022, $500 million).

Operationally, there are the usual concerns about smaller pipelines that have customer concentration risk (Bison expires in 2021, consisting of 17% of cash flows), but I do not see fundamental threats to USA domestic natural gas transportation.

Taking $50 million off of distributable cash results in $3.65/unit. At the market price of $30/unit, that’s a 12.2% total return on something that is in a very stable and predictable business. The $30 unit price appears to be a bit low and I suspect that TRP will attempt to re-incorporate TCP into it while the price is still relatively low.

Prior to all of this FERC business, six months ago (February 2018), TCP was trading at $50/unit and giving $4/unit distributions (8%) at roughly a 90% payout ratio. Now that the FERC matter has been settled somewhat, the market is currently pricing TCP at an 8.7% distribution level, at roughly a 70% payout ratio post-FERC (2019 steady-state amounts). The core business (natural gas transportation) hasn’t changed, so why the sudden doom and gloom? This MLP should creep up higher as regulatory matters get clarified. You’re not going to see TCP double to its previous US$50 glory, but I believe US$30/unit appears to be low.

(Note: TCP goes ex-dividend tomorrow, so you will see an immediate 65 cent drop in price from the currently mentioned $30 current market price when trading opens Friday).