Value Investing
Value Investing
Value Investing
This case study relates to Chapter 4 in the Book, Valuing the Assets from Book Value to Reproduction Costs. Dayton Hudson-not a simple example. Start with a principle, which you should keep in mind. Two things: What do I know and what do I not know? As I move through this process, what am I learning about the attractiveness of this investment and what are the things that I still dont know? Where are the major uncertainties? 1. When you become a professional analyst, you will spend your time trying to resolve those uncertainties. What I know, what I still need to know to see whether this is a good investment. 2. Am I using all the information available here? Are there things that I need to be looking at that I havent already looked at? Is the information fitting together to tell a coherent story? Am I getting the most out of it? When you start with Hudson Generalwhat was your first thought? Thank God it wasnt Microsoft. I am not in the pits with all the other equity analysts trying to understand MSFT. The company is small and obscuregood. From the statistical data, it probably is too small to have major institutions driving the price up above what it should be. Good: Small-Cap. This is not a stupid stock to be on the buy side. You start off with a general impression from names and then you look at this in more detail. 2.1 million shares outstanding, price is $48 a share or $100 million to buy the whole company. If you filed a 13-D, you could buy 5 million shares of 5%. What does that tell you right away about the big fundsthey cant or wont invest. $250 billion to invest-0.00005% to invest in Dayton Hudson. What does this company do? Aircraft servicing, land developing. Boring! Bad thing: The managers are clowns. They are sitting on cash, paying themselves big salaries, investing in land 1000s of miles away from their HQ while being an aircraft servicing company. If this is a bad enough mgt., then they are apt to have destroyed value.
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Without adjustment, and ignoring the two partnership interests, the assets are worth $46 and the liabilities are $5 million, leaving the net worth at $41 million. General Characteristics of Hudson General (30/June 1998) www.csinvesting.wordpress.com studying, teaching, investing Page 3
They take 3.5% of revenues for SG&A--not a economically viable business. So liquidation value, not reproduction value. Take NPV of the lease payments. Note to Hudson General Current Liabilities Deferred Tax Value $2.5 $3.0 ($3.0 million) ($2.0 million) $41.0
+74% Hudson General, LLC (Partnership Hudson General and Lufthansa +50% Kohala JV (Hawaiian Land Development) How much residual value do I have at risk here? I would get 70% to 80% of my money back if I bought at $48 a share. $30 million ($29.6) in cash coming from the LLC for the Option value paid for by Lufthansa on Oct. 1, 1998 (4 months from now). So added to the $41 million in cash, you have another $29.6 million in cash for a total of approximately $70 million in cash or $35/share. If you had bought this at $25 or $30 per share, would you have anything at risk? NO.
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Does this look like a lowball offer or a crazy (high) price? The assets won't help on the LLC--how do we see if this is a good offer? When you are in this situation, whose perspective do you want to adopt? Adopt the Lufthansa perspective. The Buyer is setting the price. What is Lufthansa thinking about? Lufthansa is an operating company hoping to run this business. Buyers not investors. Can Lufthansa make money running this business? Ans.: Yes. They won't say, "Screw this, lets buy in the open market and get into a proxy battle in the US?" NO. Lufthansa will ask if they can make money owning 49% of this business and operating it. If you are going to be value investors, you have to think about the reality as investors. Value is reality, the reality of PMV and the reality of people on the other side. If you are buying the Sub., you are getting the Parent Company as well. The Parent is sucking 3.5% of revenues from the company. Lufthansa gets the creeps (lousy mgt.) as well. If you can get rid of the creeps, then the value goes up--remember that mgt is sucking 3.5% of revenues out of the LLC. Probably more value there. So this offer isn't going anywhere. It is a firm offer. Lufthansa has an insider's view of the operations and they know what prices can be cut. Assets aren't helpful here due to the huge amount of intangibles. Let's look at the EPV of the subsidiary to see the value of the service. Right now we know there is $30 million there from the option and the balance of Hudson LLC is worth (51% of $129 million) or $66 million plus what we could get for the control premium (CP). So far we have $41 M in net worth + $30 M cash from the Lufthansa Option + $66 worth of Hudson LLC for a total of $71 M + $66 + CP = $137 M + CP or $65 per share in value + CP. (We exclude the Hawaiian Land Co. for now). www.csinvesting.wordpress.com studying, teaching, investing Page 5
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What about an EPV? It tells us what we will make if we don't get rid of management. $2 M /.08 WACC = $25 M in EPV. Current earnings are $2 M. WACC is 8%. This is a tribute of the poor management. Review: What is the intrinsic value of Hudson General's interest in Hudson LLC and the Hawaiian Land investment? On the books, it carries its 74% stake in HLLC at $22 M, which would put the Book Value of all of Hudson LLC at $30 M. PMV transaction by Lufthansa indicates that that value is too low. Lufthansa is willing to pay $30 million for 26% of Hudson LLC. At those prices, Hudson LLC must be worth $130 w/o the CP. Hudson General has 51% interest in Hudson LLC for which there is a premium paid in the PM for control. Second, Hudson LLC has earnings after-tax of $12.7 M. The Company has no debt, and its earnings stream is secured by long-term contracts with airlines and airports. If the WACC is 10% or you placed a 10 x multiple on those current earnings, you would have an approximate value of $127 M or proportionately what Lufthansa is paying out in the PM transaction for the Option ($29.6 M for 23% of LLC). Those contracts are hidden assets that don't show up on the balance sheet. They are, from another perspective, the specific competitive advantage that allows Hudson LC to earn more than it would on a level playing field.
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WACC = 50% x 12% for Equity Cost of Capital + 50% x 8% x (1-36 tax rate) = 8.5% EPV = $6,646/0.085 = $78 M + $41 M = $119 M + Land + Control Premium (?) = $132 M + Control Premium
Add back excess assets to the EPV. You also have the land value.
Asset Value (AV) is $130 M to $170 M. EPV cross checks AV. What is the bottom line? $130 to $150 M in sure value. It could be a much as $170 + M. The market value is $100 M
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The management sucks. The current earnings power is $22 million. If you could eliminate mgt., then earnings power would improve. Here is a classic situation. AV = $170 M and EPV is $22 M. Mgt. is the issue. How likely is it to remove management? Call Gabelli. Is there a staggered board, is there a poison pill? Questions left to answer after our valuations and cross checking. With Gabelli owning 48%, he will take it over. The question is how long will it take? 1 year discounted at 10% = $150/1.10 = $135 M 2 years discounted at 20% = $120 M What other things do we think about doing? Whose concern that this company will be competitive? Lufthansa has made a bid for the company-so that is one guarantee. This business is easily entered, however long term contracts offer some degree of certainty and stability. Mgt. is your enemy while Gabelli is your friend. Get rid of mgt. and put the company, Hudson LLC, into the hands of good German Management. How would you try shortening that period? Sue Mgt. for looting the company. A staggered board: 1/3 of the board gets elected every year. At the end of the 2nd year, Gabelli would have a majority control of the Board. Find out when the date of the Board Meeting is. We will sue the mgt. for stealing from the company. Mgt. will want to negotiate. Eventually, the company went for $90 per share in seven months. He got lucky. He started buying at $25 to $30. www.csinvesting.wordpress.com studying, teaching, investing Page 9
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