- In April 2010, a member recommended going long the 2nd lien floaters
- In September 2010, a member recommended going long the 1st liens
- And a few weeks ago, a member recommended going short the 10% 2nd liens
Further, it was reported that Apollo and Avenue Capital hold more than $400M of NewPage's aforementioned 2nd liens. For reference here is a chart of the 10% 2nd liens going back to May 2008:
From looking at my runs, by far the most liquid bonds are the 11.375% 1st liens and these 10% 2nd liens.
NewPage is the largest coated paper producers in North America. Cerberus purchased the company in 2005 and currently own ~80% of the company. The balance is owned by management and Stora Enso Oyj which divested its North American operations to NewPage in late 2007.
According to its most recent 10K, coated paper products represent 80% of 2010 net sales at NewPage. Coated paper is the used in media and marketing applications such as glossy advertising brochures, magazine covers, company annual reports, catalogs and textbooks. Look around at your desk and you will see numerous examples of coated paper. The remaining 20% of sales comes from supercalendered paper (inserts and flyers), newsprint and specialty paper.
As one can expect, the coated paper products market has faced both cyclical and secular declines in the past few years. With that said, industry capacity has been taken out over the past few years as demand has fallen and rising raw material and operating costs (energy) have made a number of plants across North America unprofitable. Because of back integration (they produce ~95% of their pulp requirement), NewPage is the low cost producer in North America.
It is estimated that utilizations of plants across North America are running in the mid 90s. Supply is fairly tight right now. Contributing to this, in October 2010, the International Trade Commission voted unanimously that imports of NewPage's principal product (coated paper) from China and Indonesia (15-20% of the market) and harmful to U.S. producers and workers. This allows the Department of Commerce to impose duties on imports. Industry trade group, RISI, expects coated paper to increase $67/ton in 2011 and $56/ton in 2012. Supporting this, NewPage announced a $60/ton increase on coated free sheet products starting June 1.
As on can expect in a paper / packaging company, operating leverage is magnificently high in this business. The company's EBITDA nearly doubled in 2010, and given where pricing is today plus a slight increase in volumes, Newpage should be able to double EBITDA in 2011 (from 2010 levels) in spite of higher raw material costs. This trend would continue into 2012 assuming RISI's price expectations come to fruition.
For comps I am going to use Sappi and Verso paper, both well known names in the high yield universe. Sappi trades at 5.3x 2011 EBITDA and Verso trades at 5.6x 2011 EBITDA. Assuming conservative multiples of 5.0x, 5.5x, and 6.0x versus the expected $500M of EBITDA Newpage should generate in 2011 gets us to a valuation of Newpage between $2.5-$3.0B. Without completely oversimplifying things, this is what I come up with:
So on a back of the envelope calculation, the 2nd liens are worth between 56-105. At today's price of 57-58 that looks pretty compelling for these reasons:
- In our low case I used a 5.0x multiple versus 5.3x and 5.6x for Sappi and Verso respectively
- I used a fairly conservative EBITDA number. Goldman Sachs' credit analyst Joe Stivaletti pegs 2011 EBITDA at $574M and Banc of America's Roger Spitz is using $525M for normalized EBITDA
- Assuming a restructuring and the 1st lien getting adequate protection in the form of post petition interest, run rate interest in a restructuring for NewPage will be between $200-$250M. With capital expenditures in line with previous years, NewPage (on $500M of EBITDA) could generate between $150M - $225M of free cash flow per year. Given $1.030B of 2nd lien debt, this translates into 15-22 bond points. This number increases assuming EBITDA continues to rise in 2012
- In line with the above, given how hot the bank debt market is today, it wouldn't surprise me to see NewPage refinance its entire first lien structure at a 7-9% handle saving the company $40-$70M pre-tax dollars a year
- The company has non cash flowing operating assets it can sell to generate additional proceeds. Further, cash proceeds ($100M) from already announced sales will flow to the balance sheet over the next few quarters
So all in all, with very little downside and tremendous upside NewPage's 2nd lien looks like a very interesting investment opportunity. The 1st liens look well covered as well and are attractive for risk averse investors at a healthy 12%+ yield. I personally think a 1/3 1st lien, 2/3 2nd lien position also looks interesting to hedge one self against a rapid drop in coated paper products. The biggest risk I see here is Cerberus offering to exchange 2nd lien debt into 1st lien debt (street estimating ~$500M of first lien capacity under various indentures). Instead of capturing the upside of a strong 2011/2012 pricing cycle, investors would be stuck in a fixed instrument with a longer maturity profile.
We will continue updating and fine tuning our analysis as more facts emerge in this fascinating distressed debt case.
This company makes magazine paper ahead of 100 million iPad sales over the next two years - could 2011 EBITDA be peak earnings?
ReplyDeleteYou are kidding yourself if you think the bonds have "very little downside"...coated freesheet is a brutal business with awful structural trends - the 2nd lien are a speculative investment at this price
ReplyDeleteApollo owns Verson, the second largest paper company. If you buy the 2nd liens alongside them, your interests will not be aligned. While there would be legal ramifications to this, it is not impossible that Apollo would be willing to take a lower valuation on its 2nd liens when Verso buys out the assets. Also, since any restructuring will likely be negotiated between Apollo, Avenue, and Cerberus, it is possible you as a minority 2nd lien holder could get edged on allocation in a rights offering as was the case in a lot of the auto restructurings.
ReplyDeleteCan someone point us to a time graph of coated paper pricing that gets updated at least weekly?
ReplyDeleteHow much of Newpage's product is "Light Weight Coated" (LWC) paper?
ReplyDeleteFor every $50/ton price increase, how much increase in EBITDA do we get?
For every $50/ton price decrease, how much decrease in EBITDA do we get?
Why would the current price of the 2nd liens also be at your worst case valuation scenario? Who would be a natural seller at this price?
ReplyDeleteThe 2nd liens have traded down from 64/65 in the past month to 58/59, so someone is afraid of whoever is circling the wagons.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think this analysis hinges on the EBITDA estimates. Without a deeper look into the business, can we really say that 500M is conservative? I have not looked at the analyst reports, but the fact that they believe it will be higher doesn't conclusively tell us that we should trust these because their interests are not necessarily aligned with our's - they are interested in selling securities to make a commission, right? A higher estimate will mean more investors will be attracted rather than a lower estimate.
ReplyDeleteRE: 1st Liens
ReplyDeleteThey were sold at a discount, and have only accreted up to approx 95%. In your refi scenario, if Co really can raise bank debt funds much cheaper, could Co pay back "par"/95+ to First Lien Note holders? or would they have to pay the call price?
www.foex.fi seems to have prices for coated paper
ReplyDeleteThe CME has pulp markets as well, although I'm not sure exactly how this relates to the price of coated paper
Anecdotally, I was at the NY Auto Show this weekend and very few presenters were handing out nice glossy brochures... instead, most were pointing people to their websites.
NEWPAG 10% (2nd Lien) getting clobbered today... trading at $49.5
ReplyDelete11.375% (1st Liens) holding at $99.50
any comments post-earnings?
Q1 adjusted EBITDA was $85mm... not sure what kind of seasonality this business has, but 85mm x 4 is a LOT less than the ~500mm+ 2011 EBITDA estimates from GS and BofA mentioned. Has either revised their 2011 estimates?
If the 2nd liens were cheap at 58, what are they at 12? Good luck in bk, anyone who owns this name.
ReplyDelete