Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Leucadia FMG Note Resolution

This is just a quick follow-up to my LUK posts; today Fortescue and Leucadia came to an agreement on the 4% notes.  People who follow LUK know that FMG insisted that they had a right to issue more royalty notes and dilute LUK and they have been in court fighting this out.

Today LUK announced that they have come to an agreement.  FMG will redeem the notes for 5 million and LUK will book a pretax gain of 6 million.   With 245 million shares outstanding, that comes to .15/share gain for LUK.

Is this a good thing?  Well, of course, settling this thing is good. You never know where these things can go.  As for the price, I have no idea if it's a good price or not but knowing the folks at LUK, I don't think they would take a bad price to walk away.  Plus, with China in a state of slow-motion implosion and iron ore prices tumbling, it's probably not a bad thing for LUK to be out of this.

LUK Note Valuation
They already told us they will book a 6 million pretax gain, so we know that this note was on the balance sheet at 9 million.  The aggregate book value of the FMG notes (including prepaid mining interest, zero coupon note and interest accrued and receivable) was 5 million at June 2012.  The difference is accrued interest (for first half 2012) and whatever interest was paid and accrued since then until now.

On FMG's balance sheet according to their June 2012-end financial report, the notes were booked at 7 million; this included 0 million non-current and 7 million current (which is basically the interest accrued and payable).

So if we assume the 0 million non-current portion is a little lower (by say, million for interest accrued in July, August and September), and all else unchanged, the notes would be worth 0 million (according to FMG's June 2012 model assumptions).

If this is correct, then LUK will have sold out the notes at a pretty decent valuation given that iron ore prices have declined substantially since then. 

I am not sure if this is correct as the 5 million may include accrued interest (but only for amounts accrued after June-end 2012 as interest accrued until then would have been paid out by now), in which case LUK would have sold the notes at a lower valuation.  But still, given the collapsing China and iron ore prices and the legal uncertainty, it still wouldn't be a bad deal.   I guess we will find out more in the next filing, and I'm sure LUK will summarize their FMG experience in the annual report.

FMG Overall
So how good are these guys?  Iron ore prices are falling, China may be imploding, and LUK is completely out of FMG including the notes (which would have exposed LUK to iron ore prices and other risks).

Just a quick look at this whole FMG experience shows how good these guys are.  According to the 2011 annual report:
  • In August 2006, they paid 0 million for 264 million shares and the 0 million 4% notes
  • In 2007, they paid .2 million for more shares
  • Their total investment in FMG, therefore, was 4.2 million

Further, in the report, they said that including the sale of FMG shares (sold most in 2011 and some in 1Q2012), dividends and the interest income on the notes, they took out .8 billion from their FMG investment, and they still had 31 million shares outstanding and the notes.  This is all as of the writing of the letter to shareholders.

Since then, in the 2Q2012, LUK sold the rest of the their FMG stock for 3 million (they will book a gain in the income statement but it won't affect book value much as this position is marked to market, unlike the notes which are not).

So adding that, that makes it .95 billion they took out of FMG.

Now with this note redemption, this comes to .67 billion.  Also, in the first six months of 2012, LUK received 7 million in interest income on the notes.   I don't think that's included in the .67 billion so far (as we only included what was in the 2011 letter to shareholders, the 2Q FMG stock sale and the note redemption).

So we now have .8 billion. 

If the 5 million redemption price doesn't include accrued interest from the end of June 2012 through now, then there would be million more (first half was 7 million so I just took half of that for the three months from July 2012 -> September 2012).

So in total, that would be .86 billion.  Almost billion from a 4 million investment.  Wow.  And that includes the not-so-great timing of buying not too long before the biggest financial crisis in history and exiting at a point where China is imploding (or seems to be). 

Perspective
So let's put this in perspective for a second.  In June 2006, right before they made this investment, the shareholders equity of LUK was .8 billion.  They invested 4.2 million, so that's almost 12% of the net worth of LUK that they put into this deal.  That's concentration.

And they ended up taking out .86 billion.  Ten years ago, the year-end shareholders's equity was .5 billion (December 2002), and in 2001 it was .2 billion.

Who'da thunk LUK would make more than their entire net worth (or almost twice their net worth) in a single deal within ten years?

Did I already say wow?






Source | The Brooklyn Investor | http://brooklyninvestor.blogspot.com/2012/09/leucadia-fmg-note-resolution.html

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