Jan 27, 2008
Am I watching SBUX?
Of coarse I am.
Starbucks is the kind of company I dream of owning but never get to buy because of the valuation. The stock has almost been halfed in the last 2 years but I am still not buying shares. My guess is that Frapaccino's are susceptible to the laws of economics just like any other consumer discretionary item and as the recession plays out there will be more pessimism and a better opportunity to buy the stock.
Buy I will enjoy this commercial while I wait.
Jan 23, 2008
CIM – Final Thoughts
To get to this point I have written 4 long posts on CIM covering just about every aspect of this investment and company in great detail. I can probably summarize all this verbiage by simply saying that CIM represents a pool of capital that will be invested by some of the smartest minds in the business at a time where they will be one of the very few buyers in the market and should be able to produce above average returns on invested capital over a 3 to 5 year period.
Jan 7, 2008
Abscense from posting ........
In the meantime here is an example of a fairly common occurance when dealing with small/micro cap stocks -- unrelated and uncommon businesses. Attached below is a business description for EEI, a stock I decided to not research further for a reason I don't remember and a company I looked at for a reason I can't now recall. The highlighted part made me chuckle.......
"Ecology and Environment, Inc., an environmental consulting firm, provides professional services worldwide. The company offers a range of environmental consulting services, including environmental planning, management, and regulatory compliance support. It provides engineering design, and operation and maintenance; environmental emergency management; and environmental sustainability. Ecology and Environment, Inc. offers environmental services encompassing audits and impact assessments, surveys, air and water quality management, environmental engineering, environmental infrastructure planning, and industrial hygiene and occupational health studies. ....................In addition, it produces tilapia fish for markets in the Middle East."
* DISCLOSURE: I or accounts I manage may be long or short any and/or all stocks mentioned in this post. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. For informational and educational purposes only.
Dec 26, 2007
CIM -- Michael Farrell & Annaly Capital Management Inc.
While CIM has no operating history, we can certainly use Farrell’s 10 year track record at the publicly traded Annaly Capital Management (NLY) as a guide. NLY has the same structure and business model as CIM with the big difference being that NLY’s assets are of the highest quality while CIM will invest at the lower end of the quality spectrum.
“As 2005 played out, we prepared our business for the inevitable change in sentiment and shape of yield curve. While other stretched for returns in the form of credit risk, mortgage derivatives, new business models or extra leverage, we stuck to our discipline of using AAA mortgage backed securities. It cost us some earnings …..but I believe this discipline will only be appreciated by investors when viewed through history’s rear view mirror.”
While this scenario benefiting NLY seems “inevitable” today, it certainly was not so in early 2006. This group stuck to their guns despite earnings and share price plummeting while it seemed like everyone else in the mortgage business was printing money.
What does all this have to with CIM?
Dec 19, 2007
CIM -- Business Model
In this last “background” post on CIM, I am going to talk about how CIM actually makes money and the risks of investing in this stock.
How will CIM actually make money?
The company will take the $520M of cash it raised last month in the IPO (this is called equity) and buy real estate backed loans (these are CIM’s assets) that will produce an income stream in the form of interest and principle paid to CIM. It’s a bit confusing, but CIM’s assets are loans made to someone else. So at this point the company’s balance sheet essentially looks like this …….
$520M in assets yielding lets say $25M in income to CIM
($520M in equity raised as part of IPO)
Then CIM will use its assets as collateral to borrow money and will pay X% as interest expense to the lenders. The company will than use this borrowed money to buy more assets hoping that its assets will yield X%+Spread. So now CIM goes from having $520M in assets yielding $25M, to ……
$5,000M in additional assets yielding $250M in income to CIM
($5,000M in new liabilities which cost CIM $200M in interest expense)
($520M in equity raised as part of IPO)
So, by leveraging its equity CIM goes from earning $25M or 5% return on equity for shareholders to earning $75M ($25M on equity raised in IPO + $50M in difference between interest income on $5B in assets and interest expense on $5B in liabilities used to pay for those assets) and ROE jumps to almost 15%. Since this is a REIT, 90% of the income gets paid to shareholders in form of a dividend so the shares will have a much higher yield than other equities.
This is a very simplistic example but this example give a good example of where the cash will actually come from and how a company with $500M in equity can have 10x the buying power.
Seems easy enough, but what could go wrong?
The first problem is that CIM’s business model is exposed to the yield curve because CIM will borrow using shorter term loans like commercial paper but will buy long term assets with that money like 30 year mortgage loans. There is a mismatch in maturities that creates a big risk of the yield curve flattening. If the yield curve flattens than the difference between costs and revenue will shrink and CIM will earn less money. This is exactly what happened in 2005 and CIM’s parent Annaly Capital Management got whacked as a result, more on this later.
The second problem is that the company will use a lot of leverage, that’s part of the business model, and is sensitive to what is happening in the credit markets beyond the shape of the yield curve.
For example, if the banks CIM borrows money from all wake up one day and say that they want their money back at the same time or the assets that they are holding as collateral are now worth less than they were yesterday, CIM could be in some series trouble. At this point, CIM either has to find someone else to lend them money, issue more stock which dilutes current shareholders, or have a fire sale on its assets to pay off its lenders. This is called a “credit crunch” and is exactly what happened in early August and is happening right now.
The third problem is that the value of the CIM’s assets is uncertain and changes every day while the cost of its liabilities is written in stone. CIM’s assets are loans to others either in the form of actual loans it buys from a major bank that originated them or in the form of a credit security backed by mortgage loans. Since these are long tem loans there is always a risk that borrowers will default and CIM does not get all the interest/principle it expects to get so the actual yield they realize on their assets is lower than expected.
The other risk is that one day the market can simply decide that its assets are worth much less than originally thought but the liabilities CIM owns will stay the same. If this happens there is a mismatch between loans and assets and that mismatch will be made up buy shareholder equity and will kill the stock. This is by the way exactly what is happening with just about any financial institution that owns any mortgage related assets.
So this is why CIM’s business model is a “catch 22” proposition. On one hand its extremely simple – just borrow short at X and lend long at X+Spread—and leverage that trade up 10 times and you are printing money.
On the other hand, CIM is exposed to the yield curve as well as the gyrations in the credit markets which can change overnight. If CIM takes on to much leverage or can’t sell its assets to raise money in a credit crunch, the company can go out of business overnight or suffer a serious impairment to shareholder equity and therefore the stock price. Also, the company may simply overpay for assets and not earn as much as it expected on them.
* DISCLOSURE: I or accounts I manage may be long or short any and/or all stocks mentioned in this post. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. For informational and educational purposes only.
Dec 17, 2007
CIM -- Investment Structure
Dec 16, 2007
CIM (Chimera) – First Look
Currently:
Share price: $15.25
Market Value: $564M
Investment Type: Time Arbitrage
CIM completed its IPO almost exactly 1 month ago on November 15, 2007. Per the filling on the day of the IPO, CIM planned to sell 33.3M shares at $15 per share raising $500M with an additional 5M shares optioned for overallotments. Off the $500M raised, $31.25M would be paid to the investment banks doing the IPO so CIM would received $14.0625 per share in actual proceeds.
Based on the 11/30/07 13D filling, Annaly owns 3.62M shares representing 9.8% of total shares outstanding, a maximum percentage of shares outstanding allowed to be owned by any shareholder under this structure. This implies that the final number of shares sold was 36.94M for a net proceeds after selling expenses of $520M.
CIM is basically a publicly traded hedge fund managed by an asset management group called FIDAC which is led by Michael Farrell (Annaly technically owns FIDAC but the same people that manage FIDAC also manage Annaly). The company is structured as a REIT which means at least 90% of its income will be paid out as dividends and virtually all of its investments will be real estate backed mortgage loans and structured products backed by mortgage loans.
I will spend more time in the next post on the company’s business model and may do a quick primer on the basic accounting of mortgage REITs.
* DISCLOSURE: I or accounts I manage may be long or short any and/or all stocks mentioned in this post. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. For informational and educational purposes only.