Tag Archives: sweden

Is DXJR The Best ETF To Play Japan Now?

Late last week, Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) move to impose a negative interest rate for the first time in its history took the markets by surprise. Global economic woes – the decline in crude oil prices and weak data from emerging and other export-based countries including China – led to the move. The BOJ’s step helps the third-largest country in the world to get closer to its target inflation rate of 2%. It is an effort to boost confidence and spending by companies and households. The BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has stated that there is no limit to efforts for easing monetary policy. The central bank may further expand asset purchases if required. Sub-zero interest rate measures are nothing new. Last year, the European Central Bank (ECB) had cut down interest rates to negative to lower borrowing costs, encourage bank lending and combat deflation. Denmark, Sweden and Switzerland adopted a similar measure in the past. Meanwhile, the ECB has hinted on further policy easing in its March 2016 meeting. It is expected that the ECB may further cut interest rates in response to persistently low inflation and volatility in the financial markets. The ECB president Mario Draghi identified turbulence in global markets along with plummeting oil prices as a contributing cause for Eurozone’s low inflation. Real Estate Stands to Benefit Interest rates have a profound effect on credit availability and cost of real estate mortgages. A low interest rate environment improves an individual’s ability to purchase properties by reducing the cost of mortgage capital, thereby boosting demand. A favorable consumer spending scenario and strong recovery plan could play an important role in boosting the housing market. Given this, investors may take advantage by investing in real estate ETFs based in Japan such as the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Real Estate ETF (NYSEARCA: DXJR ) . The fund tracks the performance of the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Real Estate Index, thereby providing exposure to the Japanese Real Estate sector. The fund also hedges exposure to fluctuations between the U.S. dollar and the yen. Thus, this ETF appears to be a strong bet at a time of significant foreign exchange fluctuation. The ETF charges 48 bps in fees and gained 6.2% in the last 5 days (as of February 3, 2016). The fund currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #2 (Buy) with a Medium risk outlook, suggesting that it will outperform the broad market funds in the coming months. Original Post

Jeffrey Gundlach DoubleLine Asset Allocation Webcast

By VW Staff Jeffrey Gundlach’s slides from the DoubleLine asset allocation webcast: Probability of Rate Hike (click to enlarge) Sweden/Riksbank Flip Flop (click to enlarge) Central Bank Policy Rates (click to enlarge) The Difference Between Hiking and QE Infinity 50 Bps of GDP? (click to enlarge) Evolution of World GDP Forecasts by Year (click to enlarge) U.S. Industrial Production (YoY) (click to enlarge) U.S. Core CPI and Core PCE (YoY) (click to enlarge) PriceStats U.S. CPI (YoY%) (click to enlarge) U.S., U.K. and EU Headline Inflations (Eurozone Method) (click to enlarge) See full slides below Asset Allocation Core Flex Webcast Slides Disclosure: None

Undervalued Power And Infrastructure Company Offers Significant Upside

Summary Quality power and infrastructure assets with reliable cash flows. Signficant upside to the valuation with most downside risk priced in. Pipeline of development opportunities run by management with a track record of solid execution. Capstone Infrastructure Corporation (OTCPK: MCQPF ) is a small-cap Canadian based firm that owns and operates a variety of clean power generation facilities, along with water and district heating utilities. These operations are located in Canada, the United Kingdom and Sweden. The company has a market capitalization of approximately CAD $285 million, currently pays a dividend of CAD $0.30 per year ($0.075 per quarter) and is traded primarily on the Toronto stock exchange under the ticker “CSE.” In the following sections, we’ll go into depth on each of Capstone’s operating segments and take a look at their contributions to the overall business and the sustainability of Capstone’s dividend. Natural Gas Co-generation: Cardinal Capstone owns a single 156 megawatt (MW) natural gas co-generation facility, named Cardinal. The facility has two primary revenue streams. The first stream is through its contracted arrangement with the Province of Ontario’s Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO). In this arrangement, Capstone is paid a fixed monthly fee that escalates over time in order to provide dispatchable power into the Ontario grid. When the facility is dispatched by the system operator, Capstone earns revenue on the sale of power through contracted rates. This contracted arrangement is in place until 2034. The second stream of revenue for the facility is through the co-generated steam and compressed air, which is sold at contracted rates to an Ingredion Canada Incorporated corn processing facility. With an impressive availability track record, this facility generated 49 percent of Capstone’s adjusted Funds from Operations (AFFO) in 2014. Unfortunately, this was under a much more attractive Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) than what is now in effect. In 2014, this facility generated approximately $41.5 million in adjusted EBITDA and AFFO, though is projected to come in about $30 million lower in 2015. The asset is located in Cardinal, Ontario. Wind Generation Capstone owns several wind power facilities in the Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia, Quebec and Ontario, with 228.5 MW of installed capacity today. Further, Canadian based projects in the provinces of Saskatchewan and Ontario will bring an additional 52.5 MW of capacity for the company. Its biggest wind facility is the 99MW Erie Shores Wind Farm, with 100 percent ownership and a PPA in place until 2026. Related to its development pipeline, Capstone announced on August 14, 2015, that two appeals against its wind farm development projects had been dismissed, and that it was moving ahead with the development of the Ganaraska and Grey Highlands projects. When it comes to performance, the wind segment generated $46.6 million in revenue for the firm in 2014, and added $37.7 million in adjusted EBITDA. Hydro Power Generation The corporation owns four hydro generation facilities, all on a relatively small scale between 3 and 16 MW. Two of the facilities totaling 19MW are contracted to BC Hydro and the other two facilities totaling 17 MW are contracted to OEFC (the Ontario Electricity Financial Corporation). All of the hydro facilities are 100% owned by Capstone. These facilities generated $14.1 million in revenue in 2014 and provided $10.5 million in adjusted EBITDA to the corporation. This was at a capacity factor of 50.7 percent (availability of 96.4 percent). Biomass Generation Capstone’s biomass facility, the 25 MW Whitecourt wood fired plant, is one of the largest biomass generators in Alberta. The facility runs off of waste wood, for which a 15-year supply has been contracted by the corporation. This supply agreement also has built in adjustments based on the price received in Alberta’s electricity market for the facilities’ generated power. This facility operates as a base load generator. With the change in Alberta government, additional incentives may be available in the future for green or carbon neutral generation such as biomass, which would offer an additional upside for this facility. Capstone also has a small indirect economic interest in the generation of the Chapais biomass facility, which contracts the sale of its generated power to Hydro Quebec. This interest is comprised of senior debt and preferred shares. Solar Generation Capstone currently owns a 20MW crystalline solar photovoltaic facility in Amherstburg, Ontario. This facility was designed, built and is currently operated by SunPower Corporation (NASDAQ: SPWR ). The power generated by this facility is sold at a highly attractive rate of $420 per MWh until 2031. The panels are warranted for this period and the operations are being provided under a 20-year contract, providing cost stability for the facility. Capstone is also proposing to develop, build and operate a new facility in Southwold, Ontario, with a proposed generation capacity of 38.4MW. This facility is being put forward under Ontario’s IESO Large Renewable Procurement program. Bristol Water Capstone owns a 50 percent interest in Bristol Water, a regulated water utility in the United Kingdom. The company provides water services to the city of Bristol, including treatment, storage and distribution. Bristol has substantial growth potential, with its regulated capital base expected to expand by over 25 percent in the coming five years. As Bristol earns a return on capital invested via rates, this should be accretive to its cash flow. Bristol Water has been faced with some regulatory uncertainty based upon a recent decision of its regulator, the Ofwat (UK Water Services Regulation Authority) and its asset management plan is currently under secondary review by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) in the UK. The impact of this is discussed further in the ‘recent developments’ section below. District Heating: Varmevarden The 33 percent equity interest in the Varmevarden district heating system in Sweden is a key cash flow generator for the corporation. The facility generates up to 639 MW of thermal heat, fueled by biomass, waste heat and oil, which is then used to heat local buildings and industrial processes. The Varmevarden facility contributed $7.4 million to Capstone’s EBITDA in 2014, an increase of 25 percent from 2013. Recent Developments The firm has struggled with some recent developments, which are indicated in a depressed share price. First, and perhaps most critically, the company is struggling with a negative regulatory decision in regards to its Bristol Water utility business. Its regulator, the Ofwat. These findings were subsequently appealed to the Competition Markets Authority or CMA. The CMA released primarily findings on July 10th. These findings were relatively positive for Bristol Water, with an additional operating expense allowance of £28 million. This closed the gap between the applied for operating expenses and what was approved by the Ofwat by about half. In addition, the CMA reduced the capital expenditure allowance by £8 million, and also reduced the number of projects expected to be undertaken under that budget by a value of nearly £25 million. The total uplift provided by these two decisions was approximately £45 million. The CMA also granted a higher allowed return via a higher weighted average cost of capital, but Bristol Water believes this could move higher yet in final determinations. The final piece in dispute is pay-as-you-go rates, which Bristol Water believes were still much too low in the preliminary findings, and indicated as much in their evidence and testimony submitted in response to these findings. A more generous decision here would move the company more in line with its peer utilities in the United Kingdom. The final decision from the CMA on the rate plan for Bristol is expected in early November 2015, after the CMA announced a delay in releasing its determinations. A positive outcome in this decision could have a substantial impact on Capstone’s share price. The second negative development is related to struggles with its power segment, posting some weaker than anticipated results in the first half of 2015. The decline due to the new Cardinal agreement was well known in advance, but some poor production performance, due to external factors such as hydrology and weather conditions impacted its renewable power portfolio, driving lower power revenues for the period. Adjusted Funds from Operation were also lower due to the deferral of dividends from the Bristol Water utility business and pending dividends in the third quarter from Capstone’s Saint-Philemon and Goulais projects. We believe the weather impacts are transitory and mean reverting over time based on the long run production of these facilities, and the dividends from Saint-Philemon and Goulais will be caught up in Q3, bringing AFFO for these assets in line with expectations for the year. Finally, Capstone has a case before the Ontario Court of Appeal, referred to as the OEFC lawsuit. Capstone was successful in winning this case against the Ontario Electricity Financial Corporation related to the price paid under power purchase agreements with Capstone and other Ontario power producers. The decision on the appeal is expected in mid-2016, and if the decision is upheld, it would result in a one-time gain of $25 million. Capstone is already recognizing and receiving in cash the additional $800,000 per year in annual revenues paid to it by the OEFC under this decision. Overall, these developments have resulted in the market pricing in a significant dividend cut, with the shares currently yielding 9.6%. When compared to its peer group (as defined in the valuation section below), it appears that the market is pricing in an approximate 50 percent reduction in the dividend. Management has maintained that the dividend is sustainable, and that its maintenance is the priority of the Board of Directors. Positives Solid Operational Performance of Generation Assets: Capstone’s generation assets all have strong availability and reliability, and appear to be expertly operated. The Cardinal plant just completed a major upgrade, and the other assets are relatively early in their lifecycles, some with long-term warranty and maintenance agreements. Management Execution of Capital Program: Capstone has been proficient in hitting recent capital expenditure and commissioning targets, as well as in arranging project financing for their power projects. This provides confidence that the existing wind development assets can be developed on time and on budget, and incremental cash flow related to projects will be realized as projected. Upside to Alberta Biomass Generation: The Province of Alberta recently elected a new government that has indicated it may place a higher priority on promoting green energy projects. Whether through a cap-and-trade type system, or through credits provided to green generators, the Whitecourt Biomass facility might see some upside in terms of available revenue sources. We wouldn’t expect this to be material to the share price. Unlevered Cardinal Asset: Currently, the Cardinal natural gas co-generation facility is not levered at the operating company level, giving Capstone the ability to project finance this asset over the life of the existing non-utility generator contract with the Ontario Independent Electricity System Operator. This contract expires in 2034. This is a potential source of liquidity for the corporation if needed to support the dividend until the pipeline of wind projects is developed, or in the event of refinancing needs at Bristol Water pending the regulatory review. The corporation estimates that this could raise $31 million in incremental liquidity. Risks Bristol Water Regulatory Review: There is substantial cash flow risk in the pending CMA review of Bristol Water’s rates. While we believe that much of the downside potential is realized in the share price today, there is the possibility the decision could be worse than the preliminary findings may have indicated. However, the other side of this is a potential upside if a positive decision more in alignment with Bristol Water’s application is rendered. Executing growth over the next two years: Capstone has a number of wind development projects underway or in the early development stages. There are numerous risks involved in developing greenfield power projects, and management will need to navigate these risks. We have confidence in the management team’s ability to deliver based on previous results, but unanticipated construction, financing or political delays can always weigh in on service dates and costs. Challenging Acquisition Market: Management has discussed their appetite for pursuing M&A opportunities, if the right deal presented itself. The overall market for power and infrastructure assets is quite inflated today, and it would be hard for a company of Capstone’s size to make an acquisition that would be accretive to cash flow metrics in the next few years. With the existing pipeline of greenfield opportunities, management would be best advised to focus on completing these initiatives rather than chasing what might be expensive acquisitions. Management has had good discipline in terms of responsible M&A in the past, and a focus on maintaining the dividend through growing AFFO will hopefully keep management on track. Alberta Power Market: The Alberta power market has experienced weaker pool prices in the last several months as the oil linked economy slows. This results in lower realized revenue for the Whitecourt plant. While not material to the sustainability of the dividend or the share price, this could weigh on this specific asset’s value over time. Currency Risk for US Investors: The Canadian dollar has devalued sharply over the past year and American investors are hesitant to sink their money into Canadian dollar denominated assets and cash flows. This shrinks the available pool of buyers for the stock, and likely gives American readers of this report pause when considering this investment. In our valuation, we do see significant upside that would outpace currency risk, but that doesn’t make currency risk any less real, especially for dividend investors. In terms of Capstone’s United Kingdom and Sweden operations, the company has hedged some cash flows, but does not hedge the balance sheet exposures in these countries. This does offer some currency risk diversification for US investors. Valuation In their investor presentations, Capstone has indicated it wishes to seek a stable dividend paying out approximately 70-80 percent of Adjusted Funds from Operations starting in 2017. This seems to be a reasonable approach to valuing the company, assessing what the potential 2017 dividend will be, and what the shares will trade at in a more stable environment for the firm. Here are the historical EBITDA and Adjusted FFO for Capstone for the past five years: Historical Results 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Adjusted EBITDA 55,818 55,673 120,343 128,421 160,359 Adjusted FFO 34,774 34,884 35,563 39,934 56,412 Next, we attempt to build up (or in the case of Cardinal and Bristol, reduce) these numbers over the following three years in order to derive a 2017 adjusted FFO number: (thousands) Low Case Mid Case High Case Comments Start: 2014 AFFO $56,412 $56,412 $56,412 Impact of Cardinal ($36,000) ($36,000) ($30,000) Low case is with project financing, high case is without. Impact of Bristol ($7,000) $0 $7,000 2015 Commissioned Wind $5,000 $6,000 $7,000 Skyway 8, Saint-Philemon, Goulais 2015 AFFO $18,412 $26,412 $40,412 2016 Commissioned Wind $2,500 $3,500 $4,000 2016 AFFO $20,912 $29,912 $44,412 2017 Commissioned Wind $0 $3,500 $4,000 Corporate Savings $2,000 $5,000 $10,000 Management projects $10 million in corporate SG&A, project cost, interest and tax savings 2017 AFFO $22,912 $38,412 $58,412 2017 Projected Share Count 96,408 96,408 96,408 Based on 93,573 outstanding at Dec 31, 2014, increased by 1% annually for DRIP 2017 AFFO per Share $0.24 0.3984 $0.61 Payout Ratio 80% 80% 80% Projected 2017 Dividend/share $0.19 0.32 $0.49 Projected Dividend Yield 6.5% 6.5% 6.5% Conservative dividend level based on peer group 2017 target share price (CAD$) $2.92 $4.92 $7.53 Based on the above AFFO cash flow analysis, driven by both the company’s cash flow projections and by our own analysis of upside and downside to each driver, we’ve developed a 2017 target price range of $2.92 to $7.53 per share. This indicates that much of the downside potential has already been priced into the shares, yet significant upside remains. Overall, we’ve reached target dividend in 2017 of $0.32 per share, which at a 6.5% yield, would result in a share price of $4.92 per share. If this price were to be realised, with the dividend only increased at the end of 2017 (not factored into the total return) and interim dividends reinvested, the annualized total return would be approximately 33% based on the August 14, 2015 closing price, for a total return of nearly 82 percent. The upside case would provide a total return of 163%, and the downside case would leave an investor with a 4 percent annual return through three years, assuming the dividend is reduced 50 percent in mid-2016. Of course, for American investors, foreign currency risk remains and a continued decline in the Canadian dollar could negatively impact your investment here. That said, the potential upside is much greater here than any reasonable expectation of further weakness in the loonie. With the amount of leverage built into the company, small swings in its AFFO create substantial differences in expected payouts. This is as much of a risk as it is a potential upside. Continued solid execution by management can deliver considerable returns to shareholders, but slip ups could have material risk to the projected returns illustrated here. Capstone Infrastructure Corporation Peer Group (price data August 12, 2015 close, CAD $): Company TSX Ticker OTCBB Ticker Dividend Yield Share Price Market Cap Boralex Inc. BLX OTC:BRLXF 3.78% $13.75 $660 Million Transalta Renewables Inc. RNW OTC:TRSWF 7.06% $11.90 $2.3 Billion Northland Power Inc. NPI OTCPK:NPIFF 6.95% $15.55 $2.6 Billion Innergex Renewable Energy Inc. INE OTC:INGXF 5.80% $10.69 $1.1 Billion Some critical assumptions go into these calculations. First, we don’t project the need to issue more shares with the current development pipeline. Second, we don’t believe that management will project finance Cardinal unless it is accretive to AFFO, or it is necessary to preserve the dividend. In other words, we don’t anticipate this to be project financed unless the additional capital freed up by this transaction could be deployed with a positive impact to AFFO through reducing higher cost debt elsewhere, funding new developments or in an acquisition transaction. The requirement of Cardinal to be project financed to maintain the dividend due to a liquidity crunch will be much clearer once a decision on the OEFC lawsuit is announced. Summary Overall, we view Capstone Infrastructure Corporation to be a well-managed company with a quality asset portfolio with a good pipeline of potential developments. There is a compelling valuation case to be made for this small-cap Canadian firm, with the vast majority of negative news and potential outcomes already priced into the stock. If management executes to plan, there is substantial upside for investors in Capstone over the next three years. In the shorter term, a positive regulatory decision regarding the Bristol Water utility due out at the beginning of November 2015 could be a catalyst for a short-term gain in the stock. But with the healthy dividend, investors may be wise to hold on for the ride towards 2017 where full value for the underlying assets may more readily be realized. Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks. Disclosure: I am/we are long MCQPF. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.