Tassal $TGR $TGR.AX reported their FY21 results to a mute market response. So, what happened that made the share price do basically nothing when it’s the 7th most shorted (7.5% shares) company on the #ASX?
My six key takeaways 👇
To recap my investment thesis I am betting that Tassal can double revenue, triple EBITDA, and quadruple cash flow / dividends from FY20 to FY30. This report has done nothing to dampen my expectations.
The results for FY21 and 2H21 were weak, impacted heavily by covid headwinds. I won’t repeat the investor presentation - for those interested, it’s just a click away: cdn-api.markitdigital.com/apiman-gateway…
1. Salmon domestic is a tough competitive business. The two big supermarkets $COL $WOW have renegotiated excellent rates that puts downward pressure on margins for 3-5 years.
No significant growth can realistically be expected here.
A possible outcome is $HUO owners seek to increase margins, which benefits TGR's wholesale market. Petuna has taken a low risk / high volume / low margin approach to supply the supermarkets delis - but if deli-salmon is removed in 3yrs, Tassal has pole position with their MAP.
2. Salmon exports was a missed opportunity. Despite low prices in 1H21, they returned to normal in March and Tassal didn’t export enough. They have realised their mistake and have set record export volumes in July and August 2021 (1H22).
What could have been…. ?
TGR had 7000t of salmon in their freezers. If this was reduced to normalised ~2000t, it would have added around $60m revenue and $12m EBITDA (up 8% instead of 0.6%), and potentially negated any NPAT losses.
This may have been the difference on squashing the short thesis. 🤷
3. Air freight is a massive headwind, and should be reported under EBITDA. It was $16.4m in FY21 (~$2/kg for exports), and may come down to $1.70/KG as they focus on China. But still, this won’t disappear in FY22 (“one off”?).
4. CAPEX has come down, and will continue to do so. A major part of the short thesis is the CAPEX requirements will remain elevated and depreciation is under reported. It reduced by +$30m in FY21 and will reduce by ~$20m in FY22 – ongoing savings that hit the FCF.
TGR can scale up the salmon to 45,000t by FY25 and prawns to 20,000t by FY30 with very little additional CAPEX too – e.g. they have the land, just need the ponds / permits. 👊
Depreciation will reduce, ROA will increase as prawns have 1-2% depreciation vs salmon 8-10%.
5. Normalised earnings expected for FY23+ are really strong. The platform for growth is in place. Once CAPEX lowers and the market conditions fully return to normal (almost there ex. air freight), operating cash flow may +60% and FCF becomes positive.
Here’s my model👇
6. ESG is a real focus. They contend that Tassal is best-in-class, and that salmon and prawns are more efficient forms of protein. One of their next growth platforms may also be seaweed / blue carbon farming.
Here’s their response to Flannery’s Toxic:
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Disclaimer, I'm long TGR.
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The global salmon industry is in turmoil as fears of contagion of the Norwegian resource tax hits the Faroe Islands.🐟
P/F Bakkafrost $BAKKA is down another 12% overnight, while the big Norwegians $MOWI $SALM $LSG continue to slide.
Let's take a look at the Faroe Islands 🧵👇
1. Yesterday I looked at Norway's resource tax and figured it was too difficult to find a good risk/reward bet. Right now the best forecasters of European monetary and fiscal policy seem to be a random number generator. Today I'm looking at Faroe Islands.
Norway produces over 50% of the world's Atlantic salmon. So this is kind of a big deal.
Unsurprisingly, the largest salmon companies in the world are also in Norway. In fact, the four largest are from Norway. This is because they have a huge cost advantage in the cold fjords which provide better growing conditions.
Delorean's $DEL $DEL.AX update to the market has left a fair bit to be desired. Engineering division has been decimated, financing remains out of reach, though retail is doing alright. Time to hit the panic button? 🚨
Let's take a closer look 🤏🧵👇
If you don't know what Delorean is, please don't @ me, just look at the original deep dive.
Clean Seas $CSS $CSS.AX FY22 results look really good. I recently spoke with Rob Gratton (CEO) and got to understand more of their business model and strategic direction.
Here's a short thread on my thoughts and why I don't hold 🤏🧵👇
The FY22 results look very strong. Volume growth (3.7kt), ~20% increase in pricing, ~37% revenue increase, 19% reduction in production costs, etc. And for the first time, profitable! 🎯
But I have mentioned before, this is really a bull-whip effect from the diabolical FY20 which saw inventory build up etc, and now being sold in FY22.
Treasury Wine Estates $TWE $TWE.AX FY22 results came out, and they're good considering the China wine-ban is still being flushed out. Total revenues down, but margins and NPAT are both up 🍷😋
Let's take a quick look 👇
You can find my original thread here where I outlined TWE as an asset play, with the hope that profits may return in due course.
To put in perspective the FY22 results, you can see here the 1H22 results were less negative than the market expected. But 2H22 has been pretty strong, which is why NPAT is up *only* 4% but almost 10% if you annualise 2H22.