Tassal $TGR.AX $TGR half year results out and they didn’t disappoint 🤯
✅Revenue +43%
✅EBITDA +25%
✅NPAT +31%
✅FCF +137%

Let’s take a look 👇
1. But first, you can find my previous updates and the original deep dive all linked through here.

If you don’t want to look at the entire thread, the original is in my index of deep dives on my pinned tweet.
2. The three components of my investment thesis
✅Cyclical (salmon) – peaking now but expecting to stay elevated
✅FCF conversion (prawns) – on track as CAPEX reduces
✅Valuation – remains cheap relative to peers
3. An update on the technical thanks to @ElephantCapita2

You can see we’re still closer to the bottom than the top, and fundamentals are driving this breakout.
4. But what I’m really looking for is this 2012-14 3x over an 18month period as salmon farming hit scale, CAPEX declined and FCF ramped up.

Can’t tell you about the technicals, why stock didn't pop today, but fundamentals are on target for both salmon and prawns.
5. First thesis is on the cyclical nature particularly for salmon. This has bottomed, and 1H22 was a clear turning point.

Wholesale prices up post lockdowns. Export prices and volumes way up. Expecting margins up in 2H22.
6. Cyclical prices have reached all time highs this week. I expect that due to lack of global inventory, this will remain elevated (perhaps not 90NOK) for 2H22 and maybe into 1H23.
7. @berthon_jones and @lachlanbjensen have been all over inflation impacting this earnings season.

And Tassal has been no exception with higher costs, tighter margins, forecast to continue in to 2H22 countered to some degree by higher prices / sales mix.
8. The cycle is really getting going when we have Michael @Fritz844 and FinTwit jumping on board! But my point is this is the early stage of the cycle, not the peak - yet.
9. Inventory has declined by 4000t pushing up cash flow. We can expect another 1000t to be drawn down in 2H22 before we hit around 2,000t working capital requirements. However combined with higher prices, export EBITDA may actually increase in 2H.
10.The second part of the investment thesis is FCF improving as CAPEX pulls back.

The EBIDTA to op.CF bridge shows this *starting* to kick in, but expect more in FY23+ as air freight reduces, prawn production increases, and salmon pricing flows through.
11. You can see it more clearly here the CAPEX declining, with maintenance CAPEX stabilizing around $70m for both salmon and prawn .
12. Think of salmon/prawns as an infrastructure play. CAPEX upfront, then revenues increasing.
As biomass increases particularly for longer duration salmon, efficiency improves. Salmon is nearing optimization, but prawns are still early (4000t with target of 20000t by 2030).
13. Prawns are a big part of my thesis.

The land (CAPEX) has been paid, production is only at the early stage of ramping up, working capital is lower (6months grow vs 4yr for salmon), ROIC is higher (12% salmon vs 30% for prawns), etc.
14. Big growth numbers coming out of prawns.

And as they get more efficient, better marketing (all year round availability, fresh never frozen, etc) the EBITDA margins of $5-6 should be achievable.
15. For the first time we got a glimpse as to what the third pillar of the product life cycle would be.
16. Seaweed will reduce carbon, reduce runoff and produce consumables. This will be one of the first large-scale integrated multi-trophic aquaculture based on decades of research.
17. And here’s a deep dive on why I personally think seaweed is a great opportunity for Australian businesses.
18. Last comments on valuation. Tassal are still trading at heavy discounts to international peers and the Huon takeover value.
19. Huon transacted at 20x pre-Covid EBITDA. With an EV of $1.3bn, Tassal’s pre-Covid EBITDA was $140m (9x), and I estimate a non-cyclical normalised EBIDTA for Tassal of $170m (7.4x) in FY23. 40% discount is consistent with European M&A too.
seafoodsource.com/news/business-…
20. Overall, happy with these results.

The investment thesis is unfolding as planned albeit 6 months later than I originally anticipated. Target: 2x revenue, 3x EBITDA, 4x FCF by 2030 still in play.
If you enjoyed this, bash the like / retweet / follow buttons.

A deep dive per fortnight is my commitment to FinTwit.

Questions and feedback always welcome. DYOR.

Disclaimer, I'm long TGR.

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More from @DownunderValue

Feb 17
Lark $LRK LRK.AX is an award winning whiskey distilling company based out of the beautiful Tasmania that’s been in the news for all the wrong reasons. Does yesterday's 20% drop in the share price give us a buying opportunity?

Let’s take a deep dive. 👇 Image
1. Investment thesis: Asset play.
✅Award winning whiskey
✅Growing asset base through acquisitions
✅Growing revenues with positive earnings
✅Valuations at or below net tangible assets
❓Risk of new management & Bill Lark
2. Lark was set up by Bill Lark, the ‘Godfather of Australian Whiskey’ who was inducted in the Hall of Fame in 2015.

Only 1 of 7 people outside of Scotland to claim that feat. Image
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Feb 16
Treasury Wine Estate $TWE $TWE.AX 1H22 results have come in well above consensus, popping +10% today despite:
🚨Revenue -10.1%
🚨EBITS -6.7%
🚨NPAT -5.3%
Let’s take a look 👇 Image
1. TWE was a Classic case of heads I win (China not so bad, find alternative markets), tails I don’t lose ($8-9 asset values incl. under reported land and inventory).
Here’s the previous earnings updates and original deep dive:👇
2. The 1H22 results look terrible.

Look, every number is down down down. Yet, stock price up +11.39% right this moment 🤷 Image
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Feb 14
The global water and wastewater industry was worth US$260bn in 2020, growing at a healthy 7% CAGR. Australian technology is well positioned to benefit, but are Australian companies?

Let’s take a look at Fluence $FLC $FLC.AX
Phoslock $PET $PET.AX and Calix $CXL $CXL.AX 👇
1. Tl;dr – De.mem $DEM $DEM.AX is still my #1 pick. The sector passes my baked beans hurdle (growing +4% CAGR), and De.mem have a good business model. Just not sure on their operating leverage?
You can check out the most recent deep dive here:👇
2. Fluence $FLC $FLC.AX builds decentralized water treatment plants around the world. With over 300 projects under its belt, it has a proven track record in delivering.
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Things are about to get reel interesting in the Salmon World.🐟

European inventories are depleted, demand keeps increasing, and supply is contracting. We're up ~40% from the start of the year, and prices have hit 100NOK in China! Image
"The salmon price is speeding away - towards the highest level of all time"

"Faroe islands, Scotland, Chille, Norway - they all have shortages. It is a perfect storm". <-Music to my ears. Image
They're all up 10%, 15%, 20% over the past month:
👊Mowi $MOWI
👊Bakkafrost $BAKKA
👊Leroy $0GM2
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Dec 16, 2021
Food security and fertilizers are back in the media again for all the wrong reasons. Farmers on tik-tok say the world is about to end, and fertilizer prices are going bananas. So what’s the play on the ASX?

Let’s take a deep dive. 👇
1. Food security as a megatrend is driven by population and wealth increases with limited resources.

I look to invest in:
1⃣Owning primary factors of production (food, water)
2⃣Owning low-cost food producers
3⃣Ag Tech companies, or
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There are three chemical compounds each with their own market:
🌱Nitrogen
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Nov 25, 2021
Angel Seafood $AS1 $AS1.AX is the largest oyster producer in Coffin Bay, making news for all the wrong reasons. A real microcap seeking to build scale, is now the time to swim against the tide? 🦪

Let’s take a deep dive. 👇 Image
1. Investment thesis: Fast Grower.
✅Strong market for oysters
✅Revenue ramping up
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✅Skin in the game
🚨Food poisoning / sales suspension
2. Recently I looked at East 33 $E33 as an oyster play – sorry folks, it was a ruse!

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Read 26 tweets

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