Alaris Royalty Corp. (OTC:ALARF) Q3 2023 Earnings Conference Call November 9, 2023 11:00 AM ET
Company Participants
Amanda Frazer – Chief Financial Officer
Steve King – President & Chief Executive Officer
Conference Call Participants
Gary Ho – Desjardins
Nikolaus Priebe – CIBC Capital Markets
Jeff Fenwick – Cormark
Operator
Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Alaris Q3 2023 Earnings Release Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded.
I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Amanda Frazer, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.
Amanda Frazer
Thank you, Amy. We appreciate everyone taking the time to join us this morning as we present our Q3 results. I’m joined on this call by Steve King, President and Chief Executive Officer of Alaris.
Before we begin, I’d like to remind our listeners that all amounts given are in Canadian dollars, unless otherwise noted. Listeners are cautioned that the comments made today may contain forward-looking information. This forward-looking information is based upon a number of important factors and assumptions and, therefore, actual results could differ materially. Additional information concerning the underlying factors, assumptions and risks is available in last night’s press release and our MD&A under the heading Forward-Looking Statements and Risk Factors, copies of which are available on SEDAR at sedar.com as well as our website. Non-IFRS data is also presented and may differ from the way that other companies present such data. As with the forward-looking statements, please refer to last night’s press release and our MD&A for more clarifying information regarding these non-IFRS measures.
Now for Q3 highlights. Q3 revenue of $47.2 million was up 10% over the prior period, driven largely by the $5.9 million U.S. distribution received from Fleet. While comparable to the prior year’s distribution, a portion had previously been recorded as an unrealized gain. There was the impact of our new investments in Sagamore, FMP and the Shipyard also increased our 3 months results.
EBITDA for Q3 of $83.9 million and per unit of $1.85 represents an increase of approximately 110% as compared to Q3 2022 and for the 9-month period, an increase of approximately 3%, respectively. The increase in EBITDA was largely attributable to capital appreciation on our common portfolio. EBITDA isn’t a metric that we have historically focused on as we primarily look to cash flow metrics. As our portfolio over the last four years has introduced common currently in 13 of our 20 companies, unrealized gains have become a more meaningful metric, reflecting the growing value of this portfolio.
Cash generated from operations prior to changes in working capital of $36.2 million was a decrease of 17.7% over the prior period and a result of an increase in current tax expense in the quarter. Basic earnings per unit of $1.40 is 109% above the prior period and represents a record quarter for Alaris as we paid out $0.34 per unit of distributions. The resulting $1.06 increase to book value represents a 7% increase and brings book value per unit to $20.90 at September 30.
Also contributing to the increases in the noted metrics was our second consecutive quarter with a greater than 26% decrease in G&A with the wrap-up of the Sandbox matter and salaries and wages based on a more normalized operations as compared to an unusually profitable 2022, we expect G&A to maintain these lower levels.
Q3 earnings were impacted by a $39.6 million gain in net realized and unrealized fair value of investments as compared to a net loss of $7.1 million in the prior period. The gain was driven by a $37.2 million increase in the common portfolio and a $2.2 million gain on the preferred investments. Key drivers of these fair value increases were Fleet of USD 20.5 million; Ohana, formerly Planet Fitness Growth Partners of USD 5.2 million; and Brown & Settle of USD 4.8 million.
Fleet continues to generate rate increases and syndications through both new customers and growth in current relationships. With an ever-growing backlog, their outlook for the remainder of 2023 and 2024 continues to be very positive. The business continues to prove that their data-driven approach to fleet management has entrenched them within their syndication customers. While we continue to expect there to be cycled within the business and the industry, there has been a permanent and sustainable growth in the business.
Ohana Partners is firmly back in growth mode after emerging from the aftermath of COVID, expecting to finish 2023 ahead of budget and further aided by the tailwinds of positive announcements from Planet Fitness Corporate. Ohana expects this momentum to continue well into 2024 and the coming years. Continued growth in demand in the NoVA data center market has driven year-over-year increases in both revenue and EBITDA for Brown & Settle as well as a continued record level of backlog. Other less significant movements in a number of our partners, including D&M, Accscient, Amur, SCR, Edgewater, Heritage and Carey Electric rounded out our changes in the quarter.
With the completion of our investment into the Shipyard at the end of August, we have invested a total of approximately $130 million year-to-date. And with no redemption so far in 2023, the incremental annual yield contributes $0.30 of revenue per unit. We currently have $265 million of senior debt outstanding, resulting in $185 million of available capacity for new investments. On the portfolio side, our portfolio continues to perform well with a slight decline in weighted average ECR to above 1.5x, with 10 of our 20 partners continuing to be above this threshold. Slight movements in the number of partners have contributed to the decrease. 13 of our 20 partners have either no debt or less than 1x debt as compared to EBITDA in their businesses.
Our current outlook calls for $39.9 million of revenue in Q4 and a 12-month run rate of $166.4 million, up from $157.3 million last quarter. Our G&A expectations remain consistent with the prior quarter at $15.5 million.
I’ll turn it over to Steve now for his comments.
Steve King
Great. Thank you, Amanda, and thanks, everybody, for tuning in. Obviously, we’re very pleased with the performance of the portfolio in this quarter. Our investment criteria that we’ve strived for and executed on for the last 20 years has resulted in a group of companies that are on a combined and diversified basis, has shown that it’s capable of delivering low volatility cash flow in every different economic and fiscal environment. So we’re very pleased with that.
We don’t see any change in that performance going forward for the portfolio. And obviously, adding $1 of book value per share just in the quarter displays the value creation that’s occurring, a good portion of which is tied to the common equity positions that we’ve been building over the last five years.
Alaris’ not clearly from looking at the graph has been directly correlated to a fixed income product. And if you’re just basing us on our cash yield, you’re going to be missing out on a really good cash value creation story that we’ve developed here by adding common shares to our portfolio over the last five years.
While ECRs have come down marginally, we’re still very comfortable at the level that they’re at. 1.55 is actually above historical levels. And with such little debt in the portfolio as well as some fundamental factors that we already know have reversed in companies such as LMS will be soon showing.
On the climate front, we look forward to adding on to our successful additions of FMP and Shipyard this year, with additional new partners, hopefully by year-end. We continue to be very competitive in this higher rate environment and our capital is — we do have to stay very disciplined in our approach, particularly given the very high cost of our own equity at the current valuations of our stock.
So operator, we’ll turn it back to you and happy to open it up to any questions.
Question-and-Answer Session
Operator
[Operator Instructions]
Our first question comes from the line of Gary Ho with Desjardins.
Gary Ho
Thanks and good morning. Just first question is on Fleet. Wondering if you can just walk us through the drivers behind the sizable fair value markup on that investment?
Amanda Frazer
Sure. Fleet has a June 30 year-end, and we received their unaudited financial results as well as their budget and outlook for 2024 and beyond. And really, the cash flow drivers within those 2 items are what fed into our DCF model and the write-up. We’ve always been somewhat discounting for a cycle, downward cycle in the business and the industry. And while we continue to think that that’s a potential, we just think that the low point in that cycle, given the sustained growth that Fleet has been able to achieve, is a permanent step from where it would have been maybe 2 years ago.
Gary Ho
Okay. Great. And then second question is on Planet Fitness. And I did hear your prepared remarks, there’s been talks at least from the corporate franchisor side of the potential membership rate increase. I don’t think you take that into your fair value calculation. But can you also kind of walk us through what that could do to your prefs? And I think you also hold some commons in that investment as well?
Steve King
Yes. Gary, I’ll take that one. I was just at a Planet Fitness Corporate Conference 2 weeks ago, and there has been some testing of new pricing, including at some of our clubs. I think it’s going to be at best kind of a phased approach where there’s going to be different — maybe some different [Technical Difficulty]. So we think there’s an upside on — average revenue per customer based on the different levels that will be available, which will be a little higher than what they are today.
Probably the bigger move, though, is the concessions that corporate made on renovating the clubs and also the requirements on newbuilds that will make economics of new builds and refreshes much better for franchisees. So we actually view that as a bigger move in terms of unit economics as the price. So we’re very pleased with all of that. None of that has been taken account into our forecast at this point, but provide some really good upside for us.
Gary Ho
Great. Steve, those are helpful. And then just lastly, while I have you, always interested in hearing your comments on the deal activity environment. What are you seeing on both the capital deployment and any redemptions that you’re aware of near term?
Amanda Frazer
Steve, sorry, I’m just –
Steve King
Go ahead.
Amanda Frazer
I was just going to say, you’re cutting out a little bit. So I don’t know if there’s a way to just adjust. I know you’re on a cellphone.
Steve King
Yes. Okay. I’ll try and answer. Hopefully, it doesn’t cut out too bad. On the capital deployment front, it is very active right now. We are kind of being forced to be very, very selective. We’ve got a certain amount of capital, which is adequate. But because we haven’t had any redemptions for some time, we are making sure that we can kind of spend within our means because these valuations for our equity, it’s not something that — we’re not going to go out and raise equity at anywhere near these prices. So on the redemption front, we are starting to see some potential activity there. We have had unsolicited offers on couple of our portfolio partners. So we’ll see whether those will be adequate for our partners and whether they go through.
But for the first time in a couple of years, there has been some activity there, which would be very welcomed by us. We’d be able to show some more gains on some of the common parts of our portfolio that we’re not getting credit for, and we’d obviously be able to redeploy that capital very easily. So we are starting to get some more activity on that front.
Operator
Our next question comes from Nik Priebe with CIBC Capital Markets.
Nikolaus Priebe
Okay, thanks for the question. I was just wondering if there’s any additional color that you could provide on how Fleet is funding distributions to common shareholders? Have there been any chunky asset sales or other corporate development action that has helped facilitate those large payouts? Or has that just entirely been funded by the organic free cash flow of the business? .
Amanda Frazer
Yes, that’s been entirely through cash flows. They are just a syndicator. So they don’t really have large assets to sell. They’re really a service-driven organization, so that is purely cash flow and growth.
Nikolaus Priebe
Understood. Okay. Well, that’s encouraging. And then I was just hoping I could ask a little bit more color on the events that have driven SCR’s earnings coverage ratio a little bit lower. I recognize it only represents about 3% of run rate distributions. But can you just give us a bit of an update there and your outlook for distribution sustainability from that relatively smaller partner?
Amanda Frazer
Yes. SCR, I mean, has always been a very project-based business, and there’s always been ebbs and flows to the cycle of when they have those large project hits. So I think as you look back over the course of our relationship with them, they’re always sort of bouncing around quarter-to-quarter. We believe that their $4.2 million a year distribution is secure at this point. It’s what we’re basing our DCF on. So yes, just always a little bit, one that’s a little hard to predict just with how those projects fall into the earnings.
Operator
Our next question comes from Jeff Fenwick with Cormark Securities.
Jeff Fenwick
Hi. Good morning, everyone. I guess I wanted to start off just maybe with a bit of a discussion around the fair value accounting in the context of having that larger common equity portfolio today. Like should we be expecting to see more of this type of — these types of moves quarter-by-quarter and maybe a bit more volatile, just given the nature of common valuation versus prefs? Are you contemplating anything there that might change the approach to how you tackle that fair value calculation?
Amanda Frazer
Definitely no contemplated changes in the approach, but definitely will be a more volatile part of the portfolio as common doesn’t have the same floors and collars that we benefit from on the preferred side. It is a bigger piece of the portfolio. So I do think that as it continues to grow, it will become more a meaningful portion. Movement-wise, I think that there was some common that was being held sort of below cost, and we’ve really seen some recovery from that standpoint that brought those numbers up. But I do think that we will see fair value movements on the common side being a bit more significant over the future.
Steve King
Yes. I’ll just add in on that, Jeff. One of the main drivers for KPMG’s valuation on both our prefs and the common is discounted cash flow. But then, every now and then, you’ll have — whether it’s a sale of shares between parties within the company or maybe it’s an unsolicited takeover offer that then kind of sets the value of those shares and may override a DCF calculation, and that’s when you’ll see some bigger moves like you’ve seen here. So that’s one thing that will trigger some larger moves than just kind of an ongoing DCF model will.
Jeff Fenwick
That’s helpful color. And then maybe just another question on Fleet. I mean, I think the headlines generally are that the trucking market has been pretty terrible across North America over the last number of months. And these guys are sort of blowing the lights out. So what’s driving that difference in performance? Is it that they’re trying to help these trucking companies perform better? Or how should we be thinking about that? .
Amanda Frazer
They’re really not servicing trucking companies per se. Their area of focus is really in larger businesses that have a fleet component to their business, but it’s not the main focus of the business. And that’s really where they can — their service offering can help manage the Fleet as they don’t have — it’s not the sole focus of the business. So they’re generally working with a Fleet manager who is running a division of the business, but their operations are much more focused on services and delivery.
Walmart is a large customer of theirs. They have a lot of grocery delivery trucks. So there’s a lot of focus more on businesses that have operations where they just need things delivered. Grocery stores, as you can imagine, they just need the food there at a certain point every day regardless of that trucking industry overall metric. So that’s really what is driving them more so than those macro dynamics.
Jeff Fenwick
Okay. And then maybe a question just on the SG&A. I mean, it came down for a couple of reasons that you cited there. I think in the fourth quarter — I know you’ve been accruing bonus more so on a quarterly basis now. But usually in Q4, I recall there’s a bit of a true-up that can happen. So should we expect to see that this year that might take the salary line a bit higher through the end of the year?
Amanda Frazer
It is being accrued based on earnings in the quarter. So the only thing that we should really take that estimate higher is if we’re — if we have, say, something large happen. If there was a redemption that drove a lot of gain, that could factor into the bonus. But it’s 3.5% of distributable cash flow. So without a change in cash flow to drive that, there shouldn’t necessarily be any true-up with regards to what’s already happened in the first 3 quarters that hits in the fourth quarter as an adjustment.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Zachary Evershed with NBF.
Unidentified Analyst
Hi, good morning. It’s actually Thomas calling in for Zach. Most of my questions have been answered. So maybe one last one from me. Would you increase the yield on prefs if rates stay higher for longer?
Steve King
Yes. It’s been a great area of discussion internally. And now for 20 years, we have been through some various interest rate environments. And what we’ve tried to do is in order to make our product more competitive in the market and more appetizing to entrepreneurs, we’ve decided to leave the current yield in a fairly tight band and increase the total return expectations of what we do in other ways. So for example, on our prefs, we are building in a higher premium on exit than what we’ve built in before in different environments. We’ve added the common equity, which we have priced so that we believe that we’ll be getting a much higher IRR on those investments than we are in our prefs.
So we look at it on a total return basis, and we feel like we’ve moved up our total return expectations probably at least 5% from where we would have been several years ago in the lower rate environment. So — but with that being said, the kind of the headline sticker shock of a deal is always the — is the current pay yield. And so for that reason, from a marketing perspective, we’ve chosen to leave that as is. And it’s looking very appetizing for entrepreneurs. So that’s the way we’ve decided to do it to deploy more capital into better companies, but we have indeed moved up our return expectations.
Operator
And I’m showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the conference back to Steve King for closing remarks.
Steve King
Great. Thank you very much. Once again, we’re obviously very pleased to have surprised the market this week, and we hope to do more of that. We are continuing to build on more sources of revenue outside of the current yield. So I again point to the Sonobello investment that we switched over from trade prefs to convertible prefs. That one is going to lead to surprises in [Technical Difficulty]. We’re doing another deal in process that will be similar to that with a current portfolio company that we’re hoping to release and hopefully, that will get a fee and a carry on as well as stay in this principle. So we feel like we’ve got some very exciting things going on, and we’re creating a lot of value for our shareholders, so we’ll be excited to report back on our year-end in March. So thank you very much.
Operator
And this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
Read the full article here