Their biggest (reported) commitment to-date has been the lamest and least-profitable of remaining department stores, Matsuya Co. Ltd. (TSE Code# 8237), which seemingly has absorbed perhaps a fifth to a quarter of the fund's gross long assets. The rationale for said position is a belief (which I have no reason to doubt) that their flagship Ginza store is worth far more as a veritable hole-in-the-ground, than it is as a time-honored Tokyo shopping and dining destination. Optimistic rumor has it that the block-long site-alone is worth upwards of USD$1.5billion, set against a current market cap of $1.1 bn.
Now I will admit to being a sucker for such "hidden asset stories", particularly in under-covered small and mid-cap names. And I am not alone for there is a (or used to be) an entire slew of funds focused on the so-called hidden asset game in Japan. So much for efficient markets, I guess. But given that some of these funds have been in existence for a decade and half, with fees far outstripping any investment return, it might be wise to ask the question: Is it a reasonable expectation for a carpetbagging gaijin portfolio investor to be successful in pressuring a time-honored Japanaese company to restructure or otherwise disassemble itself for the short-term parochial profit of foreign cage-rattlers?
Many - mostly those accruing management fees from their investors on Saturdays & Sundays - take an optimistic view as one might expect them to. They see positive change, management that is more sympathetic to "creating shareholder value" (the vernacular for asset stripping), despite the sh*t-kicking that activists have received on TOC (8841), Bulldog (2804), J-Power (9513), Fuji TV (4676), amongst other forays.
What IS true, once one dispenses with the hyperbole, is that some good companies continue to evolve into even better companies, but I, personally, harbour large doubts as to the overlap between these enterprises, and the low-hanging rotten no-growth fruit targeted by Steele, SFP, and other seekers of embedded-value-on-the-cheap.
I do not pretend to know the inner workings of Matsuya. So obscure is it - despite its billion$$+ mcap - no one has written a research report on it in a decade. But it appears to be a time-honored way of life for the minority family owners and its extended constituencies, rather than a business that appears to be voluntarily willing to commit ritual suicide and so shutter itself in favour of yet another, large-scale glass & steel real-estate development by Mori Trust or similar. The time-honored web of corporate and personal obligation extends deep and far, but this is not visible to those who see it as US$1.5bn parcel of land.
It is currently held by a cross-section of TeamJapan, that for all intent owns it for legacy reasons, but is still NOT likely to sell Matsuya Co. Ltd. to the foreign devils, else the same thing kharmically boomerangs upon them in the future. And even if someone pays full-market value for the site, there are the legacy pension costs, outstanding short-term and long-term debts to settle, inventories to write down, and redundancy costs for full-shuttering, thereby decrementing net proceeds to common shareholders by a large dollup. But SFP must surely have taken this into consideration. Right? Their investors should hope so.
In the meantime, aside from the paltry shares being repurchased by the company itself, SFP is the only buyer, and their stake - painfully acquired at ever-higher prices - is unimaginably large relative to what might be realizable in the market were something errr ummm unforeseen to happen, such as, for example, their largest investor were to redeem their interest in SFP Value Realization Fund in order to allocate, for example, to the Enhanced-Leverage Super-Senior Mortgage Salvation and Redemption Turnaround Fund (Euro-Class). Any estimate is, of course, a whimsical exercise, but my guess is that they would be very lucky to realize an average sale price of YEN1000/shr (or 50yen on the 100) in the market were they to become a distressed seller, under current market conditions.
I could of course, be wrong. SFP might have a trade-buyer in hand, one keen to acquire the site, and ready to "pay-up" for any and all shares, at a "fair price" far-above my estimate. But, investors would be wise to pay attention to the interim risk here, which is that there appears to be a large fat-tailed accident waiting to happen, as the race between the patience of SFPs investors, and the success or failure of their very large punt comes to an end. Personally, I would wager that SFP's investors lose patience before Matsuya's management gives up the proverbial ghost. Anyone with the bull-side of this story, please do divulge the particulars...
It is currently held by a cross-section of TeamJapan, that for all intent owns it for legacy reasons, but is still NOT likely to sell Matsuya Co. Ltd. to the foreign devils, else the same thing kharmically boomerangs upon them in the future. And even if someone pays full-market value for the site, there are the legacy pension costs, outstanding short-term and long-term debts to settle, inventories to write down, and redundancy costs for full-shuttering, thereby decrementing net proceeds to common shareholders by a large dollup. But SFP must surely have taken this into consideration. Right? Their investors should hope so.
In the meantime, aside from the paltry shares being repurchased by the company itself, SFP is the only buyer, and their stake - painfully acquired at ever-higher prices - is unimaginably large relative to what might be realizable in the market were something errr ummm unforeseen to happen, such as, for example, their largest investor were to redeem their interest in SFP Value Realization Fund in order to allocate, for example, to the Enhanced-Leverage Super-Senior Mortgage Salvation and Redemption Turnaround Fund (Euro-Class). Any estimate is, of course, a whimsical exercise, but my guess is that they would be very lucky to realize an average sale price of YEN1000/shr (or 50yen on the 100) in the market were they to become a distressed seller, under current market conditions.
I could of course, be wrong. SFP might have a trade-buyer in hand, one keen to acquire the site, and ready to "pay-up" for any and all shares, at a "fair price" far-above my estimate. But, investors would be wise to pay attention to the interim risk here, which is that there appears to be a large fat-tailed accident waiting to happen, as the race between the patience of SFPs investors, and the success or failure of their very large punt comes to an end. Personally, I would wager that SFP's investors lose patience before Matsuya's management gives up the proverbial ghost. Anyone with the bull-side of this story, please do divulge the particulars...
I would point out that Steel Japan actually made great returns for investors on Bull-Dog, it was the minority investors that took the sh*t-kicking, a result which Steel Japan sued to prevent, but lost, and so was forced to accept a truck-load of cash at a huge premium to their purchase price.
ReplyDeleteThat they managed to shift 3/4ths of their holdings back to the company at "ramped" prices is indeed a testament to the shameful stupidity of management. I will admit that I haven't seen their audited numbers (if their broken out per deal), but Steel had to buy lots of stock in 2004, 2005 and 2006, so I wonder what their actual avg price was, net of commissions, opportunity costs. I would have thought YEN1000 before costs. But just being long anything (ex-japan) accumulated after 01 but before 04 was a double, an far greater if it wasn't denom in USDs or JPYs. If they're paid 397 for ea. of their 3 warrants, and their left with a stub with an acg liq price (though they'd probably get an avg 225 or less in the market, my back-of-envelope says roughly 1420 (before legal costs, mgmt & perf fees). With a 2 annually & 20 paid on appreciation, I would be surprised if the net returns to their investors on a risk-adjusted basis (where risk is seen in respect of their concentrated illiquid outright leveraged long positions) were anywhere near simple plain generic unlevered diversified long global equity ETF unhedged back into dollars. From this point of view, they might be self-satisfied for having gamed management and the system of "ramp & extort", but that shouldn't be confused with investment prowess.
ReplyDeleteThe fact is that Steel is sitting upon a billion dollars (??!?) of similarly illiquid shite that is for all intents unmarketable save the the hope and prayer that some of the other Co. managements will be as yellow (no pun intended) as Bulldog's. Since Steel really doesn't want to manage any of these companies, and doesn't have trade buyers in-hand, management should call 'em out, rally-round the TeamJapan wagons, and make 'em puke, buying in the Shares when they do.
My point is: I'd like to see them try to liquify their portfolio and return funds to investors. The haircut upon present so-called "managed mark-to-markets" would be unimaginably large, as is the case with Matsuya.
wow you seem really clever. how much money are you managing and what is your fund's performance?
ReplyDeleteThis may be over two years old but has proved to be a very very accurate prediction of what has come to pass. SFP's holding appears to have dwindled from over 14% of the company to just $40m worth of stock. SFP's performance in 2008 and 2009 has been nothing short of lamentable. Your definition of the risks associated in investing with Mr Baran's mob was, if anything, understated. The principals have made a fortune. Investors have lost one. However, at some point soon, Matsuya will be devoid of its least sensible shareholder. The stock has already had one big rally in late 2009 when it became obvious just how badly SFP had been forced to bash the stock. Once they are gone (and their own fund must, surely, be seeing wave after wave of redemptions given its performance and loss of critical mass), it will normalise to its long term average, ie Y1200-1500.
ReplyDeleteThere is a little known fact that Mr Baran doesn't like to broadcast. Back in the mid 1990s, he worked for a guy called John Lowrey (though he fails to disclose that in the presentations I have seen). They attempted to take a stake and interact in the management of a Japanese company. Any idea which? Yup, 8237. He has re-hashed an old idea borne out of the 1980s Q ratio game and has managed to con investors twice over. In both instances, investors lost and they got paid far too handsomely.
You should revisit this story. It has developed as predicted. SFP has become a wonderful parody of an emperor that wears no clothes.
ReplyDelete