Characteristics of commodity companies
While
commodity companies can range the spectrum from food grains to precious metals
and cyclical firms can be in diverse business, they do share some common
factors that can affect both how we view them and the values we assign to them.
- The Economic/Commodity
price cycle: Cyclical companies are at the mercy of the economic
cycle. While it is true that good management and the right strategic and
business choices can make some cyclical firms less exposed to movements in
the economy, the odds are high that all cyclical companies will see
revenues decrease in the face of a significant economic downturn. Unlike
firms in many other businesses, commodity companies are, for the most
part, price takers. In other words, even the largest oil companies have to
sell their output at the prevailing market price. Not surprisingly, the
revenues of commodity companies will be heavily impacted by the commodity
price. In fact, as commodity companies mature and output levels off,
almost all of the variance in revenues can be traced to where we are in
the commodity price cycle. When commodity prices are on the upswing, all
companies that produce that commodity benefit, whereas during a downturn,
even the best companies in the business will see the effects on
operations.
- Volatile earnings and
cash flows: The volatility in revenues at cyclical and commodity
companies will be magnified at the operating income level because these
companies tend to have high operating leverage (high fixed costs). Thus,
commodity companies may have to keep mines (mining), reserves (oil) and
fields (agricultural) operating even during low points in price cycles,
because the costs of shutting down and reopening operations can be
prohibitive.
- Volatility in earnings
flows into volatility in equity values and debt ratios: While this
does not have to apply for all cyclical and commodity companies, the large
infrastructure investments that are needed to get these firms started has
led many of them to be significant users of debt financing. Thus, the
volatility in operating income that we referenced earlier,
manifests itself in even greater swing in net income.
- Even the healthiest
firms can be put at risk if macro move is very negative: Building on
the theme that cyclical and commodity companies are exposed to cyclical
risk over which they have little control and that this risk can be magnified
as we move down the income statement, resulting in high volatility in net
income, even for the healthiest and most mature firms in the sector, it is
easy to see why we have to be more concerned about distress and survival
with cyclical and commodity firms than with most others. An extended
economic downturn or a lengthy phase of low commodity prices can put most
of these companies at risk.
- Finite resources: With
commodity companies, there is one final shared characteristic. There is a
finite quantity of natural resources on the planet; if oil prices
increase, we can explore for more oil but we cannot create oil. When
valuing commodity companies, this will not only play a role in what our
forecasts of future commodity prices will be but may also operate as a
constraint on our normal practice of assuming perpetual growth (in our
terminal value computations).
In
summary, then, when valuing commodity and cyclical companies, we have to
grapple with the consequences of economic and commodity price cycles and how
shifts in these cycles will affect revenues and earnings. We also have to come
up with ways of dealing with the possibility of distress, induced not by bad
management decisions or firm specific choices, but by macro economic forces.