stake in AMC. Through September of 2020, the conversion price does not step down as
long as AMC dividends are equal to or less than 20c per quarter (10c after September
2020). However, on September 14, 2020, there will be a 10 day look back and the
conversion price will be reset to the lower of $18.95 or 120% of the average price for
that 10-day period with a limit that SL’s 23.1% stake cannot grow to more than 30% fully
diluted. At current prices (and prices up $11.23), this would amount to a $13.48
conversion price and 13.35 million additional shares being issued to SL. Mitigating this
issue somewhat (in addition to the 30% cap) is another provision that Wanda, AMC’s
controlling shareholder, is subject to forfeiting up to 5.666 million shares should a reset
occur. So…the maximum net dilution is actually 7.69 million shares. But this should be
in the stock price at this point. The dilution can no longer get worse, it can only get
better; also, none of the new stock is coming to market.
Rather than worry about the convert, we believe the convert reset is an opportunity as it puts
pressure on the controlling shareholder and the board to pursue actions to create value. They
have ten months from now to do so; and there are a number of paths, some building on each
other which would help rerate the stock.
1) AMC could partially address the ASC-842 earnings dilution by restructuring the FLO
leases by refinancing with debt. I don’t think we have enough information to predict
the impact that such a refinancing/restructuring would achieve, but it should be
considerable. The pickup in EBITDA would likely be between $50- $100 million at the
cost of $200-$500 million in debt.
2) AMC’s previously planned IPO for its European unit could be relaunched. We would
note that AMC is further along in its capital program with Odeon and Nordic,
performance has improved, and International accounting standards do not treat FLOs
(most of AMC’s FLOs originate from Odeon) as rent, and so Ode0n would present a
higher EBITDA contribution as a stand-alone than it does for the consolidated company.
The proceeds could be used to pay down debt and/or repurchase stock.
3) AMC’s previous $100 million share repurchase program expired in August with $56
million of stock purchased at 14.87, a 69% premium to the current stock price. AMC
could reinstate a new share repurchase authorization funded by its lower cap ex plans
going forward and/or the aforementioned IPO of the European business. We would
note that AMC’s float is only $460 million and 41% of the float is short. A $50 to $100
million share repurchase would have a significant impact.
4) Free Cash Flow is about to improve. AMC is guiding to $300 million of cap ex ($150
million of maintenance cap ex) for 2020 versus $415 in 2019. We also expect EBITDA to continue to grow.
5) AMC’s fleet of theaters should grow. Currently, AMC has about 3% of its screens offline
for refurbishment. Given the lower growth cap ex going forward, the number of off-line
screens should decline, giving a boost to revenue and profits at a much higher rate than the #
of sceens would imply given the fixed cost nature of the business.