2023 | 2024 | ||||||
Price: | 7.35 | EPS | 0.99 | 1.15 | |||
Shares Out. (in M): | 82 | P/E | 7.4 | 6.4 | |||
Market Cap (in $M): | 600 | P/FCF | 7.4 | 6.4 | |||
Net Debt (in $M): | 374 | EBIT | 0 | 0 | |||
TEV (in $M): | 974 | TEV/EBIT | 0 | 0 |
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Long: CMPO equity
Current Price: $7.35
Target Price: $15.00
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About a year ago, we pitched CPI Card Group with the argument that contrary to popular opinion, the credit card manufacturing business was a decent industry and that 6x FCF was far too low a multiple for this under-the-radar stock. The stock has gone up by about 200% since the. We think that CompoSecure (CMPO) is a very similar investment.
We think CompoSecure is an above-average business that is trading for a deeply discounted valuation with a fair value more than double the current share price. Catalysts for a re-rating include 1) increased investor awareness, 2) a renewal of its agreement with customer Chase, 3) deleveraging and potentially refinancing its debt, 4) a profit contribution from its Arculus cold-wallet technology and 5) an eventual sale of the company.
Our thesis is:
1. The US payment card manufacturing business is a reasonably good industry with moderate growth – and the premium metal card industry is even more attractive
2. CompoSecure is the leader in the industry – and its competitive position seems secure
3. CompoSecure is very off-the-radar with very few investors focusing on it, partly because it is lumped in with the 2021 SPAC cohort that performed so badly
4. CompoSecure’s valuation is attractive, even in the most conservative scenarios
5. Contract renewals, crypto wallet profitability or sale, debt refinancing and an eventual sale could be catalysts
Card manufacturing industry
We will refer back to our write-up on CPI Card on why we think the credit card manufacturing industry is attractive and why we think the industry will grow at a low-to-mid-single-digit rate for many years:
https://www.valueinvestorsclub.com/idea/CPI_CARD_GROUP_INC/5930792130
The premium metal card submarket is even more attractive given its cache and its use as a marketing tool by banks, “neobanks” and Fintechs for the attractive younger cohort that seeks the status of heavy metal cars. As such, the company expects the business to grow at a 15% through-cycle CAGR, while we assume it will be lower for the sake of conservatism. CompoSecure is best known for making the Chase Sapphire and Amex Platinum cards (these are the 2 most important relationships, which we will discuss later) but it has a wide portfolio:
CompoSecure is the leader in the industry – and its competitive position seems secure
We were initially concerned that CompoSecure’s very high margins (40% EBITDA margins) made it vulnerable to competitive risk, but for a variety of reasons, its relationship with its customers seems secure:
CompoSecure is very off-the-radar with very few investors focusing on it, partly because it is lumped in with the 2021 SPAC cohort that performed so badly
Despite being very profitable and increasing its guidance throughout 2022 (when most companies struggled), CMPO is still very off the radar. It is only covered by 4 analysts, it has never been mentioned on VIC and has only one article on SeekingAlpha. It’s clearly not a household name. To the extent that people have heard of it, we have found the perception to be very negative and associated with “some crypto SPAC” – which is both true and misleading.
CompoSecure is guilty of hyping up their crypto cold wallet (Arculus) during the repugnant SPAC mania of 2021. At the time, they downplayed the solid metal card segment to make exaggerated claims about crypto. Guilty as charged:
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921051686/tm2113351d1_ex99-2.htm
As the air came out of the crypto and SPAC balloon, we think what is lost is that the metal card business actually did *better* than expected:
SPAC Presentation April 2021: $138 million in 2022 EBITDA for Metal Card segment
2022 Actual EBITDA for Metal Card $157 million ($136 million reported + $21 million in Arculus segment losses + $10 million arbitration charge minus $10 million stock based comp)
Normally, we think this would be very well received, but we believe that the starting shareholder base at CMPO was much more interested in the “explosive” growth in crypto assets rather than the boring profits in card manufacturing, so CMPO stock price fell by about 50% in 2022.
Adding to the selling pressure was the fact that the sponsor that put the SPAC together (Don Basile at Roman DBDR) sold its entire 6 million share stake, mostly in the 4Q and is now entirely out of their stock position:
We welcome their exit because Don Basile is exactly the type of clown that excelled during the bubble: bullsht snake-oil con artist with checkered track record who tried to peddle the next hot thing to retail investors. Don Basile’s resume includes being the CEO of Violin Memory, which came public in 2013 at $9 and filed for bankrupty 3 years later, and for creating some crypto token for which he is now being sued:
We think the exit of Roman DBDR is a positive for the company and its selling pressure has created a positive entry point for the stock. Good riddance.
CompoSecure’s valuation is attractive, even in the most conservative scenarios
Similar to our PMTS write-up last year, we think that 6x FCF is far too low a valuation for this business. We think something closer to 13x-15x FCF is more appropriate, while FCF should grow as well
Upside drivers:
Contract renewals, crypto wallet profitability, debt refinancing and an eventual sale could be catalysts
The elephant in the room here is the customer concentration. As the two largest issuers of the two most popular metal cards, it shouldn’t be surprising that Amex and Chase are the two largest customers of CompoSecure, making up a combined 67% of revenues. While this is clearly a risk, we think it is an analyzable and acceptable one for the following reasons:
We made general assumptions about how much a typical premium cardholder spends, the interchange that the issue charges, and the portion retained. Readers are free to make their own assumptions about interchange, network fees, merchant acquirer fees, credit provisions, etc, but we think this is very attractive business for Amex and Chase.
Amex Agreements
2004.08.04 original https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-22.htm
2016.09.09 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-23.htm
2018.07.27 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-24.htm
2018.12.26 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-25.htm
2019.10.10 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-26.htm
2020.03.19 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-27.htm
2020.09.24 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-28.htm
2021.07.14 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-29.htm
2023.03.29 renew https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465923038007/tm2310757d1_ex99-1.htm
JPM Agreements
2008.01.04 original https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-30.htm
2014.05.01 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-31.htm
2019.06.06 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-32.htm
2019.10.17 amend https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1823144/000110465921154308/tm2135648d1_ex10-33.htm
Appendix & Misc
Management
Short interest
Risks
Contract termination – far and away the most important risk – we discussed our views above, but if Chase does not renew by year—end, this stock is going by at least 33%
Crypto is toxic and destroys almost everything is touches
Ugly share count – the company needs to clean up all these dilutive securities – in our analysis, we have not adjusted the share count for the warrants and earn-outs, given the $11.50 strike, but if the stock does double, you will need to factor this dilution in.
Disclaimer: I, my firm, or my firm’s clients may have a position (long or short) in the securities discussed herein and may change such position without further notice. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security.
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