2023 | 2024 | ||||||
Price: | 8.69 | EPS | -0,2 | 0,25 | |||
Shares Out. (in M): | 46 | P/E | neg | 27 | |||
Market Cap (in $M): | 307 | P/FCF | neg | neg | |||
Net Debt (in $M): | -77 | EBIT | -3 | 21 | |||
TEV (in $M): | 230 | TEV/EBIT | n.a. | 16 |
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Neo Performance Materials
This short post is dedicated to an interesting opportunity opening up recently in NPM – a Canada headquartered advanced industrial materials manufacturer.
NPM is one of the global leaders in the production of magnetic powers and magnets, but also different specialty chemicals/alloys/metals. The company itself divides its’ business across three business lines/segments –
The company was formed due to the infamous Molycorp restructuring, back in 2016. Since 2016 the company has constantly been in the net cash position, allowing it to undertake minor M&As across the board and enjoy uninterrupted business activity during less opportune times. Considering the „electrification of everything“ trend globally, we see demand for products produced by the company being attractively positioned for long-term growth.
Investment thesis
The world goes more and more in the direction of electrification trends, which concerns increasing production of EVs, but also already existing electrical devices becoming more and more efficient. On top of that, the promises for lower GHG emissions globally and a more significant share of sustainable energy sources are quite unquestioned trends we are witnessing. To do all of that, a simple thing is required – REE-based magnets and magnetic powders, which are set to increase in demand by more than 2x in the following decade.
As such, NPM’s products deliver magnetic, catalytic, luminescent, electrochemical, and enhanced thermal stability properties that enable technologies to be considered vital.
To make things clear, NPM is not an REE mining or vertically integrated company – though the company has a rare earth project in Greenland under development – their value-added lies in the processing part of the supply chain, making the business somewhat less cyclical (but not immune), and not being interested that much in sky-high prices of the product, but in high demand of those magnets (that sometimes become less affordable, like in the past couple of years). And lower affordability can translate into customers thinking about alternatives (like ferrites, which are cheaper but less efficient). But, at the end of the day, considering the pass-through mechanism put in place across major parts of NPM contracts, the company just enjoys its’ margin-earning process, which so far has been very cash-generative.
Differentiation
So what’s so special in NPM’s operations?
REE mining, separation, and all other parts of the supply chain are mostly located in China. China is unquestionably the largest REE producer and exporter globally, where companies are usually subject to production quotas. NPM has advantageous positioning since the company’s operations are diversified across the globe. The company has in total 9 manufacturing facilities in China, the US, Germany, Canada, Estonia, and Thailand. As such, NPM operates a unique dual supply chain inside and outside of China for REE separation and REE advanced materials. In Europe, the company is the only player operating commercial RE separation and rare metals facility in Europe.
At the end of the day, NPM is serving a bunch of well-known names to anyone:
Ongoing investment cycle
2023-2024 will be record years in terms of capex for the company. On average between 2017-2022, NPM was spending 10-12mln USD on capex (while generating ~50-70mln USD on EBITDA level). This year, though, according to our estimates, the company will spend ~90mln USD as 2 high-importance projects are going on:
In total, the Zibo reallocation project should cost ~75mln USD (12mln USD already spent, to be finished in 1Q24), while Sintered Magnets project in Europe costs ~107mln USD (20mln funded by EU grant; will be finished in 2025). Considering the 300mln USD market cap of the company, those projects are sizable and important strategically.
Recent results
In previous years, results were affected by general economic slowdowns and cautious economic outlooks, putting sales volumes of Magnequench’s and C&O under pressure from time to time (especially in cases when global car sales are sluggish). Recently, the same reason affected results, but also add to that global shortage of chips and economic issues in China + local covid lockdowns, putting results under pressure.
Interestingly enough, the CEO and CFO commented during recent conference calls, that their recent conversations with customers indicate that demand could be back to a more normalized environment already in the second half of the year.
Quite the same goes for EBITDA generation, but also it should be noted, that at the moment the company has a high-cost inventory on hand, which gets processed step-by-step (while selling prices for NPM change either monthly or quarterly in most cases), creating artifically low reported figures (as later on, at some point, NPM enjoys the opposite situation and „overearns“ when prices are rising, but has low-cost inventory on hand). At the end of the day, the EBITDA margin profile throughout the years is more-or-less steady and stays in between 10-14%, while gross margin historically has been 23-25% with a couple of hiccup-years, jumping to ~30%.
Cash generation has been heavily affected since 2020 by i) covid-effects (lower demand = more inventories on hand), and ii) considerably higher prices for magnets globally, which start falling to pieces only recently with the first positive working capital effects visible in the first quarter of 2023.
At the moment, the NWC/Sales ratio stays around 37%; while if history is any guide, then it should be closer to 31-32%, meaning that partially the upcoming capex cycle will be covered by cash released from working capital. During the next 5 years, we foresee the company generating around 70mln USD of free cash flow. 2023-24 are set to be CAPEX-heavy years, with 2025 onwards CAPEX = depreciation and NPM generating ca. 50m USD in FCF p.a. or 16-17% FCF yield on EV.
Valuation
We approach the case with 2 scenarios, one of which is quite conservative (base case), while the other one is more upbeat.
Risks:
China's macro suddenly improves ahead of the current consensus expectations, triggering a better economic outlook across the globe as well
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