COMPASS DIVERSIFIED HOLDINGS CODI
July 01, 2021 - 3:54pm EST by
NZ
2021 2022
Price: 25.50 EPS 0 0
Shares Out. (in M): 65 P/E 0 0
Market Cap (in $M): 1,650 P/FCF 10 0
Net Debt (in $M): 930 EBIT 0 0
TEV (in $M): 3,000 TEV/EBIT 0 0

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  • FCF Machine

Description

Compass Diversified Holdings (NYSE: CODI)

  • 1.6B market cap; 3B EV (debt + preferred)

  • Founded 1998 as the private-equity arm of a charitable trust. 

  • IPO 2006. Charitable trust still owns 13%, and works out of the same building as management

  • 5.5% dividend yield K-1. Will be 4% C-Corp pro-forma. Dividend has been steady for 15 yearS

 

I will present this opportunity in Q&A form, but highly reccomend investors look at the company's extensive presentations to get a better handle on each individual subsidiary.

 

Why is this exciting- Why does this opportunity exist?

  • ~10x FCF using upper-end of management’s 2021 guide . All companies are cash flowing. High dividend yield in a low yield market

  • Changing to C-corp from pass-through in Q3/4. Won’t have tax at corp level sans a gain on sale

  • Potential to sell or IPO some holdings into a hot market

  • No debt maturities until 2029

  • 600mm available on revolver for further opportunities

  • Mis-understood company. Sell side coverage from the BDC crowd. 

    Company buys mid-market and does not lend

    Not a RICNo mark-to management/market obscure businesses

  • Valuation being centered around NAV, and not FCF or putting a multiple on each business

  • M&A obscures results

    •  company has to be looked at on a pro-forma basis, which is often only available from investor decks-

    • GAAP numbers include lots of D&A, one-time gains/losses etc, and investors need to go below the surface

  • Company uses terms such as “subsidiary EBITDA”, “Cash available for distribution”, and makes for a complicated screen

 

What do they do?

  • Buy middle market companies in diverse industries (with a tilt to the outdoor/recreational side of things), manage them, do tuck-ins, and opportunistically sell

    • All FCF-positive companies

    • Generally require seller to roll forward some equity  

    • Keep subs management team intact

    • Currently own 10 holdings/subs

      • Sold 2 in 2019. Bought 2 in 2020

      • Sterno (food warming/lighting), Advanced Circuits (circuit boards), Arnold Magnetics, Altor (foam manufacturer), Liberty (safes), Ergobaby (baby gear), 5.11 (outdoor, professional gear), BOA (dial alternative to shoe laces), Marucci (baseball gear)

  • Permanent capital from equity and debt issuances. Use the revolver to move quickly

    • Layer subs with intercompany debt. Bring up cash to HoldCo in an efficient manner

    • Reduce leverage/revolver upon divestiture, and don’t sit on lots of cash

    • Refinanced in Q1, and now have $1bn of debt at 5.25% (vs previous 7-8% cost of debt capital) with nothing due until 2029

 

Who manages this?

  • “External” management team owned by founders etc, with a 2/20 arrangement. 

    • 2% is ~$40mm annually, and 20% is post a high water-mark and is essentially only relevant upon disposition, or as a bonus for holding a company and succeeding 

  • Elias Sabo, CEO since 2018. Very passionate. Great track record in the things he was involved in. Seems to be focused on the consumer products side

  • Heavily incentivized management and their wealth is tied up here 

 

How have they done-How well will they do?

 

M&A:

  • Have sold larger holdings to public companies (VSTO, TLRY, HSC)

  • Some home-runs, like Fox Factory (FOXF) which had an IPO in ~2014

  • Some have been disappointing with minimal growth (Tridien- Medical supplies)

  • M&A is tied to management’s ability to transact, making it difficult to look back historically when CODI was under a different CEO. The current CEO has done a great job. 2 huge divestitures into a strong market in 2019, and 2 acquisitions in 2020 of strong consumer companies with great growth trajectories

 

Operational Results:

  • Diversity of consumer businesses and industrial businesses offers a healthy balance

  • Consumer brands have been growing strongly over the past few years and during the pandemic. Industrials have been pretty flat, and had their challenges during the pandemic - specifically Sterno which is primarily all about events, but have been rebounding.

 

 

Cash Flow (AKA: Cash available for distribution/CAD):

  • After subs EBITDA, the company deducts corporate costs, management fees, subs taxes, CapEx, interest, and preferred share distributions.

  • Lots of financial and operational leverage if EBITDA and the businesses grow. Great set-up 

 

 

 

Anything

  • Change to C-Corp will open company to larger shareholder base

    Management expects to pay-out a special dividend of $.88 to cover the step up as the company moves to a C-Corp
    Will maintain a $.25/qualified quarterly dividend going forward, which will net investors $.70 annually, equivalent to the amount they’ve averaged over the past number of years considering all M&A
    C-Corp will now pay tax on gains
  • Management has indicated an interest in IPO’ing 5.11

    • Multiples are really hot on the consumer side. CODI paid low-teens for its 2 recent acquisitions which are growing rapidly (50% revenue growth. 1000 bps margin expansion Y/Y in Q1)

  • Q1’21 results were fantastic. 

    • Consumer revenue +33% (pro-forma), Industrial +4%

    • Consumer EBITDA +82% (pro-forma), Industrial +0%

    • Management increased guidance

 

Final Thoughts:

 

I’ll end-off by saying that multiples in the consumer space are very strong. The 2 recent acquisitions were done in the low-teens, and grew 50%+ in rev and 100%+ in EBITDA during Q1 ‘21. 

 

Industrials likely garner a HSD multiple. 

 

Backing out all the sale and management costs, there is a lot of equity value here.

 

Whether you come from a FCF or asset perspective, this company is flying under the radar.

I do not hold a position with the issuer such as employment, directorship, or consultancy.
I and/or others I advise do not hold a material investment in the issuer's securities.

Catalyst

Change to C-Corp

Continued execution

Divestitures/Acquisitions

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