Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Wednesday, March 11 2020 - 04:08
AsiaNet
Spruce Point Capital Management Releases A Strong Sell Research Opinion On Amcor plc (NYSE: AMCR / ASX: AMC)
NEW YORK, March 11, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Report entitled "A Core Short" outlines how Amcor plc ("AMCR" or "the Company") 
faces 40%-60% downside risk to approximately $3.60-$5.40 per share. The full 
contents of the report can be reviewed at www.sprucepointcap.com. Amcor is a 
roll-up, and newly created S&P 500 company, formed through a stock-for-stock 
merger between Amcor (Australia) and Bemis (U.S.). Its shares trade on both on 
the NYSE: AMCR and ASX: AMC. As two companies in the global packaging industry 
with large exposure to the consumer and beverage industry (PET bottles, plastic 
bags, tobacco), we believe Amcor is facing cost and revenue challenges as the 
world moves toward healthier and more environmentally conscious solutions. 
Based on our forensic review of the deal rationale touted by Amcor, we are able 
to disprove or question a majority of its promotional selling points. We also 
believe Amcor is obscuring significant financial strain (organic revenue 
decline 3.0% - 4.0%, cash overdrafts and cash flow contraction) that will place 
its dividend and BBB investment grade credit rating at risk.

   -- An "Organic" EPS Growth Story Through Suspect Cost Synergies and Obscured
      Tobacco Dependence: Nearly 10% of sales are tobacco cartons, yet Amcor's
      recent SEC filings and investor presentations disclose "tobacco" zero
      times! Based on our research, we learned that tobacco cartons once
      accounted for up to 30% of Amcor's EBITDA, and may generate margins
      1,000bps higher than other businesses. Tobacco sales are declining mid
      single digits globally, and Amcor has obscured its goodwill and entities
      associated with tobacco packaging acquisitions. Amcor even changed its
      goodwill impairment testing from "quantitative" to "qualitative" factors
      in 2019. Goodwill accounting is a current hot topic for the SEC, which is
      investigating Newell Rubbermaid. Other dependencies include plastic
      bottle sales to Pepsi (~8% sales), and packages to Kraft Heinz (~3.5%
      sales), which is also under SEC investigation. Amcor claims $180m of
      Bemis deal cost synergies and avoids discussion of sales synergies. Based
      on our analysis, deal costs are rising faster than planned, and sales are
      vanishing. Our analysis suggests both Bemis and Amcor sales are
      organically declining 3.0% - 4.0% and its cost synergy targets, relative
      to other industry deals, are very aggressive. Amcor's claim in Feb 2020
      that it's increasing cost synergy guidance from $65m to $80m appears
      dubious in light of evidence that R&D spending is running $35m below
      plan. Amcor was adamant at the deal announcement that cost synergies
      would not include R&D cuts.

   -- Signs of a Cash Crunch Calling Into Question Management's "Enhanced
      Financial Profile" Claim: We believe Amcor presents an inaccurate view of
      its cash by obscuring clear presentation of rising cash overdrafts and
      restricted cash. Recently disclosed European filings (30% of sales in
      Europe) show that Amcor's cash pool fell into a deficit after a multi
      year surplus. Amcor claims rising volumes in Europe, yet didn't disclose
      intentions to shut two Flexible facilities in Finland. Rising dependence
      on cash overdrafts has been a major harbinger of financial strain in
      companies we've warned about (notably XPO and Maxar Technologies), and
      also played a part in the collapse of the scandal at MDC Partners. Amcor
      is also intensifying its use of commercial paper (CP), a risky strategy
      given it was recently downgraded by credit agency Fitch, and as a BBB
      credit, is close to junk status. As a junk credit, Amcor's access to the
      CP market could be restricted, its cost of capital rise, and its
      liquidity reduced. Amcor embellishes its liquidity by claiming its CP
      is "long-term" debt, but we believe it should be viewed as short-term.

   -- Why Free Cash Flow Won't Improve and The Dividend Is At Risk: In its
      recent quarter, Amcor became more aggressive with add-backs in its free
      cash flow presentation, a classic sign of strain. The CFO claims cash
      flow will seasonally improve through June 2020 (2H'20), but this
      conflicts with an on the record statement by Bemis' CEO before the deal
      closed that its strongest cash generation is in Q3 (June-Sept). Amcor has
      said that its 3.5% capex to sales spend is "a healthy amount", but based
      on our analysis, the average industry capex spend is 5.5%. While all
      Amcor's close peers maintain or increase capex spending, we believe Amcor
      is materially underinvesting in the near-term, a strategy that will
      depress future free cash flow. Pre-deal Amcor said it required $400m of
      annual capex to maintain organic growth. However, our analysis shows
      legacy Amcor capex is running 30%-35% less. We believe Amcor will soon
      face a crossroads in its financial strategy between completing a $500m
      share repurchase program, increasing capex to remain competitive, and
      paying a generous $725m/year dividend. Absent a suspension of
      repurchases, we believe Amcor will be unlikely to maintain its current
      dividend.

   -- Leverage Is Greater Than It Appears: Amcor does not include leases in its
      presentation of Net Debt to investors. Leases currently amount to $580m,
      and are now recorded on the Company's balance sheet. In addition, Amcor
      has $354m of unfunded employee benefit liabilities. Going against
      Financial Accounting Standards Board guidance, Amcor does not clearly
      mark restricted cash amounts in its cash flow statement. On the surface,
      the Company tells investors it is levered 2.9x Net Debt / PF Adjusted
      EBITDA, but with these basic adjustments, we estimate leverage is 3.3x.

   -- A Poor Risk/Reward Investment Opportunity: Amcor's valuation is in-line
      with industry peers, but should trade at a discount to reflect our
      documented concerns about the accuracy of its financial statements,
      fragile financial condition and unsustainable dividend policy. Amcor
      investors should study the recent $5bn Westrock/Kapstone packaging deal
      as a comparable example of what to expect. The combined company has
      repeatedly missed sales forecasts, and is now expected to decline,
      resulting in significant multiple contraction. Westrock is comparably
      levered to Amcor, has higher margins, and also has a ~5% dividend yield.
      If we applied Westrock and its closest peers' sales multiple of 1.0x –
      1.2x to Amcor, it's easy to justify 40% – 60% downside risk to Amcor's
      share price.

Spruce Point Capital has a short position in Amcor (NYSE: AMCR) and stands to 
benefit if its share price falls.

About Spruce Point Capital
Spruce Point Capital Management, LLC, is a forensic fundamentally-oriented 
investment manager that focuses on short-selling, value and special situation 
investment opportunities.

Contact 
Daniel Oliver 
Spruce Point Capital Management 
doliver@sprucepointcap.com 
+1-212-519-9813

Spruce Point Capital Management, LLC is a member of the Financial Industry 
Regulatory Authority, CRD number 288248.

SOURCE: Spruce Point Capital Management, LLC