David:
My take on SPTR is a little different that what you have been hearing on this thread. I subscribe to the philosopy that invetsing is both an ART as well as SCIENCE.
I will refrain from giving any investment advice there. RJ - Ray Jaeger, Chairman and CEO of SPTR
The sci part involves analysis of the financials of the company, i.e., income statement, balance sheet, as well as statement of cash flows. The art part is the "touchy-feely" part.
Science part:
I do not have all the numbers with me but do have them at home.
In general, this quarter the gross margins have fallen to close to 38% range. SPTR's expalnation has been higher start-up costs that they have included in cost of sales. Sounds like a reasonable explanation if you are the trusting type. My experience is that fallling gross margins at manufacturing companies are one of the early red-flags of surprises ahead. If you believe that stocks are priced based on their future earnings stream then pay careful attention to this.
A very common reason to falling gross margins is pricing pressure on the widgets you make and sell. Often the pricing pressure comes about due to an imbalance in supply/demand equation. At least I know for certain that there is a supply/demand imbalance and pricing is under pressure. Corning has stated so in its conference call, been in the press, and SPTR has confirmed this. It is not just a rumour. But I am not in a postion to quantify it. So, the best I can do is watch for early indicators that tell me the potential impact going forward.
In SPTR's prospectus for the secondary, as well as 1Q97-10Q and 2Q97-10Q, in the MD&A section they have stated that increasing prices is one of the reasons that their gross margins have been rising. Vis-a-is 1Q and 2Q their margins have fallen in 3Q. What are the implications ? Is it just the higher than expected costs for the expansion ? Also, the gross margins are the highest for the communications division, followed by the specialty products, followed by APD (prospectus for secondary as well as 96 10K). Well they got rid of APD the least profitable part of the business (I know it is a 50-50 partnership) so to me as an investor that is good news as higher margin businesses are now left. So higher margins will translate to higher earnings which translates to higher stock prices. Just the opposite has happened. The trend over the last 4-5 quarters was rising margins. The trend has changed. Is this reversal of trend transient, or is it an indicator of what you can expect to see in future. Except that in future mgmt may come up with another exuse.
When you have pricing pressure and gross margins fall, two of the most common ways to dig yourself out of this hole is
(1) slash prices and increase your sales (a la INTEL, COMPAQ, DELL etc), and/or
(2) increase operating efficieny.
Let us first take increasing operating efficiency, which translates to holding down or reducing sale & marketing expense, closing down non-performing offices, layoffs, mfg process improvements, better yields, or just making more efficient use of your resources. SPTR has had flat sales for the last 4-6 quarters due to operating at maximum capacity and yet to their credit they have increased margins. How ? The answer to this question can be found in their own 10Q's of 1996 and 97 as well as 96-10K and prospectus. They have stated that they have improved margins by improving operating efficiency. This simply means that their ability to squeeze more returns out of improving operating efficieny is fairly limited going forward. This leaves them with increasing sales as a way to respond to falling prices. I don't see how they can win a pricing war with GLW and LU, much less when they are your biggest customers. SPTR is no Intel, Dell, or Compaq. Since the operate on long term contracts, I fail to see how they are going to increase sales significantly without having signed new contracts.
Also, there is one other reason their GM may be under pressure. They got in to single mode around 1993 but it was not until the last few quarters that they stablized their mfg processes and got into volume production of single mode. In the annual meeting or may be in a 97 10Q they have stated that now their unit volume of single mode is approaching that of multi-mode fiber sales. They have also stated that multi-mode has higher margins than single mode. Could the rising volume of a lower margin product have caused a decline in gross margin and not just rising expansion costs ?
I will make the point that 37-38% gross margins are still at the high end of their range over the last 3 years or so.
David, when you read a press release, remember what is _not_ said is as important, if not more, than what _is_ said. They very clearly stated at the shareholders meetring the the first big sales increase from the comm fiber division will be seen in 1Q 98. This was I believe 30th May 97. I attended this one. Well in the press release dated Sept 11, second para reads as follows:
"Although additional capacity at the Communication Fiber Technologies will not be available until 1998 ..... ".
When in 1998 ? 1Q or 3Q. The absence of firm time frames has introduced uncertainity. Also, in the 3Q earnings press release no mention has been made of how the progress on the expansion of the comm fiber division is going. On schedule or not ? Was the Raymond James analyst following the company told something that caused him to downgrade the stock after 3Q earnings ?
Also, in the same press release"
Jaeger continued, "Our multi-year contracts are still in effect and we have every reason to believe they will be honored. We have recently received confirmation of Lucent technologies multimode fiber requirements under our supply contract with them, which are at anticipated levels. We are currently in disscussions with Corning regarding the supply for the 4th quarter of this year and 1998 under our supply contract with them. We expecty to conclude these discussions in the coming weeks"
Let us read between the lines here. Has LU locked themselves in for 4Q 97 and all of 98 ? pretty vague statement IMO. What about GLW, it is now mid-Nov, what has happened with GLW have they signed on the line yet ? I don't know and it is making me think hmmm..... Any responsibility to investors that got in at the secondary at $19.00 maybe ?
BTW, I have been following SPTR since 4Q 1994 and accumulated over the fall of 1995. I am out of it now but may get back in.
Now, most of the capacity increase in going to be in single mode, as they have stated. As per their statements (96 10k & prospectus) they are targeting emerging markets like China, India, and SE Asia with single mode fiber. Around 25% of their sales are foreign sales. A conservative opinion would say that their abiity to sell all this new capacity coming on stream in 1998 (I wish I knew when in 98) to SE Asian nations will be impacted. A more positive opinion will be that these nations will not delay their communications infrastructure projects lest they fall behind in their plans of building little Silicon Valleys everywhere. Clearly there is uncertainity there. My opinon is there will be some impact but not an earnings showstopper that will persist.
Also, the 100% increase in fiber production will be largely single mode which has lower margins. What does that do to margins going forward with the change to the product mix ? Most likely lower ? May be they will compensate with higher sales since they will have this increased capacity.
Contrary to opinions that have been expressed here I believe that going to capital markets was well timed and well executed. Sometime in fall 1995, before many of you were aware of SPTR, RJ had stated they will go to capital markets (in a conf call) for more funds to expand but that the stock price was too low. It was in the 6-7 range then. So it was planned and people that were following SPTR were aware of it then. Also, I like the fact that they have taken on a combination of debt and equity for expansion as against all debt or all equity. As long as they manage the money well. They have 24 million in long term debt, and interest payments start Dec 1999 I believe. Will eat into profits for sure. The point is you have to give them credit for pulling off the secondary in the short window that they were given by the market, issused Senior notes and expanding. Whether you agree with it or not, they said they were doing it and they are executing against their plan. They are better positioned as a company going forward than they were 2 years ago. However, if the market will give them a better valuation is the real question. If they show the earnings the market will reward them. They have more cash in the kitty now. Gen Cable tie-up may pay off. Instead of spending money on hiring expensive technical sales folks they now have a much better distribution capability they they could have ever hoped for. RJ stated this at the annual meeting and I agree. LU royalties will go away end of 97 and GLW by the end of 99, if I recall now. Also, they claim that their single-mode fiber is not subject to royalties. As they make more of this, a much less %age of sales will be subject to royalties.
Contray to opinon expressed here optical fiber is not a commodity product. Yes it is produced in volume but IMO that does not make it a commodity product. The barriers to entry to this business are very high capital requirements, patents, complex mfg processes, long lead times, the close tolerances and precision of mfg, highly skilled labor to name a few. IMHO commodity products are not characterized with such attributes. It it were a commodity product, the US would have been importing it from the SE Asian countries that want to import it.
Now the ART or the touchy-feely part. People have gotten burned pretty badly July 96 with small-caps and the liquidity problems that comes with them. They just started getting their feet wet this summer. Too bad the market tanked and the big cap techs have taken a pounding in the last few weeks. Intel, Compaq, Dell, 3Com, Ascend, Bay, Hewlett Packard, Applied Materials, Sun, on and on. When the techs rebound, and they will, but I don't know when, my FEELING is the money is going to the big cap techs again. I hope I am wrong for some of you sptr holders. You are simply getting good large tech companies at good prices now, if you have a 2-3 year horizon. You usually do not get good companies at cheap prices. At current price, if you have a 2-3 year horizon, GLW looks worth putting on your radar screen as well. This is not to say SPTR is overvalued or is a bad investment. Just that IMHO I can find better alternatives for my hard earned money in the form of larger cap techs.
If I see a catalyst in the 3Q 97-10Q, or in a press release that I have some level of confidence in, of if folks start getting uneasy of large-cap techs then I may even get back into SPTR. Missing out on $3-4 dollars will not bother me. If SPTR is a good buy today at 12* it will still be a good buy at 16* in the future. Assuming the change has been caused by fundamentals and not speculation. |