iionline.com
Judith Graham (7/29/99)
When preparing a company to be sold, it helps to make it look desirable.
Cosmetics titan Revlon (NYSE: REV - Quotes, News, Boards) should know a thing or two about getting spruced up for a meeting with a possible suitor. But in light of its just announced quarterly earnings, attracting a potential buyer may now prove a trickier task than previously anticipated.
Like this Article?
Tuesday night the company reported second-quarter earnings of $0.11 per share, missing analysts' estimates by a landslide. It was expected to earn $0.31 per share, based on the average analyst estimate. A slew of restructuring charges put the actual profits take well into the red.
Adding insult, the outlook for the second half of the year doesn't look much better. That's because Revlon will have to spend more on marketing to keep up with new competition from brands such as Johnson & Johnson's (NYSE: JNJ - Quotes, News, Boards) Neutrogena and Procter & Gamble's (NYSE: PG - Quotes, News, Boards) Oil of Olay.
Revlon's sales were disappointing across the board, due in part to the impact of its new competition, sluggish category growth and economic uncertainty overseas. Sales slid 3.8%, with international sales falling 12.3% on weakness in Latin America and Russia and the translation of foreign sales into the stronger U.S. dollar.
Bullish comments regarding the sales outlook for the second half were the only reasons shares didn't crater. The shares fell $1.50, or 6.7%, to $20.75.
However, the company's tale of declining profits and sales shortfalls is nothing new. After having recorded four consecutive quarters of sales declines, Revlon is expected to grow in the low single digits in the second half of the year, bringing full year sales to about $2.2 billion, down 2% from last year when it had only 0.8% growth, according to a morning report by analyst Andrew Shore of PaineWebber.
And now, with its past sins of overloading distribution channels, coupled with the absence of major new product activity, the company has managed to weave its business into a tangled web.
A sales shortfall wouldn't be such a problem if the company wasn't sitting on a mountain of debt. A cumbersome $1.75 billion debt means the company must dole out $36 million in interest payments every quarter. In the quarter just ended, Revlon generated $34 million in operating income. With high interest expenses chipping away at profits, the company can barely afford to chip away at the actual debt.
So how does this affect the company's quest to find a buyer?
As PaineWebber's Shore wrote in his report, 'Financially, the company's $1.75 billion debt and negative equity constrains the operational flexibility, and has the appeal of deadly poison to any interested acquirer.'
However, analyst Melissa Grant of Warburg Dillon Read says debt only presents a problem for a company that wants to buy all Revlon's holdings. 'It limits some players from buying the entire company, but it doesn't limit them from buying a portion,' Grant says. 'Given Revlon's portfolio, there are certain product segments Revlon's in that could be strategic fits for certain buyers.'
But after the stock jumped in March on speculative appeal that its knight in shining armor was standing by, four months later, the auction house is empty. Past interested parties included Japan's Kao, but it, along with some others, reportedly opted out after assessing that Revlon is not as strong an international brand as it is in the U.S.
On Monday, the Financial Times of London said Revlon's latest suitor, Coty Inc., decided not to bid for the company.
Chances are Revlon is more likely to be dissected piece by piece rather than as a whole. But first it needs a buyer -- and at this point, any buyer.
Grant says today's resulting stock price decline may make the company more enticing for a potential buyer. 'If anything it looks more attractive,' she says. 'The stock price is down, and it would be a better deal now than if this had been done this few months back.'
But for investors, it was probably time to jump ship a long time ago.
'Speculative appeal (we are skeptical of even that), for whatever its worth, is the only driver for the stock in the near term,' Shore notes. 'Revlon continues to be an investment story that one would be better off to avoid.'
Bottom Line:
Revlon's goose is cooked, and the near-term outlook is grim. Expect the stock to hover in the teens until there is evidence to suggest things are shaping up at Revlon, or until there is a bidder. |