The Weekly Pitch: CCC, An Environmental Growth Stock

Greetings. I will be starting a new blog on WSO where I will focus on putting together quality equity research pieces. My goal is to get practice at writing ER and to hopefully generate some investing discussion on the boards in the process. I'll be starting a sister blog here: (http://seekingalpha.com/user/13500742/profile) where I will post more detailed versions of these articles. I will do my best here to be concise while still providing key details. I am hoping for some discussion/constructive criticism.
-----
Company: Calgon Carbon Corporation
Ticker: NYSE:CCC
Stock Price: $16.44
Market Cap: $903 million
Debt: $50 million
Beta: 0.78

Investment Thesis

Calgon Carbon Corporation is a specialty chemical producer and industrial equipment maker that provides water purification and air pollution cleaning services to utilities, the shipping industry and other industrial applications. The company partners with its customers to meet increasingly onerous environmental standards in water purification and emissions and is expected to show strong long-term revenue and earnings growth due to the impending implementation of several environmental laws and a current restructuring effort. Equip with both high potential growth and high expectations, investors need to ask themselves if the company can deliver on its promises and if Calgon’s newly appointed CEO can execute accordingly.

The social trend of increasing eco-awareness is long standing and is now making a global footprint. New environmental laws at both the national and transnational level are set to hit developed and developing countries alike over the next 5 to 10 years. For better or worse, Calgon Carbon is a pure-play environmental cleaning company with the world’s largest activated carbon specialty chemical business geared towards municipal water purification. By leveraging the stable cash flows from its water purification business, the company seeks to expand into the key emerging environmental markets of mercury emissions cleaning and ballast water treatment for large ships.

The resulting investment story is one of potential high rewards paired with high risk that should keep investors cautious until Calgon achieves key milestones in its business plan. The upside could see as much as 65% 5-year revenue growth and 75% 3-year EBITDA growth which could translate to greater than 50% upside in the equity. However, a colossal valuation with heightened uncertainty over management’s ability to execute a turnaround and successfully expand into new markets unfavorably tip the risk/reward balance for the time being.

Please refer to the attached file which contains the financial model outputs while reading through the analysis.

Business Segment Analysis

The company is organized into three reporting units: Activated Carbon and Services, Equipment and Consumer Products.

Activated Carbon and Services (or “ACS”) is the core business of the company is and contains the specialty chemical product lines for water purification and air pollution clean-up and had 2012 sales of $485.7 mm or 86% of total sales. The unit is projected to have a 6 year compound average growth rate (CAGR) of 5.67%. The top-line growth will be driven by price increases, a modest increase in volumes to existing customers and robust growth in the air pollution cleaning market in response to new regulations. Operating and EBITDA margins are expected to expand from 10.15% and 14.80% currently to 15.00% and 19.65% within 5 years driven by price increases and a restructuring program.

Activated carbon is a specialty chemical used for water and air purification. Calgon produces over 100 types of activated carbon which are highly differentiated patented chemical products. The key raw material is bituminous coal and the manufacturing process is complicated by specific regional environmental regulations which cover everything from comingling raw materials to regular chemical testing.

The ACS unit’s primary customers are municipal water and coal power utilities. The water treatment customer base is very stable and typically engage in 10 year contracts for activated carbon services. Calgon Carbon is the world’s largest seller of activated carbon services and has relative pricing power over its customers because of its partnerships with localities to customize carbons for specific cleaning needs and to meet regional regulatory requirements. Its customer base is highly fragmented (each municipality is basically independent of each other) and has high switching costs due to the customized nature of products and services. The purification business is experiencing modest top line growth due to recent anti-dumping actions placed against Chinese competitors allowing Calgon to successfully raise its prices (estimated by management at 5% per year until the tariffs expire after 2017).

The coal power plant customers are clients in the air pollution product line which is currently a growth area for Calgon with several recent positive regulatory tailwinds in the US and internationally. The market for mercury emissions clean-up in North America is currently 160 mm pounds per year; however, once the new EPA standards take effect, the market is expected to grow to 800 mm pounds per year. Air pollution revenue is expected to grow from $95.6 million in 2012 to $207.7 million in 2017 based on growth in the market and the company’s current competitive position.

The Equipment unit has two primary product lines: equipment for water purification and the ballast water systems (BWS) for ships and had 2012 sales of $66.0 mm or 12% of total sales. The unit is expected to post a 6 year CAGR of 25.75%. The growth will be driven by a ramp up in sales of BWS. Operating and EBITDA margins are expected to expand from 1.06% and 3.11% currently to 16.00% and 18.05% within 5 years driven by a product mix shift towards the more profitable BWS.
The water purification equipment represents engineered solutions for advanced purification needs in a variety of applications. Sales have been stagnated because of strapped municipal budgets as well as a lack of resources for Calgon to take on large scale infrastructure projects – typically losing those contracts to industrial conglomerates.

Ballast water systems represent the company’s single biggest growth opportunity. New regulations will take effect in the US and a growing number of other countries which require all ships to have ballast water cleaning systems installed. Ballast water discharges have been found to cause environmental contaminations when ships release water collected in one ocean in a different part of the ocean. The potential market size is 95% of all large ships (anywhere from 50-80 thousand ships) and Calgon has a ready-made BWS that is already compliant with the new regulations. Calgon uses a UV disinfectant solution. UV systems are currently two thirds of BWS sales and Calgon’s market share has been 10-15% of UV BWS sales. Ships are required to install a BWS during their next dry dock and because a ship dry docks on average every 5 years, the next 5-10 years is a multi-billion dollar opportunity. Calgon expects a majority of its sales to be generated from existing ship installs; however, so far, its 200 plus sales have almost entirely been generated from new ship constructions. The fact that Calgon has not gained traction in existing ship installs is a worrying sign. The business line is expected to drive annual BWS sales in upwards of $100 – 500 mm as US and international regulations phase in between 2014 and 2018.

Finally the Consumer Products segment represents a very small piece of the overall company (1-2% of total sales). There are numerous applications of activated carbon which can be embedded into other materials such as carbon cloth for gas masks or wound dressing. Other applications include food processing and Brita water filers, just to name a few. The consumer division does not appear to be on the top of mind of management. Segment sales are assumed to maintain current operational characteristics.

Corporate Initiatives

In August of 2012, Randall Dearth was newly appointed as CEO. Since joining as CEO, Mr. Dearth has already made shareholder friendly moves in announcing a $100 mm share buyback program (11% of shares outstanding) and initiating a restructuring program. The restructuring aims at cutting 30 million in annual costs by consolidating manufacturing facilities, reducing product types by as much as 50% and investing in factory automation and improved IT systems. The restructuring moves seem sensible and given that for the last 3 years top line growth has been 15% with no earnings growth, there are likely many low hanging fruit.

Sales and marketing is carried out through a direct sales force with offices based in the US, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, UK, Belgium, Germany, France, Sweden, Denmark, Japan, Singapore, China and Taiwan. As part of the current restructuring, the sales staff has been reorganized into teams supporting specific product lines as opposed to the sales function being a stand-alone division of the firm. This new sales model may allow better focus and improved client service which may incrementally improve sales.
The company drives sales growth both organically and inorganically by gradually opening offices in new geographies (1-2 per year) and periodically engaging in small acquisitions (less than $50 million) of regional activated carbon businesses to win relationships.

Key Risk Considerations and Mitigants

Key risks include regulatory uncertainty, macroeconomic conditions, competing solutions, and management execution risk.

The company’s growth is concentrated in areas where regulation is expected to create demand. Outside of these areas, the firm’s products are expected to grow at GDP-like rates. Calgon has no control over the regulatory process and can only anticipate when enforcement will begin. Because Calgon has already invested in engineered solutions, late adoption of regulations would give its competitors time to develop solutions and will hurt Calgon’s cash flow due to the fact that its newly acquired overhead would operate below capacity.

The developed world’s public sector has shown soft demand due to tightness in government budgets which is expected to persist. Core water purification and air pollution services should not be greatly impacted because of their essential societal purpose; however, equipment sales have already experienced multi-year demand softness which will likely persist. Because of macroeconomic conditions, further increases in environmental standards may be deferred because of the additional cost they put into the system.

Competing solutions remain a significant risk as there are many competitors in all categories. In the core activated carbon markets, the industry is highly fragmented and many regional competitors exist. Competition is especially difficult in regions where Chinese anti-dumping duties are not in place or where patents are not effectively enforced. Industry consolidation and the rising trend in trans-national fair trade treaties are mitigating factors.
In emissions reduction, there are alternative products (notably dry scrubbing); Calgon’s wet scrubbing solution is currently the most effective and environmental and is a category leader.
Calgon faces intense competition in ballast water systems. However, of the few dozen BWS on the market, Calgon is one of the few (less than 10) with regulatory approval and has one of the longest industry track records.

Management execution risk is a major concern due to the challenge of the restructuring and hitting aggressive growth targets. While there is some traction in the air pollution sales, BWS sales are still flat over the last three years. A snapshot of the board of directors shows experiences aligned with the chemicals and energy industries – no shipping industry ties. Further, while the company expects a majority of its BWS sales to come from existing ship installs, almost all past sales are from new ship constructions. Most of the company’s BWS competitors have long standing shipping industry ties which highlights the question of whether Calgon can make inroads in the industry which is currently out of its comfort zone. Until BWS sales to existing ships gain traction, growth projections for the company as a whole look optimistic at best. Because the valuation is reliant on heavy growth from BWS sales, the high risk currently associated with the growth strategy seriously calls into question the current valuation.

Valuation and Key Assumptions

Because of the high-growth nature of the company, a comparables analysis of relative valuation and growth should better reflect what investors are willing to pay for CCC shares. Using the ‘Valuation Statistics’ table in the accompanying financial schedules, CCC is currently trading at the high end of all near term multiples: P/E 19x vs. 16x median, EV/Sales 1.6x vs. 1.4x median and EV/EBITDA 10x vs. 9x median. However, CCC also has the absolute highest projected growth of the comparable companies with three year top-line growth 35% vs. 14% median and three year EBITDA-growth 76% vs. 25% median. When applying projected long-term growth to the 2013 trading multiples, Calgon actually has the cheapest multiples: 2013 EV/Sales/Growth 0.05x vs. 0.10x median and 2013 EV/EBITDA/Growth 0.13x vs. 0.39x median.
In addition to higher projected growth, Calgon has a significantly lower beta than its peers with average LTM margins. The lower beta is a function of having less leverage and a more stable business model due to its long term municipal contracts. The peer companies have varied business models with some focusing on equipment sales and other focusing on specialty chemicals. If CCC’s restructuring efforts are successful, its margins will be near the high end of its peers and will validate the company’s premium multiples.
The comparables analysis shows that if Calgon meets or exceeds expectations for growth and profitability then the shares are quite undervalued in the long-term. Using the implied valuations from the EV/Sales/Growth and EBITDA/Sales/Growth multiples, the 3-5 year target share price should appreciate by 1.6x or reach approximately $26.5. Alternatively, if one were to apply the current EV/Sales and EV/EBITDA multiples to 2017 projected financials, the implied share price would also be approximately $26.5. Of course, these share price approximations do not account for the risk in the projections.

Conclusion

Calgon has a promising business model with significant regulatory tailwinds. If the company delivers on current expectations, then its shares could easily see greater than 50% upside. However, significant risks and questions over execution unfavorably tip the risk/reward tradeoff and make the current equity valuation appear overdone. Investors would be wise to wait for early milestones that the company is executing and pay particular attention to signs of growing traction in equipment sales.

Attachment Size
CCC Model Outputs.pdf 74.95 KB 74.95 KB
 

Dolores iusto accusamus molestiae ut nisi. Rem illum sed qui beatae adipisci. Ut illo cum nulla nam repudiandae quia aliquam. Nostrum et laudantium tempora. Sit rerum laboriosam et aliquid eos et quo omnis. Voluptatem perspiciatis et voluptatem sunt voluptates numquam maiores. Ut expedita voluptas dolores quisquam aliquam voluptas. Incidunt omnis libero est repellat tempore.

Et nobis quod adipisci nihil esse ea. Suscipit est possimus quos cumque aliquam repudiandae quo. Ea aperiam ipsa tempore est ea non quia.

Competition is a sin. -John D. Rockefeller
 

Temporibus hic corporis nihil hic excepturi. Autem velit cumque assumenda aspernatur. Minima recusandae maxime deleniti ut cum dolorem magni. Reprehenderit aut eveniet ut qui voluptatibus odit dolores. Autem doloremque temporibus et asperiores aliquid quod at. Mollitia molestiae fugit debitis ad repellendus placeat. Provident repellendus omnis esse quidem necessitatibus repudiandae quae.

Recusandae non placeat eos ullam. Soluta natus accusamus perferendis. Cupiditate unde assumenda veniam a nostrum. Adipisci architecto neque deserunt accusamus beatae et laboriosam suscipit.

Deserunt quos est sunt repellendus qui harum earum illo. Dolores minus veritatis est numquam. Quas officiis sint earum repellat magnam nostrum. Voluptatem voluptates aut ut sit sed excepturi quia. Doloremque ad rerum et sit dolor.

 

Placeat dolor sint ipsa rerum velit consequatur voluptas. Repellendus qui soluta in nesciunt eaque. Corporis vel distinctio voluptatum voluptatum. Tempore qui eos consequuntur dolor architecto sed possimus. Rerum placeat rerum molestias nisi. Itaque qui non officiis deserunt quia velit. Aut illum distinctio nesciunt iste architecto.

Eaque deserunt explicabo voluptate repellat ipsam quisquam enim assumenda. Sunt quia laboriosam veniam magnam vel. Blanditiis consectetur quasi laborum ut ad quas.

Iste nobis cum architecto cumque est. Voluptas nihil sequi perferendis id est. Doloremque dolor numquam ut sunt maiores explicabo maiores velit. Quas quos et dolore commodi nulla suscipit. Molestiae omnis nihil eveniet odio quas omnis iusto.

Array
 
Best Response

Et et dolor repudiandae omnis. Minima expedita quia doloribus magni tenetur distinctio adipisci. Natus id hic maxime atque mollitia eaque quis possimus.

Dolores placeat minus ea iste atque. Magni nemo placeat adipisci pariatur mollitia. Sed praesentium amet reiciendis sapiente. Error voluptatibus eum debitis eius omnis hic molestias. Aut sed animi soluta velit ut corporis beatae omnis.

WSO Writer | View my blog
 

Dolorem qui sed consequatur vitae iusto. Facere asperiores minus ea reiciendis laboriosam. Ut numquam omnis natus voluptas ea.

Aut impedit blanditiis maiores aut eum est. Dicta et ut sed rerum est quos eaque. Totam earum non ut iste dolor quis vel totam. Nisi qui ut vitae ullam. Quasi provident quia nemo et voluptas tenetur nemo.

Ut saepe dolores numquam autem laborum. Quos dicta architecto delectus beatae quos. Cum et voluptatem iure officiis sequi ut non.

WSO Writer | View my blog
 

Eum et quidem fugiat optio qui. Ratione molestiae tempore laborum est voluptatem quam. Aliquam corrupti iste unde placeat.

Dignissimos tempora impedit omnis dolorum est vitae. In qui magni aliquid tempora. Nihil cupiditate expedita nesciunt ut suscipit nihil. Eum molestiae unde cum porro. Sed consequatur rerum alias doloremque a. Repudiandae vel unde et commodi voluptates.

Beatae dolorum sit odit dolor nam. Voluptatem est eius voluptate nemo accusamus. Ratione cumque qui maiores est.

Est autem labore reprehenderit occaecati architecto officia adipisci quaerat. Amet ut nulla maiores ea harum maiores. Amet fugiat quia enim fuga laudantium eligendi ut iure.

WSO Writer | View my blog
 

Eum quia dicta consequuntur dolore quaerat. Qui et voluptatibus est suscipit repellat quo. Ipsa minus enim earum atque quis qui eos iusto.

Quis accusamus enim dicta quae suscipit. Nisi tempora quos vel. Corporis nihil neque et dicta animi quia nihil.

Consequuntur consequatur impedit atque. Vitae adipisci architecto qui est quia. Quas nobis dolorem rerum non beatae enim porro. Est enim nihil sequi at voluptatum quasi vero odit.

Magni eos et et eaque. Enim nobis ipsa tenetur. Incidunt deserunt totam nulla facere accusantium enim repellendus. Sunt eveniet est voluptatibus quibusdam. Et et quibusdam voluptas autem.

 

Recusandae reiciendis asperiores dolor eius. Consectetur qui non rerum sit cupiditate maxime. Eum quos recusandae hic corrupti impedit eaque.

Temporibus voluptas ratione quidem saepe et nobis. Ad consequatur dolorem voluptatum id est eum.

Rerum tempora et doloribus eos. Velit incidunt amet perspiciatis laborum libero. Quo mollitia molestias eius sed voluptatum earum at. Aut impedit quas veritatis iusto explicabo. Magnam ut corrupti at amet qui earum.

Iusto veniam consequuntur ut quo incidunt quis. Suscipit vitae ducimus qui qui debitis. Quas dolorem aut ipsum iste quia. Deleniti quis suscipit quaerat omnis.

"What the hell would I ever say to a gorrilla?
 

Eos consequuntur sit consequatur atque consectetur aperiam. Corporis rem quam nulla doloremque ut. Quia voluptates sed ratione eum iste. Dolores quia totam perferendis voluptas facilis dolore eos.

Consequatur velit et mollitia neque doloremque. Ratione tempora maiores quasi omnis adipisci quo quia. Et consectetur facilis exercitationem expedita omnis inventore nostrum. Error repellat est inventore incidunt veniam sed. Nesciunt aspernatur iusto eius corrupti.

Deserunt maiores qui sunt accusamus aliquid ullam. Illo voluptatum excepturi et voluptas.

 

Rerum dolore quis quia suscipit ea. Amet odio eveniet cupiditate ratione aut deleniti. Laborum quasi aut quasi dolor a dignissimos voluptas.

Magnam vitae nesciunt et magni aut doloremque. Et aut labore fugit et at. Ad natus commodi aut est laboriosam ratione.

Velit et numquam ullam sapiente rem harum et consectetur. Quisquam et aperiam qui et error magnam in.

Eveniet omnis dicta dolorem tenetur temporibus quis dolor. Culpa voluptatem aut distinctio ab fugiat consequatur. Eum corrupti consectetur quia repellat omnis voluptatum.

Career Advancement Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Jefferies & Company 02 99.4%
  • Goldman Sachs 19 98.8%
  • Harris Williams & Co. New 98.3%
  • Lazard Freres 02 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 03 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Harris Williams & Co. 18 99.4%
  • JPMorgan Chase 10 98.8%
  • Lazard Freres 05 98.3%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.7%
  • William Blair 03 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Lazard Freres 01 99.4%
  • Jefferies & Company 02 98.8%
  • Goldman Sachs 17 98.3%
  • Moelis & Company 07 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 05 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Director/MD (5) $648
  • Vice President (19) $385
  • Associates (87) $260
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (14) $181
  • Intern/Summer Associate (33) $170
  • 2nd Year Analyst (66) $168
  • 1st Year Analyst (205) $159
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (146) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

1
redever's picture
redever
99.2
2
Betsy Massar's picture
Betsy Massar
99.0
3
BankonBanking's picture
BankonBanking
99.0
4
Secyh62's picture
Secyh62
99.0
5
kanon's picture
kanon
98.9
6
GameTheory's picture
GameTheory
98.9
7
CompBanker's picture
CompBanker
98.9
8
dosk17's picture
dosk17
98.9
9
numi's picture
numi
98.8
10
Kenny_Powers_CFA's picture
Kenny_Powers_CFA
98.8
success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”