Summary
- CF’s merger with Yara was never a merger of equals.
- Now that merger talks are off, equity market can return to core CF investment case.
- CF is taking a number of investor friendly actions but lower grain prices a near-term challenge.
CF Industries (NYSE:CF)
is a leading low cost producer of North American nitrogen from cost
advantaged U.S. shale gas. The company has been taking a number of
actions to increase value for shareholders, including deploying more
capital to shareholders through a higher dividend and stock buybacks,
locking in mid-teens returns through long-term supply agreements,
selling phosphate assets, and positioning the company to benefit as a
first mover in new capacity in 2015/16. However, despite of these
shareholder friendly measures the company continues to face challenges
in the near-term in the form of lower grain prices. It Was Never "A Merger of Equals" With YaraMostly recently the company had entered into talks with Norway's Yara International (OTCPK:YARIY) about potential merger of equals. While both the companies have terminated
the merger talks now, it was not a merger of equals to begin with given
the disproportionate degree of benefits Yara would have received from
merging with CF. If both companies had merged Yara would have gained
substantially low priced North American feedstock benefits plus a
greater degree of UAN and ammonia exposure. CF on the other hand
would have benefited from Yara's global downstream sales & marketing
business, as well greater scale in specialty nitrogen products. While
the merger would have combined the world's two largest nitrogen
producers, with a combined market share of 8%-9% globally, it was
surprising that CF was even entertaining a merger of equals with Yara
given that the company is well-positioned to harness cheap U.S. natural
gas. From CF's perspective, the merger would have increased exposure to
higher-cost European natural gas and away from its advantaged access to
U.S. shale gas. Moreover, CF is buying back its own stock aggressively,
just before its new plans start-up in late 2015-16. Among The First To Bring Online New CapacityCF
Industries is ahead of its peers in nitrogen capacity expansion
projects. The company will be among the first and certainly among the
largest to bring online new nitrogen capacity in North America when its
plants at Donaldsonville and Port Neal start-up in late 2015 and
mid-2016, respectively. CF is adding 2.1 million tons of new gross
ammonia capacity, much of which will be able to be upgraded into urea or
UAN. Based on current prices, these two projects could add up to $700
million of EBITDA on an annual, when both these projects are fully
operational in 2017. While CF Industries is among the first, it is
certainly not the only company coming up with expansion projects, rest
of the industry is also catching up. At least 25 new ammonia projects
have been announced which could be built by 2020. Almost half of these
projects, including 5 greenfield projects, would have either received a
final investment decision or will be under construction by the end of
2014. While CF is well positioned with two big expansion projects
coming online in 2015 and 2016, which have the potential to contribute
significantly to EBITDA and earnings per share, but the company
continues to face challenges in the near-term in the form of lower grain
prices. In the near-term, urea and UAN prices are bouncing along the
bottom. Urea, in particular, is likely to remain range bound with the
floor defined by the high-cost marginal exporters in China. The need of
importers like the U.S. to attract imports at premium prices determine
the urea price ceiling but as the new capacity starts up that premium is
likely to narrow. |