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What are you buying today?


LowIQinvestor

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MSGN

 

Thanks

Lance

 

Yup, from the looks of it, I'll likely be adding to this(again) today as well. Bottomless abyss. Odd for a company with such easily predictable and stable earnings.

 

I think Dolan is actually a plus here, as he has the power to change many of the arrangements that may or may not become favorable with MSG, and will basically be able to make whatever arrangements are necessary to get a deal done. He obviously wants to sell this, and given the capital needed for his giant TV projects, will likely have to start considering selling some assets given he isn't really allowed to borrow much against the sports teams.

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^ I passed on this because it is a cigarbutt ( albeit with a lot of life left) in a sense that it will be worth far less once the contract with MSG ( the sister co) is up. It rather deal with the foibles of MSG, as sports team valuations have  tail winds.

 

Dolan still controls both entities. He won't just let the contract run out and wipe out billions in value.

 

Just added more at 14.75.

 

Company has been plowing cash into debt pay down, now standing around $700M net of cash. You've got $200M FCF and even with sub decline a fairly decent chunk of it will continue to get offset by decrease in interest expenses.

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^ I passed on this because it is a cigarbutt ( albeit with a lot of life left) in a sense that it will be worth far less once the contract with MSG ( the sister co) is up. It rather deal with the foibles of MSG, as sports team valuations have  tail winds.

 

Dolan still controls both entities. He won't just let the contract run out and wipe out billions in value.

 

Just added more at 14.75.

 

Company has been plowing cash into debt pay down, now standing around $700M net of cash. You've got $200M FCF and even with sub decline a fairly decent chunk of it will continue to get offset by decrease in interest expenses.

 

6.5% decrease in subscriber is staggering

 

 

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^ I passed on this because it is a cigarbutt ( albeit with a lot of life left) in a sense that it will be worth far less once the contract with MSG ( the sister co) is up. It rather deal with the foibles of MSG, as sports team valuations have  tail winds.

 

Dolan still controls both entities. He won't just let the contract run out and wipe out billions in value.

 

Just added more at 14.75.

 

Company has been plowing cash into debt pay down, now standing around $700M net of cash. You've got $200M FCF and even with sub decline a fairly decent chunk of it will continue to get offset by decrease in interest expenses.

 

6.5% decrease in subscriber is staggering

 

Same thought I had.  I know they have been able to continue to increase per-sub fees, but the volume decline is big. 

 

If you take a perhaps overly harsh view and assume that the business has no value beyond the life of the current contracts with MSG, so the business value is simply a DCF over the life of the existing contracts, what sub declines and per-sub fee increases are implied by the current enterprise value?

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Subs declining obviously isn't great, but this isn't the decline of sports as we know it. The teams suck and had a summer that can only be described as embarrassing. But MSG Networks owns the content and really just needs to find a way to monetize it differently, before cable/cord cutting becomes too much of a problem. Right now it isn't a problem IMO. Sports betting will only further keep the gravy train moving.

 

But for now its trading with something like a 20%+ FCF yield with $45M in interest expenses to likely be eliminated or significantly reduced in the next 3 years. Big buybacks and dividends are also expected at 2X EBITDA, which should also be in the not too distant future.

 

Given that Dolan controls this and will do what it takes not to destroy his own company, I see zero chance at this being a 0 ever, and zero chance the distribution rights disappear in 15 years or whatever unless it is of significant benefit to another Dolan entity, which I also happen to own.

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Subs declining obviously isn't great, but this isn't the decline of sports as we know it. The teams suck and had a summer that can only be described as embarrassing. But MSG Networks owns the content and really just needs to find a way to monetize it differently, before cable/cord cutting becomes too much of a problem. Right now it isn't a problem IMO. Sports betting will only further keep the gravy train moving.

 

But for now its trading with something like a 20%+ FCF yield with $45M in interest expenses to likely be eliminated or significantly reduced in the next 3 years. Big buybacks and dividends are also expected at 2X EBITDA, which should also be in the not too distant future.

 

Given that Dolan controls this and will do what it takes not to destroy his own company, I see zero chance at this being a 0 ever, and zero chance the distribution rights disappear in 15 years or whatever unless it is of significant benefit to another Dolan entity, which I also happen to own.

 

I agree sports aren't dying anytime soon.  In fact, the NBA seems to be getting more popular.

 

What I don't know is whether bundling has caused non-sports viewers to subsidize sports viewers, and, if so, whether continued unbundling/cord-cutting will unwind some of that.  But to your point, if MSGN can't continue to get increasing per-sub fees from traditional cable cos, maybe they can make just as much (or more) selling higher priced, but lower volume, DTC subscriptions and perhaps selling some subset of rights to the likes of Amazon, Hulu, YouTube, etc.  My understanding is that basketball is also by far the most international of the big four US sports, so it should interest companies with global distribution in a way that the NFL, MLB, and NHL likely do not.

 

Also, I agree that owning MSG likely presents a hedge against the true worst case scenario for MSGN, but I think there are several more years before you need to worry about that.

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Bought a few shares of TLF (just dipping my toes in the water) A retailer .. Fuck me. Still, quantitatively very cheap, insiders own a large stake (the writer of 'dear chairman'), some selling pressure the past few days due to a delayed 10Q because of an internal accounting audit. Leathercraft seems relatively 'Amazon-proof', company has been profitable every year the past decade, capital allocation seems sensible and revenue is stable. Market cap ~$41m, solid balance sheet with ~$17m in cash, no debt.

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Subs declining obviously isn't great, but this isn't the decline of sports as we know it. The teams suck and had a summer that can only be described as embarrassing. But MSG Networks owns the content and really just needs to find a way to monetize it differently, before cable/cord cutting becomes too much of a problem. Right now it isn't a problem IMO. Sports betting will only further keep the gravy train moving.

 

But for now its trading with something like a 20%+ FCF yield with $45M in interest expenses to likely be eliminated or significantly reduced in the next 3 years. Big buybacks and dividends are also expected at 2X EBITDA, which should also be in the not too distant future.

 

Given that Dolan controls this and will do what it takes not to destroy his own company, I see zero chance at this being a 0 ever, and zero chance the distribution rights disappear in 15 years or whatever unless it is of significant benefit to another Dolan entity, which I also happen to own.

A 20% FCF yield with a 13.5% decline in operating profit isn’t necessarily a good deal. I have heuristically come to the concluding that most of these type of value situations don’t work, and even if they do, they cause much more grief then they are worth (averaging does trading around ). Others may come to different conclusions and better results, but those are mine.

 

FWIW, I think the whole cable / TV sector is a bit spooked by subscriber losses, but MSGN are definitely the worst I have seen.

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Subs declining obviously isn't great, but this isn't the decline of sports as we know it. The teams suck and had a summer that can only be described as embarrassing. But MSG Networks owns the content and really just needs to find a way to monetize it differently, before cable/cord cutting becomes too much of a problem. Right now it isn't a problem IMO. Sports betting will only further keep the gravy train moving.

 

But for now its trading with something like a 20%+ FCF yield with $45M in interest expenses to likely be eliminated or significantly reduced in the next 3 years. Big buybacks and dividends are also expected at 2X EBITDA, which should also be in the not too distant future.

 

Given that Dolan controls this and will do what it takes not to destroy his own company, I see zero chance at this being a 0 ever, and zero chance the distribution rights disappear in 15 years or whatever unless it is of significant benefit to another Dolan entity, which I also happen to own.

A 20% FCF yield with a 13.5% decline in operating profit isn’t necessarily a good deal. I have heuristically cam to the concluding that most of these type of value situations don’t work, and even if they do, they cause much more grief then they are worth (averaging does trading around ). Others may come to different conclusions and better results, but those are mine.

 

FWIW, I think the whole cable / TV sector is a bit spooked by subscriber losses, but MSGN are definitely the worst I have seen.

 

Thanks. Appreciate the cold water as I always prefer hearing the other side of things. I don't think there is much if any downside here, and likely IMO it overshot to the downside for a number of reasons, all short term. ~$600M market value decline in a couple weeks is a bit much for a company like this. The numbers may move around, but this company isn't going anywhere. I'd like to see them consider some sort of streaming option for out of network people. Plenty of people would pay $5-$8 a month in season for this.

 

That said, I only see two things that provide a catalyst for better valuation. 1) Dolan hitting the bid. The most recent RSN deals definitely support a higher valuation than todays MSGN share price. $2.5B EV is about a 40% premium 2) stacking cash for the next couple years.

 

This, after today is about a 3% position for me. I'm inclined to add a bit more to it but also probably need to adjust my allocation based off of a longer expected holding period for the thesis to play out.

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GRIF @35 and MSGN @14

 

I would be buying more GRIF if it wasn't for the large position size already.

 

Yea while I don't think its got much of a catalyst I still kind of ask myself Who TF is selling at these prices? Its one thing to look at a stock and pass. Its another when you already own it because you have to at least peripherally be aware of what's going on. I mean, even on a super short term, trading based thesis, $35 is still where'd you'd be buying, not selling... got another 1250 today.

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GRIF @35 and MSGN @14

 

I would be buying more GRIF if it wasn't for the large position size already.

 

Yea while I don't think its got much of a catalyst I still kind of ask myself Who TF is selling at these prices? Its one thing to look at a stock and pass. Its another when you already own it because you have to at least peripherally be aware of what's going on. I mean, even on a super short term, trading based thesis, $35 is still where'd you'd be buying, not selling... got another 1250 today.

 

Gabelli has sold some recently.  I think he manages SMAs and when clients redeem, they tell him to sell out of the stock which he is always very reluctant to do.  That's why you see 40,000 shares sold from Gabelli.  I think Gabelli and the family reducing their stake is better for the long term because it will improve the liquidity and the bid/ask spread of the company.  Yes, there is no catalyst.  But when you have a NAV that's 90-100% higher than the current price, good things happen.  The same thing happened to HHC.   

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Cash.

 

Following the sale of 20% of my S&P 500 puts. Waiting for 30+ VIX to sell more.

 

Have been buying & selling over the last 2-3 weeks. Typically 20-30% of the position. When VIX dropped to 15-17 I was buying and selling those same contracts each time it went to 20+.

 

Entire position has basically been paid for in profits at this point and I purchased more today.

 

VIX hasn't dropped in the target range like I've been waiting for on prior buys, but 2 observations give me an ominous feeling:

 

1) A handful of the last few days have ended slightly positive or flat for the S&P/Dow and my puts positions still rose in value slightly (crazy!)

 

2) NYSE Composite failed to break through it's 200 DMA today and turned negative again.

 

Not a huge TA expert, but that seems to tell me that a major composite failed to break out on positive headlines (supposedly softer trade stance from Trump/China) and the market isn't buying it and is hedging instead (a bid under puts despite rising market).

 

Maybe I'm just to more risk-seeking now that it's house money, but it doesn't sit right with me so I purchased more puts today.

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Cash.

 

Following the sale of 20% of my S&P 500 puts. Waiting for 30+ VIX to sell more.

 

Have been buying & selling over the last 2-3 weeks. Typically 20-30% of the position. When VIX dropped to 15-17 I was buying and selling those same contracts each time it went to 20+.

 

Entire position has basically been paid for in profits at this point and I purchased more today.

 

VIX hasn't dropped in the target range like I've been waiting for on prior buys, but 2 observations give me an ominous feeling:

 

1) A handful of the last few days have ended slightly positive or flat for the S&P/Dow and my puts positions still rose in value slightly (crazy!)

 

2) NYSE Composite failed to break through it's 200 DMA today and turned negative again.

 

Not a huge TA expert, but that seems to tell me that a major composite failed to break out on positive headlines (supposedly softer trade stance from Trump/China) and the market isn't buying it and is hedging instead (a bid under puts despite rising market).

 

Maybe I'm just to more risk-seeking now that it's house money, but it doesn't sit right with me so I purchased more puts today.

 

Yea, Im getting the same gut feeling. Everything of late seems like a bull trap. Cyclicals just don't move on up days and then get flattened on down days. Everything gets faded. Many names within an earshot of or at 52 week lows. Even non correlated assets are getting sold off. My top performer this month is basically a triple net REIT....

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