Transcript Bulgartabac
Bulgartabac
Holding AD
Tina Boyadjieva
Rob Ferguson
Renee Hartmann
Jeff Walwyn
Emerging Market Finance
Agenda
Overview of Bulgaria
Bulgarian Tobacco Market History
Bulgartabac Overview
Opportunity Discussion
History of Past Deals
Current Opportunity
Cost of Capital
Valuation and Sensitivity Discussion
Proposed Solution
Real Options
Bulgaria – A Snapshot
Population: 7.8 million
32% rural; 68% urban
Currency: Lev
1.96 lev = 1 Euro
Communist govt. from 1944 –
1989
Ruling Party – National
Movement for Simeon II
Next Election: 2005
Slated for 2007 EU entry
8.5% Turkish population
Bordering Countries: Turkey,
Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia, Serbia, Romania
Bulgaria’s economy
+ Politically stable
– Organized crime
+ Secure currency
– Tension btwn. social
+ Low inflation
+ Adopting EU laws
+ 4-5% GDP growth
+ Little ethnic or
religious conflict
+ Low labor cost pool
+ Close relationship
with IMF
and economic growth
–14% unemployment
rate
–Avg. wage <
$100/month
–Unsuccessful
privatization efforts
–Bureaucratic and
slow
Bulgaria’s Tobacco Market
Leading grower of high quality tobacco
Tobacco and tobacco are 40% of agricultural exports and 5% of
all exports
Cigarette smuggling an issue
Large black market for foreign brands
No anti-smoking movement yet
56% of men and 32% of women smoke
Accession into the EU will increase competition and
lower import duties
Tobacco industry has been large employer of Turkish
population
Bulgartabac has near local monopoly
85% market share
Bulgartabac - company
1947 – 1993 tobacco unit of BCP
1993 – becomes a Holding with 22 subsidiaries
2005 – one of largest tobacco companies in SE Europe
85% market share on the domestic market
One of largest tax payers and generates 4% of the BG revenues
Involves roughly 250,000 minority population in the production
Government purchases 13,000 tons/ year at determined prices
Owns around 50 trademarks
93% owned by the Ministry of Economics
60 bill cigarettes annual production, 75% produced at 3 plants
Privatization process
Essential to accession to EU – open market
requirements for entry
Special government requirements:
1. Maintain tobacco production purchasing
2. Keep most of the current employees
3. Government has control over tobacco price until 2007
4. Government still maintains a stake in the company
Establish a “Tobacco fund” to transition minority
workers
Failed BAT deal
October 2004 BAT:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Offers 200 million euro for 3 largest plants
Promises to keep purchasing 7,000 tons of production
Promises to use at least 30% Bulgarian tobacco in its
production
Pledges to make Bulgaria tobacco production center of the
region
Deal fails after 3 months: MRP and BSP don’t
think it is in the strategic interests of the country
Cost of Capital
Using Institutional Investor country credit rating,
Bulgaria is more risky than the United States
(Rating – 51.6)
Cost of Capital Worksheet implies a 19.8% cost
of equity
Organized Crime Expropriation
Creeping Expropriation
Operational Autonomy
Resource Risk
Valuation considerations
Three scenarios developed
EU membership could have various different
effects
Increase imports of foreign brands
Open up new markets for Bulgarian made products
Growth is uncertain given previous government
control
Labor costs are very high and government
wishes to guarantee employment
Valuation considerations (cont’d)
Conservative case:
EU entrance reduces sales as imports increase competition
Slow reduction in labor expenses
Most likely case
Declining labor costs
Conservative growth
350,000
300,000
Enterprise Value
Best case
Significant labor savings
High growth in export sales
Enterprise Value Sensitivity Analysis
250,000
200,000
150,000
100,000
50,000
0
Conservative Most Likely
Best Case
Recent offer
Sensitivity analysis
Cost of equity of 19.8%
Recent Offer suggests a lower cost of capital
Terminal Value could be understated
Cost of Equity & Terminal Growth Sensitivity
$900,000
$800,000
0% growth
Enterprise Value
$700,000
1% growth
$600,000
2% growth
$500,000
3% growth
$400,000
4% growth
$300,000
5% growth
$200,000
Recent Offer
$100,000
$0
10%
15%
20%
25%
Cost of Equity
30%
35%
Real Options
Input/Output Mix Option
Current production mix
Inputs – 50% Burley, 33% Virginia, 17% Oriental
Outputs – 15% bargain brands, 42% premium
Create different mix of premium/bargain to match optimal
profitability
Intensity/Operational Scale
Currently running at 30% of 140 thousand ton processing
capacity
Valuation is also based on current capacity
Analogous to option to build additional plant, without the capital
investment
Solutions/Recommendations
Government
Continue to pursue strategic investor
Continue to sell parts, rather than whole
ABC – Always Be Closing
Each year postponed is hurting potential accession to EU and ICCR
A sale gains FDI and will prove minority protection (Turkish)
Purchasing Party
Create social solution
Concessions to relieve social and political risk
Appease minority populations
Value is not the sticking point
Use past deals as a starting point - learn from the failures
Find flexibility around operational autonomy