Wolf Richter www.testosteronepit.com www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
David Stockman, Budget Director under President Reagan and then a
partner at private-equity firm Blackstone Group, has graciously
permitted me to post excerpts from his bestseller, THE GREAT DEFORMATION: THE CORRUPTION OF CAPITALISM IN AMERICA. This is the first installment from Chapter 25, “DEALS GONE WILD: Rise of the Debt Zombies” – the titles alone are reason to read the book! In this chapter, he vivisects
the LBO craze before the financial crisis, particularly the largest
buyout ever, Texas mega-utility TXU Corporation, as it was called then,
now in bankruptcy. The prior installments were from Chapter 23 (hedge
funds) and can be found here.
The wildest speculators in Leo Melamed’s pork-belly rings at the
Chicago Merc could never have dreamed up a commodity trade as
fantastical as that underlying the $47 billion LBO of TXU Corporation.
It was basically a bet on a truly aberrational price gap between cheap
coal and expensive natural gas—a “fuels arb”—that couldn’t possibly
last. So the largest LBO in history was the ultimate folly of bubble
finance.
Electric power utilities are normally stable generators of cash flow,
plodding along a tepid path of growth. But TXU’s financial results in
the year before its February 2007 buyout deal had been mercurial, making
its initially benign leverage ratios an illusion. Thus, TXU had posted
about $11 billion of revenue and $4.5 billion of operating income prior
to the buyout, but by fiscal 2011 the company’s sales were down by 35
percent, to $7 billion, and operating income was just $960 million. Its
bottom line had plummeted by nearly 80 percent from the pre-LBO level.
Accordingly, the company’s leverage ratio has become a horror show.
Its fiscal 2011 debt stood at $36 billion and thereby amounted to nearly
thirty-eight times its reported operating income. In LBO land that
ratio is beyond the pale—it’s a veritable financial freak.
How the largest LBO in history ended up this far off the deep end is a
crucial question because it goes right to the heart of the great
deformation of finance. The TXU deal is the financial “Vietnam” of the
Greenspan bubble era, not some dismissible aberration from the main
events. It was sponsored by the “best and brightest” in the private
equity world including KKR, the founding fathers of LBOs, and David
Bonderman’s TPG, which was also a successful LBO pioneer of legendary
rank.
Since the equity portion of the financing at $8 billion was only 17
percent of the total capitalization, TXU’s existing $12 billion of
conventional utility debt had to be tripled, to $38 billion, in order to
close the deal. Accordingly, Wall Street had a money orgy coming and
going. Fees on the new deal exceeded $1 billion, and at the LBO closing
there was an epic $32 billion payday for selling shareholders, including
the hedge funds which had front-run the deal.
At the time, the reckless wager embodied in the TXU buyout was
rationalized as nothing special. The purchase price at 8.5 times EBITDA
was purportedly in line with the 7.9X average for publicly traded
utilities. Yet when the onion was peeled back by a year or two it became
clear that the buyout was being set up at a lunatic multiple: an
astonishing 18X the company’s EBITDA in 2004.
This jarring difference reflected the fact that TXU’s income was
temporarily and drastically inflated by a utility deregulation bubble
floating on top of a natural gas bubble. Under the Texas deregulation
scheme, wholesale electric power prices were set by the marginal cost of
supply, which was natural gas fired power plants. But TXU generated
most of its power from lignite coal and uranium, so when natural gas
prices soared its own fuel costs remained at rock bottom. The company’s
revenue margin over the cost of fuel, therefore, also soared, rising
from 38 percent in 2004 to nearly 60 percent in 2006. The gain was pure
profit.
If deregulation meant a permanent increase in TXU’s profit margins,
of course, the heady February 2007 LBO valuation of its current cash
flow might have made sense. The underlying reality, however, was that
the price of wholesale electric power in Texas at the moment had been
inflated by a humongous natural gas price bubble which flared-up in the
wake of Hurricane Katrina’s August 2005 disruption of offshore gas
production.
Natural gas prices had soared to the unheard of range of $10 and $15
per thousand cubic feet (Mcf), compared to a band of $2–$5 per Mcf that
had prevailed for years. So TXU’s fulsome cash flow was running on the
afterburners, as it were, of one of the greatest commodity bubbles of
recent times.
At the same time that TXU was booking revenues of 13.7 cents per Kwh
based on natural gas prices, the fuels cost at its base-load nuke plants
was 0.4 cents per kWh and just 1.2 cents in its lignite coal plants.
Thus, at the coincident peaks of the Greenspan credit bubble and the
natural gas price bubble in February 2007, TXU was selling electric
power at 12X and 36X the cost of its lignite- and uranium-based power,
respectively.
These markups were off-the-charts crazy. Even after absorption of
modest fixed operating costs (labor and maintenance) at its power plants
and corporate overhead, the profits were staggering. It was only a
matter of time, therefore, until the natural gas bubble ruptured and
TXU’s power margins came crashing back to earth.
Wolf here: Stay tuned for the next installment. For my review of David Stockman’s bestseller, see… “Money Printers And Wall Street Coddlers.” You can find his book at your favorite bookstore or at Amazon…. THE GREAT DEFORMATION: THE CORRUPTION OF CAPITALISM IN AMERICA.
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