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The New Criterion: the decline of junk mail weighs on the listed printers

  • In Opinion
  • September 16, 2020
  • Tim Boreham
The New Criterion: the decline of junk mail weighs on the listed printers

In a victory for the ‘no junk mail’ eco warriors and a blow for an army of 14,000 letterbox walkers, grocer Coles last week ceded to the digital age and stopped producing physical sales catalogues for seven million Australian households.

Whether other mass-market retailers follow suit is of keen interest to IVE Group (IGL) and Ovato (OVT), the foremost printers and distributors of the letterbox clogging material.

The holder of the Coles printing contract, IVE estimates the loss of work will reduce its revenue by $35-40 million a year, equivalent to  around 5 per cent of last year’s turnover of $691.5m.

The analysts’ questioning at IVE’s recent results briefing swiftly turned to the lingering question: are we seeing the long-heralded demise of junk mail?

Coles claimed its decision will save 10,000 tonnes of paper and 80,000 trees a year. But IVE’s – and the broader printing industry’s – line is that as trees are renewable and act as carbon sinks, catalogues have more green credentials than energy-sapping digital browsing.

Despite online shopping, more than eleven million catalogues are still delivered to seven million households weekly – compared with only 400,000 online.

“As a channel they have been very effective for decades,” IVE executive chair Geoff Selig says. “They [catalogues] have also existed alongside the digital medium for a very long time.”

He adds that 2.5 million Australians don’t have internet access and four million don’t have mobile internet access.

Selig’s assurances aside, IVE’s faith in catalogues was reflected more tangibly with the company’s purchase of the country’s biggest letterbox business from the now delisted Salmat, for $25 million.

Mind you, management also hedged its bets by buying Lasoo, a site that aggregates digital catalogues for easy and interactive viewing.

Overall, IVE derives 20 per cent of its revenues from companies involved in white goods, furniture and electrical; and a further 12.5 per cent from supermarkets.

These are the sectors going gangbusters during Covid-19, although the viralytic curse forced the company to report a $20 million full-year loss compared with a $31.3m previously.

However IVE’s underlying earnings eased a mere 6.6 per cent, to $76.6 million and its net debt improved to $137m from $143m previously.

“I don’t believe that as a business we could have responded any better to the crisis,” Selig says.

He adds the company pulled every lever to reduce costs: forced leave, redundancies, pay cuts, the works.

“We can’t close the doors week in week out,” he says. “We had to respond to huge swings and volatility in revenue to recalibrate the business and respond to market movements.

“Our cost base was probably more flexible than we thought.”

An amalgam of printing, digital marketing and distribution business, IVE sprung from the antecedent company Selig Printing that dates back to 1921.

IVE, in essence portrays itself as a match fit business with omni channel presence in print, retail display, creative services, business intelligence and tele fundraising.

While the board cancelled the interim dividend was cancelled and did not declare a full year payout, shareholders can expect an interim dividend for the December half.

The company pocketed $16.8 million of JobKeeper payments. But it does not expect to be eligible beyond September, which is reassuring in that revenue has recovered.

Management guides to “consistent” underlying earnings for the current year.

IVE shares have been harshly dealt with, given they were trading at above $2 before the late February corona-meltdown. Reflecting this demise, the stock gets chucked out of the ASX 300 index next Monday.

Broker Bell Potter plugs in a net profit of $27.9 million on sales of $727m , with a 9.7c cents a share full year dividend.

Shaw Stockbroking assumes a slightly less generous $22 million profit on revenue of $692m and a 6.7c a share div.

Split the difference between these estimates and IVE trades on an earnings multiple of 4.4 times and a fully franked yield of 10 per cent.

Of course punters need to be convinced the Coles catalogue decision was an outlier rather than a wider harbinger of doom for the letterbox stuffers.

Ovato (OVT)

In early 2019 catalogue and magazine printer (and IVE rival) PMP sought to distance itself from its legacy of woes with the time-honored strategy of changing its name.

The new moniker Ovato was inspired by the word ‘ovation’ – “the strongest response an audience can give”.

Sadly – and with apologies to Led Zeppelin – the song remains the same. Ovato posted a $111 million loss for the 2019-20 year, which follows on from deficits of a previous $84m and $43m in 2018-19 and 2017-18.

Granted, $92 million of one-off items accounted for most of the red ink. But underlying earnings (ebitda) also plunged 70 per cent to $9.2m, which isn’t much to show for $539m of sales.

Ovato’s supposedly transformative moment came in 2017, when the competition regulator approved the merger of PMP with arch rival IPMG. The union saw IPMG’s owners, the Hannan family, emerge with a 37 percent PMP stake (and now a 53 per cent Ovato stake).

By reducing the number of big-ticket catalogue printers from three to two, the merger promised to rid the sector of overcapacity and an entrenched culture of discounting just to win the volume and keep the presses whirring.

Ovato has been in the throes of cost cutting and restructuring, notably the closure of its Moorebank plant in Sydney and replacing six inefficient presses in favour of a $20 million monster capable of printing 80 pages at a time.

This resulted in a $31.8 million one-off cash charge.

Asset sales are also on the cards, in view of a “smaller but more agile and profitable Ovato”.

Having traded at pre-corona levels of 6c, Ovato shares are now trading in the 1c valley of death.

One scenario is that the Hannan family swoops with a takeover offer, thus putting Ovato investors out of their memory after 30 years of underperformance as a listed company.

But why hasn’t it already done so?

To be fair, Ovato still has half a billion of revenue to play with an a still-impressive rota of clients including Woolworths, Kmart/Target, Harvey Norman and the (shrinking) stable of mags recently acquired by Mercury Capital from Bauer Media.

Unless management can work out how to trickle more of this turnover to the bottom line, the only reception from investors will be loud raspberries.

 

Disclaimer: Under no circumstances have there been any inducements or like made by the company mentioned to either IIR or the author. The views here are independent and have no nexus to IIR’s core research offering. The views here are not recommendations and should not be considered as general advice in terms of stock recommendations in the ordinary sense.

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Tim Boreham
Tim Boreham edits The New Criterion
Latest posts by Tim Boreham (see all)
  • Amid dazzling returns, is now the time to join the diamond hunt? - November 10, 2021
  • Two listed ag stocks that promise a bounteous harvest for investors - November 3, 2021
  • ASX-listed e-gaming stocks show promise but are they in the main event? - October 27, 2021
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  • About
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Tim Boreham
Tim Boreham edits The New Criterion
Latest posts by Tim Boreham (see all)
  • Amid dazzling returns, is now the time to join the diamond hunt? - November 10, 2021
  • Two listed ag stocks that promise a bounteous harvest for investors - November 3, 2021
  • ASX-listed e-gaming stocks show promise but are they in the main event? - October 27, 2021

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  • About
  • Latest Posts
Tim Boreham
Tim Boreham edits The New Criterion
Latest posts by Tim Boreham (see all)
  • Amid dazzling returns, is now the time to join the diamond hunt? - November 10, 2021
  • Two listed ag stocks that promise a bounteous harvest for investors - November 3, 2021
  • ASX-listed e-gaming stocks show promise but are they in the main event? - October 27, 2021
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