Waste handler
Covanta Holding Company (CVA: NYSE)
reported financial results for the first three months of the year at the
beginning of May 2020. True enough the
net loss might have been wider than published estimates for the quarter, but the
consensus target did not reflect a one-time, non-cash charge for asset
impairment. Indeed, Covanta’s sales climbed
year-over-year to $468 million, of which $61 million was converted to operating
cash flow. Waste handling is considered
an essential service so Covanta operations remained at full operations even as
many of its customers were subject to work stoppages and stay-at-home policies
to stop the spread of the coronavirus COVID-19.
The numbers must have triggered a widespread sigh of relief. In early April 2020, when Covanta leadership cut the company’s generous dividend payout, shareholders had apparently expected the worst. The bad news was accompanied by a withdrawal of guidance for 2020 earnings and a warning that policies to deal with the coronavirus could severely impact Covanta revenue. Furthermore employee health and safety would require additional spending, cutting into profits. They promptly took a cleaver to CVA shares, sending the price to historic lows.
In retrospect
the dividend cut may seem a bit drastic given how well the company came through
the first quarter. That said, the worst
of the crisis came later in April and May 2020.
To learn how Covanta handled conditions in those weeks shareholders will
have to wait until early July 2020, when Covanta reports financial results for
the quarter ending June.
Part of the
company’s success in the first quarter 2020 was the result of clever
negotiations with customers and forward-thinking contracts with price
escalators. The company reported
same-store average tip fee increases by 5% in the quarter. Much of the company’s tip fee revenue comes
from processing residential waste on behalf of municipalities, for which
volumes have remained strong.
There are reasons
to be cautious in taking a position in CVA.
The company is well leveraged with over $2.6 billion in debt on its
balance sheet. That represents an
exceptionally high debt-to-equity ratio of 843.9. Nonetheless, earnings often trump balance
sheet circumstances. Based on cash
earnings over the last twelve months Covanta’s interest coverage multiple was
2.4 times at the end of March 2020. This
compares well to 2.5 times for the year 2019, but leaves little room for further
slippage.
Having prepared
for the worst in the first quarter report, shareholders will probably still
brace themselves for Covanta’s second quarter results. The company will have been subjected to
coronavirus pandemic conditions throughout the entire quarter. Management may have been able to apply
lessons learned in the first quarter to help smooth out the worst bumps. Investors appear to believe they will be
successful.
The stock has
recovered by 37% over the all time low set in April, pushing back up through a
line of volume-related price support/resistance at the $8.50 price level. Another good quarter report could move the
stock back closer to the pre-crisis level near $15.00.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein. The author of this article holds a beneficial
interest in CVA shares.
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