Tom Konrad CFA
Several smart money managers I know are excited by the heads-I-win,
tails-I-win big opportunity offered by Power REIT’s (NYSE:PW)
attempt to foreclose on its railroad lease with Norfolk Southern
Corporation (NYSE:NSC) and Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway (WLE).
I know this because I’m one of them, and I’ve talked to
others about it. Others aren’t quite so sure. Despite
the fairly obvious merits of its case, as a tiny company, Power
REIT is massively outgunned when it comes to fancy lawyers.
NSC, for one, does not seem at all concerned about its
prospects: The civil action has
not even made it into the company’s disclosure of legal risks
in its annual report in either of the last two years.
Now there’s a way to hedge that risk.
The Offering
This article is not about the legal opportunities. See the
links above and the company’s most recent litigation update to
learn about those. It is about an overlooked opportunity in
Power REIT’s ongoing Preferred
Stock offering.
Why do I say this opportunity is overlooked? Because, until
I asked Power REIT’s CEO David Lesser about it yesterday, he had
not even thought about it himself. Nor is it mentioned in
the offering documents or presentation. This is the opportunity: If Power REIT loses the civil
action, the value of the preferred should increase.
Preferred stock is usually a hybrid between the characteristics
of equity (common stock) and debt (bonds.) This
preferred offering is closer to the debt end of the range.
The upside for investors is collecting the 7.75% dividend
payments, since the preferred can be redeemed at any time after
2018 at par. Like bond interest, preferred dividends are
much more secure than dividends on common stock. With a
“cumulative” preferred issue like this one, preferred dividends
are not lost if the company is temporarily unable to pay.
They will accrue until the company is able to resume
dividend payments. All accrued and current dividends on the
preferred must be paid before the company pays any common
dividends.
The company intends to pay preferred dividends currently.
If it were to suspend preferred dividends at some time in
the future, those accrued dividends would have to be paid as soon
it started making a profit. That’s because 90% of REIT
profits must be paid out to shareholders in order to maintain REIT
status, and preferred dividends (both current and accrued) must be
paid before common dividends.
While Power REIT is not currently profitable, this is due to the
legal expenses from fighting a civil action against two much
larger companies. One reason Power REIT can pay its
preferred dividends despite these legal expenses is because its
law firm has agreed to accept payment only when the company is
able to pay. (Few law firms would accept such terms, but
Lesser’s wife is a partner at this particular firm. While
the related party transaction has caused some prospective
investors to pause, the extended payment terms and the firm’s
willingness to allow Lesser to do much of the work which would
normally have been done by paralegals would not be available from
a firm without this relationship. I also understand that a
certain about of uncompensated legal advice arrives in the form of
pillow-talk.)
If PW loses, preferred dividends will become tax-free.
All of that explanation was a prequel to why the preferred is an
excellent hedge for the risk that Power REIT might lose the civil
action. A “loss” in the civil action would basically mean
WLE and NSC get everything they want: a return to the status quo.
- PW could not foreclose on the railway lease, and rent would remain at $915,000 annually.
- NSC and WLE indebtedness of at least $16.6 million (plus accumulated interest) under the lease would not be due.
- NCS and WLE would not have to pay PW’s legal expenses.
A win, of course, could see the opposite result on all these
accounts, which could mean a cash infusion larger than the current
market value of the company. That is why common investors
are excited.
Preferred investors, on the other hand, only get the upside in
the payment of their 7.75% dividend. This dividend will be
more secure if PW wins on any of the above counts. If PW
loses, however, the dividend will be a tax free return of capital.
That is because PW will be able to write off the $16.6
million indebtedness mentioned in item 2, off-setting PW’s next
$16.6 million of profits for tax purposes. If the company
were to resume its former $0.10 per share dividend on the common,
and the full preferred offering is subscribed, that $16.6 million
would be enough to turn all those dividends into a tax-free return
of capital for the next 32 years.
Conclusion
If PW loses its civil case on every count, it should be able to
continue paying its preferred dividends, but those dividends will
become a tax-free return of capital. While PW’s common stock
may decline without the prospects of a big pay-off, the value of
the preferred should increase given the new, tax-free status.
If PW wins, the payment of the dividends will be backed by
cash, which should also help the value of the preferred by
reducing risk. Hence, PW’s preferred stock (NYSE:PW-PRA) should be a perfect
hedge for any legal risk embodied in the common stock (NYSE:PW.)
The 7.75% annual dividend is nice, too.
http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2014/02/power_reits_preferred_stock_offering_ a_hedge_that_pays_775.html
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