Chip Carlson banks on an offbeat breed of bond to boost his fund's return.
The 45-year-old manager of the Greenspring
Fund-named for the picturesque Greenspring Valley area outside of his
firm's home office in Baltimore-has been using busted convertible bonds
for nearly 15 years. The bonds began to pique his interest in the
1980s, when he began shifting money into what were then the
under-followed, deeply-discounted securities. Today, the fund he has
managed since 1987 has nearly half of its assets in them.
"Greenspring's objective is steady, consistent
performance in all types of market environments, and busted
convertibles tie in well with that," he believes.
Convertible bonds become "busted" when the company's
common stock price falls below the conversion value of the bonds,
rendering the conversion feature less valuable. When that happens, the
bonds trade more on their profile as income-producing securities than
as a play on the underlying equities.
A number of possible scenarios can play out after an
investor purchases a busted convertible. The securities can simply
mature, so that the investor earns a yield-based return. According to
Charles "Chip" Carlson, the busted convertibles in the portfolio sport
yields of around 5.5% to 6%. If there is a put feature, the issuer can
buy the bonds back, usually at a premium to par, to shore up its
balance sheet. Many convertibles are issued with a change-of-control
put feature, which specifies that if the issuer is acquired by another
company, convertible bond holders have the right to force the acquirer
to buy the convertible bond from them at a stated price, usually a
premium to par. Or, in a best-case scenario, the stock could rebound
and the bond's price would jump with it.
Carlson likes the fact that the underlying stock
does not necessarily have to go up for him to make money. In line with
that view, he bases most of his analysis on a company's financial
strength and how well it is able to cover its debt, rather than whether
or not the underlying stock is poised for a rebound.
"We are typically indifferent to stock price," he
says. "Obviously, it's better if the stock goes up after we buy the
bond because that benefits the price of the convertible. But that
doesn't have to happen. In fact, most of our incremental returns have
been coming from early redemptions."
Sometimes, a dip in a stock's price because of
disappointing earnings or other negative announcements prompts him to
take a look at the convertible bond the shares are associated with. But
he won't necessarily rule out convertibles when he considers the
underlying stock to be richly valued. "We're looking for an "acceptable
base case," which is basically clipping the coupon and letting the bond
mature," he says. "Anything beyond that is icing on the cake."
While he points out that some of the companies
issuing the bonds "aren't household names," he insists that they are
financially sound. "There's a broad spectrum of quality in the world of
busted convertibles," he says. "Some of the issuers are financially
troubled, and others are quite secure. We look at the safer end of the
spectrum for characteristics such as healthy balance sheets and good
cash flow."
According to Carlson, semiconductor equipment
manufacturer Brooks Automation has those characteristics. He recently
added to his position in the company's busted convertibles, which he
began buying about three years ago. "At one time the stock sold in the
fifties and it's down to $13 a share," he says. "But the company has a
strong balance sheet, with over $350 million in cash and just $175
million in debt." The convertible bonds are scheduled to mature in 2008
and yield around 6%.
He usually buys older bonds that are close to
maturity or have a near-term put feature, and the fixed-income side of
the fund has an average duration of two years. "Keeping duration short
has been an effective way to limit interest rate risk," he says. "The
impact of 11 increases in the Fed Funds rate of the last 18 months has
been minimal."
The Challenge From Arbs
The characteristics that appeal to Carlson have not
gone unnoticed by other investors. Today, with more investors pouring
money into convertible bonds, the market has become more efficient and
it's harder to find bargains than it was just a couple of years ago, he
admits.
The proliferation of hedge funds that use a
convertible arbitrage strategy also has increased short-term
volatility. The funds buy convertible bonds of a company while at the
same time selling short an offsetting amount of the common stock of the
same company, with a goal of generating a consistent level of positive
return regardless of whether the company's stock is headed. If the
stock goes up, they make money on the convertible bond, but lose a
lesser amount of the short stock position. If the stock moves down,
they make more money on the short position than they lose in the value
of the convertible bond.
But as hedge funds began to exploit the strategy in
increasing numbers, the arbs stretched into riskier issues. Some
purchased busted convertibles, even though their lack of equity
sensitivity made them less appropriate for a convertible bond arbitrage
strategy. When returns suffered earlier this year, investors began to
withdraw money and the funds were forced to liquidate some of the
holdings in their portfolios.
Although the redemption-related selling pinched bond
prices, Carlson says it also created a buying opportunity for his fund.
"As long as a company's operating fundamentals have not changed
significantly, or the company is not dependent upon speedy access to
the capital markets, the issuing company's ability to service its debt
is not affected by the short-term dynamics of the bond market," he
says. "When the research shows there is no fundamental change in a
company's ability to service its debt, the markdown creates a buying
opportunity." Buys created by the short-term dynamics of the market
have included busted convertibles of King Pharmaceuticals and
Millennium Pharmaceuticals.
On the equity side, Carlson favors "companies in
inefficient sectors that are not well covered by Wall Street." Although
the fund has no restrictions on company size, the focus on
off-the-radar securities almost always leads its manager to smaller
companies whose stocks are selling at a discount to their industry
peers or their historical prices, and that have ample free cash flow
and an established position in their industries. He also likes to see a
catalyst for change, such as new management, new products or a change
in corporate structure.
Recent purchases include Rush Enterprises, the only
publicly traded network of truck sales and service centers. The
company, which has a $355 million market capitalization, trades at
about nine times estimated earnings for 2005. "That's inexpensive
compared to the half-dozen publicly traded auto dealers, and the
company is only covered by analysts at two investment banking firms,"
says Carlson. Another recent buy, KMG America, provides insurance
products to employees through payroll deduction plans. The company,
which has a market capitalization of just $180 million, has a new
management team that is expanding its product line.
"These are companies that are not well covered but
have strong cash flows, solid market positions and great management
teams," says Carlson. "The fact that we are not part of a larger fund
family gives the fund the flexibility to move into the more
under-followed, inefficiently priced areas of the market."
Greenspring's quirky mix of busted convertible and
small-caps has produced returns that often do not dance to the same
tune as the stock market or funds that invest in both stocks and bonds.
In the late 1990s, its performance placed it near the bottom of its
Morningstar moderate allocation category, and it also trailed the
S&P 500 Index by a significant margin. Between 2000 and 2003,
however, Greenspring's returns trounced those of both its category
competitors and the index.
Morningstar fund analyst John Coumarianos thinks the
fund's unusual approach holds appeal for those willing to deviate from
the mainstream. "The mix of unloved, out-of-the-way small-cap stocks
and broken converts won't please investors seeking a balanced fund with
large-cap stocks and high-grade bonds," he notes in a recent report.
"Besides the added credit risk of the bonds and the volatility of the
stocks, small-caps and converts have had strong runs the past few
years, making them more expensive than they have been recently.
However, this unusual fund can be a very nice complement to a large-cap
heavy portfolio."