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Derrick Leung, Class of 2008 Advisor: Professor Alain Kornhauser 6 December 2010. Unyoking the Cash Cow: Who Should Own the New Jersey Turnpike?. ORFE Senior Thesis Presentation. 1: Introduction. The New Jersey Turnpike. Interstate 95; 148 miles Opened in 1951-1952
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Derrick Leung, Class of 2008 Advisor: Professor Alain Kornhauser 6 December 2010 Unyoking the Cash Cow: Who Should Own the New Jersey Turnpike? ORFE Senior Thesis Presentation
The New Jersey Turnpike • Interstate 95; 148 miles • Opened in 1951-1952 • FY06 toll revenues: $533.4 million • FY06 ridership: 250 million trips • 5th most traveled highway (IBTTA) • Current valuation • $6 billion (Lesniak, Mar. 2006) • $30 billion (Villaluz, July 2005) • $40 billion (Edwards, Feb. 2008) 1
Privatization Debate • Improved operational efficiency • Innovative tolling • Public sector needs for fresh capital • Incentives to use private equity (leverage) • Uncertain private sector advantage • Conflicting public/private goals • Transaction costs ($30 million to $200 million) Public Benefit Company (PBC) For Privatization Against Privatization 2
Motivation • Private sector management • Public sector control • Proposed structure of toll increases • Chicago Skyway, Jan. 2005 • $1.83 billion, 99-year lease • Indiana Toll Road, June 2006 • $3.85 billion, 75-year lease • $29.7 billion as of June 30, 2007 • $2.6 billion annual charge Public Benefit Company (PBC) Previous Asset Monetizations New Jersey State Debt 3
Formulation • Modified DCF formulation • Free Cash Flow (FCF) formulation 4
p x Traffic Model Parameters • Valuation timeframe: 75 years (2007-2081) • Inflation measure: 3% increase in CPI • Revenues: • Projected using regression of growth rates over past 9 years • Five (5) different tolling scenarios • Price elasticity of traffic: • 0 (inelasticity), -0.19 (average), -0.15 (low bound), -0.31 (high bound) • Expenses: • Projected using regression of growth rates over past 9 years • Interest and principal payments; capital expenditures 5
Tolling Strategies • Case 1: Status Quo • Current real toll maintained • Case 2: Leung-Kornhauser Plan • Initial real toll doubling • Case 3: Break-even Toll Plan • Calculation of real toll such that net present valuation yields 0 • Case 4: Governor Corzine’s Plan (PBC) • “50% maximum real toll increases in 2010, 2014, 2018, and 2022 plus annual increases, based on CPI, levied to capture the prior 4 years, starting in 2010 and every 4th year thereafter.” • Case 5: Private Entity Plan • Initial real toll increase that yields optimal (maximum) valuation 6
Case 4: Governor Corzine’s Plan (PBC) Functional form of solution Valuation sensitive to more inelastic traffic 8
PBC Equivalent • PBC Equivalent Cash Flow structure • Tolling structure of current plan inefficient • Inspired by Leung-Kornhauser plan • Gains to setting initial three-time (quadrupling) real toll increase • Greater cash flow in earlier time periods 9
Case 5: Private Entity Valuation Functional form of solution Private Entity Valuation unbounded for elasticity of 0 10
Valuation Sensitivity to Line-Item Costs Valuation insensitive to individual line-item costs (5%) 11
Valuation Sensitivity to Cost Basket Material benefit due to cost reductions seen from reduction in cost basket (20%) 12
High Valuation Drivers Valuation driven by increased tolls when traffic is price inelastic Valuation driven by cost reductions when traffic is price elastic 13
High Arbitrage Gain • Case 1: Status Quo • Arbitrage Gain = $0 • Case 2: Leung-Kornhauser Plan • Arbitrage Gain = $9.1 billion • Case 3: Break-even Toll Plan • Arbitrage Gain = N/A Arbitrage Gain = High Valuation – Current Valuation • Case 4: Governor Corzine’s Plan (PBC) • Arbitrage Gain = $31.5 billion • Case 5: Private Entity Plan • Arbitrage Gain = ∞ 15
Recommendation: The Buyer’s Perspective Implement PBC Equivalent: 3x initial increase of real toll 16
Background • Pennsylvania Turnpike is America’s oldest toll toad (1937), 537-mile route • Operated by Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission • Powers to construct, operate, and maintain the Turnpike System and issue revenue bonds, repayable solely from tolls and other Commission revenues • Pennsylvania population: ~12 million • Vehicle trips (May 2007) • Passenger: 160 million • Commercial: 25 million • Total: 185 million • Gross fare revenue (May 2007) • Passenger: $323 million • Commercial: $295 million • Total: $618 million 17
Operations (FYE May) Vehicle Trips Gross Fare Revenue (in $mm) Vehicle Trips (% Split) Gross Fare Revenue (% Split) Source: Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission 2007 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report 18
Toll History Illustrative Value of $1.00 from 1940 • Erosion of real toll value over the years has led to severe lack of profitability of the Turnpike (like many toll roads) • Variable costs and interest rates increase every year by inflation, so tolls should also increase by inflation to preserve the integrity of the toll road’s cash flows • But the act of raising tolls is difficult from a political perspective Source: www.InflationData.com 19
Timeline • November 2006: Study by the Pennsylvania Transportation Funding and Reform Commission (PTFRC) note critical need for annual investment of $1.725 billion to fund maintenance, repair and expansion of state roads • May 2007: Morgan Stanley report analyzes various alternatives including a long-term lease, public corporation/leverage, and a PTC proposal • Sources indicate $12-18 billion as an indicative valuation range for a lease • September 2007: Governor Ed Rendell solicits qualifications for potential bidders for the Turnpike in anticipation of a lease • May 2008: Final winning bid announced • Abertis / Citi consortium offers $12.8 billion • Goldman Sachs / Transurban consortium offers $12.1 billion • September 2008: Financial crisis deepens with collapse of Lehman Brothers Source: For Whom the Road Tolls: Corporate Asset or Public Good (An Analysis of Financial and Strategic Alternatives for The Pennsylvania Turnpike 20
Valuation • Winning bid of $12.8 billion also contemplates an additional $1.7 billion to fund the beginning of operations (total consideration of $14.5 billion) • Purchase price funded by mixture of equity and debt • Critics noted the use of leverage for the investment was more conservative than structures typically used at the time (ex. 80% or even 90% debt for infrastructure assets like the Turnpike) • Capital structure of winning bid: • $8.5 billion of debt, including a $250 million capex facility • $6.0 billion of equity • Bid perceived to fall short of goal • Valuation = 35x EBITDA • 365 million (2007) • Relatively low compared to Skyway and ITR transactions Source: InfraNews 21
Criticism • Winning bid anchored by foreign investor • Abertis is a Spanish transportation and telecommunications firm (founded in 2003 after a merger of two companies founded in 1967 and 1971) • Operate 6,700 km of motorways in Europe, and several international airports • Public company traded on the Bolsa de Madrid (BMAD: ABE) • Earned 3.9 billion Euros of revenue (2009); over 12,000 employees • Valuation not as high as previously contemplated • Final bids were around $12 billion, the low end of valuation range originally indicated • Governor Rendell indicated later that the $18 billion range contemplated tolls being increased 5.5% annually (not possible since tolls would be capped to the greater of 2.5% or CPI) • State Assembly vote would face opposition from public • Bid expiration was extended twice by the consortium to facilitate discussion Source: InfraNews, Abertis 22
Decision • If you were a State Congressman... What Would You Do? 23
Outcome • State Assembly ultimately did not hold vote • Some members of Congress were offended by “low” valuation, although some confessed that the vote would not have been favorable in any case • Unforeseen issues: • Credit crisis eroded debt markets for financing • Equity sponsors less willing to make investments due to uncertainty • State finances eroded as tax revenues were lower due to high unemployment • Municipalities unable to refinance debt (and break out-of-the-money interest rate swaps) or issue lower cost debt due to credit risk • Citi Infrastructure Investors moved on soon after to bid on Midway Airport (large hub airport in Chicago area) • Bid also failed since acquisition was contingent on securing financing • Closed credit markets provided challenge 24
Goldman Sachs • Investment Banking • Mergers and Acquisitions • Industry coverage groups (Technology, Media and Telecom (TMT), Natural Resources, Financial Institutions, Industrials, Consumer/Retail, Real Estate) • Product group (Leveraged Finance, Equity Capital Markets, Derivatives) • Asset Management • Asset Management (GSAM) and Private Wealth Management (PWM) • Trading and Principal Investments • Equities • Fixed Income, Currency, Commodities (includes Special Situations Group) • Merchant Banking/Private Equity Division • Principal Investment Area (Corporate Equity, Corporate Debt, Mezzanine, Real Estate, Infrastructure) 25
What is Private Equity? • Acquisition through leveraged buyout (LBO) of mature, stable cash flow businesses with free cash flow generation used to support debt service • Reasonable growth, defensive business model, strong management team, low capital expenditures, over-equitized capital structure • Leverage used to increase purchase price in auctions • 2004-2007: 75% debt / 25% equity, low cost of debt (low credit spreads) • 2008 and after: at most 50% debt / 50% equity Private Equity Firm (General Partner) Investors (Limited Partners) Private Equity Fund (Limited Partnership) Investment B Investment C Investment A 26
Characteristics of Infrastructure Investments • Stability • Provision of essential services to communities • Insulated from business cycles, high barriers to entry • Duration • Nature of services supports asset longevity • Long-term cash flows support long-term investment horizon • Inflation • Regulation or concession determines pricing (inflation-linked cash flows) • Yield • Current yield through free cash flow • Diversification • Low correlation with other asset classes • Alternative to other investments (including traditional private equity) 27
Competitive Landscape • Competitors • Private equity firms • KKR, TPG, Carlyle, Blackstone, Bain Capital, Apollo • Boutique infrastructure investment firms • Global Infrastructure Partners, Alinda, Macquarie, Babcock & Brown • Investment Banks • Morgan Stanley • Insurance companies / pension funds • Sovereign wealth funds 28
Selected Transactions • Sea Ports • Restructuring of $5 billion North American terminal operator • Distressed LBO of $5 billion international port and rail company • Toll Roads • LBO of Florida toll road through P3 auction; approx. $1 billion transaction • Proprietary recapitalization strategy for select North American toll roads • Airports • LBO of regional airport through P3 auction • Natural Resources, Energy and Power • Equity investment in one of the largest natural gas pipelines in the U.S. • Investment in natural gas storage facility in Wyoming (development) • Investment in water storage facility in southern California (development) • Carve-out of regional electric utility • Fundraising • Raised $3.1 billion of equity capital for new infrastructure fund 29
Then and Now • Mega funds • Diversification of investor base • Auctions accepted • Use of leverage • Cheap cost of debt (low spreads) • Long tenor (7-10 years) • Steep growth profile underwritten • Stable, solvent companies Pre-Credit Crisis Post-Credit Crisis • Smaller funds • Limited Partners want to exit • Negotiated transactions • More equity required • High cost of debt (debtor risk) • Short tenor (3-5 years) • Low base, moderate growth • Restructuring strategies through debt or equity investments 30