In a late statement, FPN has announced its FY 19 earnings. Negotiations are still ongoing with potential buyers of the plot the company owns in Le Blanc-Mesnil (northern Paris suburb). The legal disputes are gradually being resolved although the main proceedings remain outstanding. The reference shareholder (FIPP, Duménil Group) has announced that it will provide operational financing until December 2020.
Litigations
The bulk of the disputes, in terms of numbers, now looks to have been circumscribed with no real positive surprises to date as FPN has lost its proceeding against Vinohrady. This settlement took place after Vinohrady’s request to liquidate FPN in February 2020, both parties subsequently having reached an agreement to close the dispute.
All the aforementioned elements had not been provisioned in the FY 18 accounts although we did take the risk into account in our full initial FPN valuation. In terms of the outstanding related proceedings, FPN will probably have to pay another €0.6m (Lacaton & Vassal procedure) in FY 21.
Last but not least, property taxes. The position of the French fiscal administration will remain key to the valuation process as FPN’s arrears represent c.€10m vs. a current market cap of below €3m. Note that the French fiscal administration is a priority creditor and benefits from a €10m real guarantee (mortgage) on FPN’s buildings to protect its debt.
Financing
The H1 20 accounts are not yet available. However the reference shareholder, controlling 100% of the Board, estimates the cash burn at c.€0.3m in H2 20 (H1 20 cash burn unavailable). FIPP will provide the liquidity required for FPN’s operations until the end of 2020 by increasing its shareholder loan. The latter could reach c.€15m by the end of FY 20. While the balance sheet remains very unbalanced, FPN’s future as a going concern seems assured for the next six months.
Consolidated shareholders’ equity was negative to the tune of €-8m at end FY 19 vs. our estimate of €-14m due to a change in accounting method by FPN. Its subsidiary Pamier SARL, holding the asset, opted to revalue its 45,000 sqm plot at the bare land value as opposed to the amortised cost of acquisition method. FPN’s viability nonetheless continues to depend on the valuation of its real estate and the associated project (sale or redevelopment).
The Board of Directors still envisages selling the plot while the largest shareholder (Ott, 29.9%) seems to be prioritising a redevelopment. The future of this asset is thus currently unclear.
Shareholder structure and governance
FPN confirmed that 33m convertible bonds had been converted on 8 June 2020, giving Ott Ventures a 29.9% shareholding (and more than 60% on a diluted basis, should the warrants be confirmed as neutralised). FIPP (Duménil Group, considered a reference shareholder) owns 21% of FPN.
No change was announced to FPN’s governance. FIPP thus appears to retain full control over the Board.
The FY 19 press release doesn’t mention neutralisation of the warrants. The latter is key to the valuation process as its absence would add substantial dilution based on a €0.025 price per share. Were this neutralisation not to take place, the dilution resulting from the warrant exercise price of €0.025 per share would call into question our current share price target.
Valuation
The sole FPN subsidiary (Pamier SARL) owning the Le Blanc-Mesnil plot decided to value its asset at “a” market value of €22m in its FY 19 accounts. This is well below our estimate of c. €32m and reflects a value of the bare land at €485 per sqm. FPN has indicated that this value stands towards the lower end of its valuation range without, however, disclosing this range. This price doesn’t appear to take into account the presence of existing buildings/superstructures which could be reused, wholly or in part, based on the future project.
We are thus sticking with our initial estimate of €32m for now. FPN also confirmed that the current Master Plan would enable FPN to build c.80,000 sqm (both residential and retail spaces).
For the moment, the French residential market is proving remarkably resilient. It was even buoyant in terms of prices and prices in June, which comes as something of a surprise, no impact of the crisis having been witnessed to date. For its part, the office market in Northern Paris is starting to show signs of weakness with rents down by c.6% to 10% relative to their pre-crisis levels. Four months ago…
We will modify our forecasts once the FY 19 Annual Report is made public and will integrate the €0.5m additional loss in FY 19 vs. our estimates.
This will not result in a significant target price adjustment. The key element concerning warrant neutralisation remains to be clarified. The property taxes dispute and the material project concerning the plot also remain decisive in the valuation process.