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Topic: Wealth Management

Sale of Canada Bread is next step in Maple Leaf Foods restructuring plan

Sale of Canada Bread is next step in Maple Leaf Foods restructuring plan

Holding companies give you an easy way to buy a variety of businesses at a discount. As well, their structure makes it easy for them to unlock hidden value by selling undervalued subsidiaries.

For example, Maple Leaf Foods has risen sharply since it said it would sell Canada Bread. We reported on Maple Leaf’s restructuring plan in September (read the article here). Here is our latest report on the company from The Successful Investor.

MAPLE LEAF FOODS INC. (Toronto symbol MFI; www.mapleleaf.ca) is Canada’s largest food processing company. It mainly sells its products, including fresh and prepared meats and poultry, under the Maple Leaf and Schneider brands.

The company recently said it plans to sell its 90.0% stake in Canada Bread (Toronto symbol CBY), Canada’s second-largest producer of baked goods after Weston Bakery.

Canada Bread supplies a third of Maple Leaf’s sales. Maple Leaf’s $1.6-billion stake in this business is equal to 73% of its $2.2-billion market cap.

The companies share some facilities, so they could be hard to separate. Nonetheless, Canada Bread’s strong brands and high market share should attract several bidders.

The sale proceeds will help Maple Leaf restructure its meat-processing operations, including building plants and eliminating unprofitable products.

Investing advice: Restructuring plans contribute to Maple Leaf losses in latest quarter

In addition, Canada Bread recently paid an $8.00-a-share special dividend. Maple Leaf will likely put the $182.9 million it received to pay down some short-term loans early, which would lower its interest costs.

Meanwhile, Maple Leaf lost $2.6 million, or $0.02 a share, in the three months ended September 30, 2013. A year earlier, it earned $9.0 million, or $0.06 a share. Without restructuring charges and other unusual items, the company lost $0.01 a share, compared to a profit of $0.13.

Sales fell 2.5%, to $1.15 billion from $1.18 billion. That’s mainly because Maple Leaf sold some operations as part of its restructuring. The lower Japanese yen also makes its pork exports more expensive in Japan.

The company’s $0.16 dividend yields 1.0%.

In the latest edition of The Successful Investor, we examine the likely impact of the sale of Canada Bread on Maple Leaf’s balance sheet. We also look at the company’s earnings forecast in light of its restructuring plan and whether the shares can keep rising. We conclude with our clear buy-sell-hold advice on the stock.

(Note: If you are a current subscriber to The Successful Investor, please click here to view Pat’s recommendation in the latest issue. Be sure to log in first.)

COMMENTS PLEASE—Share your investment knowledge and opinions with fellow TSINetwork.ca members

If a stock you own is going through a restructuring plan, how you decide whether the company is going in the right direction and thus worth keeping? Have you invested in a stock because it was undertaking a big restructuring plan? Did the stock pay off for you?

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