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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Mechanical Technologies Equity Analysis: $6M Stock Secures $3.3M Purchase Order

By Alex. Originally published at ValueWalk.

Mechanical Technologies Euro Stoxx 50: How it works and how you can invest

Mechanical Technology Inc. (OTCMKTS:MKTY) is a supplier of precision linear displacement solutions, vibration measurement and system balancing solutions, and wafer inspection tools. These tools and solutions are developed for markets that require the precise measurements and control of products processes for the development and implementation of automated manufacturing, assembly, and consistent operation of complex machinery.


Q1 2020 hedge fund letters, conferences and more

The company has decades of experience in working with OEMs and their subcontractors in the supply of sensor, instruments and systems technology to incorporate into OEMs’ equipment and major companies’ manufacturing processes as they develop and implement new process, quality and automation controls. Mechanical Technology targets leading companies in specific market segments including the industrial and consumer electronics, automotive and other precision automated manufacturing industries, turbo machinery and the research and development aspects within these markets for both product and process improvements.

As of this morning (05/08), Mechanical Technology locked-in their largest contract in the history of the company. Over $3M in orders from the US Air Force. Mechanical Technology will churn through this order by the end of 2020. That one order represents 50% of the company’s market cap.

What Mechanical Technologies Produces

  1. Automated Monitoring & Precision Automation Manufacturing

Allows companies and engineers to rectify system problems before they become costly repairs and maintenance costs.

MTI Solution: Non-magnetic paper-thin probe that allows users to measure and monitor gaps in high power generators, wind turbines and other auxiliary equipment.

MTI provides advanced linear displacement solutions for OEMs. These solutions are incorporated into a tool or equipment manufactured by a company to monitor performance and/or achieve control. These products are also placed into a process to control manufacture of parts or to measure critical parameters of parts as they leave the process.

In other words, they’re a small but critical part of larger assemblies. This creates stickiness with their suppliers. Suppliers know the quality of work and the reliability of Mechanical Technology’s products. It’s going to be hard to switch over even if a competitor is lower cost.

The company has a long-standing track record of excellence with Automated monitoring. Mechanical Technology is the preferred supplier for applications that require complex and extremely precise measurement tools of intricate targets and assemblies.

  1. Axial Turbo Machinery

Mechanical Technology is a leader in the development and commercialization of vibration measurement and system balancing for axial engines.

You can find axial engines on medium to large aircrafts (military and commercial).

These measurement and balancing systems are designed to pinpoint engine vibration issues for improved fuel efficiency, lower maintenance cost and general safety.

Once again, small but critical components to larger products.

The company sells the axial products to major aircraft engine manufacturers, US and foreign militaries, commercial airlines and gas turbine manufactures.

  1. Industrial and Academic R&D

This is an interesting business. The company has a dedicated line of various instruments, testers and tools that help other, private R&D teams conduct research.

According to the 10-K, these customers include testing and R&D departments in large industry and academia. They also include process development labs focused on automotive, electronics, semiconductor, solar and material development.

On the surface it looks like a cap-ex light, high-margin business. The company produced these tools once, and then “leases” them out to other R&D teams for their individual research objectives.

Product Manufacturing & Operations

Unlike most companies in the sensor, instrument and systems markets, Mechanical Technology is a 100% US-based manufacturing company.

The company thinks their US based operations provide them with the following advantages:

  • Reducing risk of inadvertent technology transfer
  • Ability to control manufacturing quality
  • Much more effective customer management and satisfaction process

So far it’s paid off. Mechanical Technology sports long-term relationships with vendors, and they believe most raw material used in their products is readily available.

Customer Concentration

Mechanical Technology’s largest customer is the US Air Force. The company also has long-standing relationships with businesses in the electronics, aircraft, aerospace, automotive, semiconductor and research industries.

The Air Force accounted for 20% of total revenues in 2017.

Going Dark (March 19, 2018)

The company filed a Form 15 on Mach 19, 2018, voluntarily deregistering from the SEC. Here’s Mechanical Technology’s reasoning behind deregistering:

“We expect the deregistration of our common stock to result in significant cost savings to MTI in the near term from the elimination of complying with SEC reporting requirements. Also, the deregistration of the common stock will allow the Company to avoid the substantial additional costs associated with the compliance and auditing requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), and to focus its resources on increasing long-term growth.”

Although not required, the company will maintain quarter/annual financial statements on the OTC Markets Group website.

The Balance Sheet (Hidden Assets)

As of Dec. 2018 the company has around $52M in NOL carryforwards. This is a huge asset that’s not acknowledged on the balance sheet. In fact, $52M in NOLs is 6.5x the current market cap. $737K will expire in 2020. The remainder? They’ll expire in 2037. That’s 17 years of NOL carryforwards.

Mechanical Technology carries a robust balance sheet. As of Q3 2019 the company sports $5M in assets with $1M in total liabilities. Asset levels dropped in half due to a one-time special dividend of nearly $4M in July of 2019. If you add back the dividend the company maintained above $8M current assets.

Management

The company’s run by Frederick Jones. Jones is a younger CEO (49), but incentives appear aligned. 26% of his total compensation in 2017 came from Incentive Plan Compensation (based on performance objectives).

Directors and officers own 45% of the common stock. Brookstone Partners, LLC owns another 40%. This leaves 15% free float for remaining shareholders. Brookstone Partners looks like solid capital. Take a look at their investment strategy (per their website):

“To invest alongside founding families and management teams in companies that offer significant opportunities for value creation through organic growth, strategic acquisitions and improvements in operating performance.”

This feels like permanent capital, not a quick turnaround as with most PE firms. Another thing I like about Brookstone Partners is their skin in the game. All the principals commit their personal money into each investment. Here’s their reasoning:

“Brookstone’s principals have personally committed a significant portion of the firm’s equity capital, making them true owners rather than investors of third party capital. As owners, Brookstone’s principals understand the nuances of building successful businesses and have the flexibility to make long-term decisions that are right for the business. As major investors in every deal, our principals pride themselves in having their interests perfectly aligned with those of management teams.”:

Financials

The company generated $1.54M in EBIT in 2018. Adding the $392K in NOL tax benefit, the company ended 2018 with nearly $2M in income. MKTY also generated close to $2M in free cash flow, giving it a 25% FCF yield.

Mechanical Technology ended the year with $5.7M in cash on their balance sheet. That’s a lot for an $8M market cap company. So, in July of 2019, management paid around $3.5M in special dividends to shareholders. That was a 37% dividend yield at the time of issuance. Not bad!

One thing to note about Mechanical Technology is the variability in revenues. The company admits that their revenue streams are lumpy in nature. They depend on various contracts with militaries and commercial enterprises. These contracts can come in waves. One quarter they earn a ton. The next quarter, not so much. This is important when we look at valuation and realistic expectations of the future.

Valuation

Mechanical Technology is cheap. The company trades for less than 5x earnings (25% yield), and if you add back their one-time dividend issuance they trade at a 7.5% premium to NCAV. At the July 2019 dividend price, a mere three special dividend issuances would cover the original purchase price. You’d get your initial investment back in dividends and retain the business for free. Moreover, that free business can generate over $2M in free cash flow per year over the next five years.

If they’re able to maintain consistent cash-flows, you’d end 2023 with close to $12M in cumulative free cash flow (compared to $7M market cap) and $24M in Enterprise Value. Adding back the net cash we get a market cap of $27M (vs. $7M current market cap). That’s $2.82/share in equity value (257% increase).

As nice as the above picture sounds, it likely won’t look like that. The company’s revenues and earnings are lumpy in nature. It’s important we look at downside cases. Let’s assume the company generates $5M in revenue in FY 2019. Note that the company’s already generated this $5M as of their Q3 report. So we’re assuming zero 4Q revenues. On top of that, let’s assume the company loses another $1M in revenue in FY 2020. Then generates steady-state $4M in revenues until 2023.

In this scenario, we’re anticipating a 50% revenue decline in less than three years, and a 50% decline in operating income. We’re also going to assume a 1M share dilution over the next five years. The company has a history of issuing shares, so I want to make sure that we account for such possibilities in the future. By the end of 2023, we get $4M in annual revenue, $750K in pre-tax cash flow and $950K in free cash (thanks to NOLs). That’s a cumulative $7.34M in free cash flow over the next five years, which equals the current market cap.

But remember that share issuance. For this scenario, we’re dividing our $15M market cap by 10.57M shares. This gives us an equity per-share value of $1.44 (80% upside).

We also have balance sheet protection. Mechanical Technology has enough cash to cover all liabilities three times over. And if we assume a smaller current asset profile (based off continued dividends), we’re still left with around $0.40/share in NCAV as downside protection.

Risks

There’s four main risks with MKTY:

  • Wide Bid/Ask Spreads

Shares are rather illiquid and there’s a large bid/ask spread. For example, as of writing, the Bid is $0.81/share. The ask is $0.99. That’s a wide divergence. This makes establishing positions a bit difficult with limit orders. But you don’t want to place a market order for fear of getting poor cost-basis.

  • Customer Concentration

Mechanical Technology generated 28% of its product revenue from the US Air Force. This is part of the company’s $9.5M contract with the Air Force that’s set to expire halfway through 2021. Besides the Air Force, the company recognizes 11% of its revenue from a semiconductor manufacturer in Asia. A breach in one (or both) of these contracts would mean a significant loss in revenues.

  • Share Issuance

The company’s increased share count by 200K over the last four quarters.  We looked at what the valuation would look like with 1M shares issued over the next five years. Regardless, I’d like this trend to reverse.

Disclosure: As of writing this I/we do not hold shares in MKTY. 


Article by Brandon Beylo

About the Author

Student of value investing for over 13 years spending his time in small to micro-cap companies, spin-offs, SPACs and deep value liquidation situations.

The post Mechanical Technologies Equity Analysis: $6M Stock Secures $3.3M Purchase Order appeared first on .

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