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Earnings call: Burford Capital boasts record Q1 cash receipts

EditorLina Guerrero
Published 05/13/2024, 08:12 PM
© Reuters.
BUR
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Burford Capital (ticker: BUR), a global finance firm specializing in litigation finance and risk management, reported robust financial results for the first quarter of 2024. CEO Christopher Bogart announced the company's highest ever first-quarter cash receipts, underpinning a successful cash performance despite facing headwinds from changes in discount rates. CFO Jordan Licht detailed the company's financial health with a strong liquidity position, noting over $500 million in cash and securities.

The company's asset management business also showed positive results, contributing $4 million in cash receipts. Although Burford Capital does not provide future guidance on commitments, the firm expressed optimism about the interest from large corporates in litigation finance, which remains a key factor for new business.

Key Takeaways

  • Burford Capital reported its highest first-quarter cash receipts in the company's history.
  • The company's liquidity position is robust, with over $500 million in cash and securities.
  • There were no material negative case developments, and the loss rate stayed below historical averages.
  • Burford's asset management business performed well, contributing $4 million in cash receipts.
  • The company's expenses have decreased compared to the same period last year.
  • Burford remains optimistic about new business opportunities, particularly from large corporates.

Company Outlook

  • Burford Capital is optimistic about performance and opportunities ahead, despite not providing specific future guidance.
  • The level of new business is influenced by the presence of significant deals with large corporates.

Bearish Highlights

  • Changes in the discount rate affected unrealized gains.
  • The company reported a partial loss in a subcase within a larger portfolio.

Bullish Highlights

  • Liquidity remains strong, with a large portfolio generating consistent returns.
  • Interest from corporates in litigation finance is encouraging for future business prospects.

Misses

  • The group-wide business is not as profitable as the core balance sheet business.

Q&A Highlights

  • No questions were asked via phone or web during the earnings call.

Throughout the call, Burford Capital's executives, including CEO Christopher Bogart and CFO Jordan Licht, emphasized the firm's strong cash performance and liquidity. The company's focus on maintaining a low loss rate and the success of its asset management business were also highlighted as key factors contributing to its positive outlook. Despite the unpredictability of large corporate deals due to long sales cycles, the interest in litigation finance suggests potential growth in the company's core balance sheet business. Burford Capital is set to release new research on the legal market soon, which may further illuminate the company's strategic direction and market opportunities.

InvestingPro Insights

Burford Capital's recent financial results have painted a picture of a company with a strong liquidity position and the ability to generate significant cash receipts. According to real-time data from InvestingPro, Burford Capital has a market capitalization of $3.24 billion and is trading at a low earnings multiple with a P/E ratio of 5.27. This valuation could be attractive to investors looking for companies with potentially undervalued earnings.

InvestingPro Tips suggest that while the stock has taken a hit over the last week, with a 1-week price total return of -9.88%, it has been profitable over the last twelve months. This aligns with the company's reported highest ever first-quarter cash receipts and a strong liquidity position. Moreover, Burford's liquid assets exceed its short-term obligations, providing further stability to its financial structure.

Despite analysts anticipating a sales decline in the current year, the company's gross profit margin remains high at 98.47% for the last twelve months as of Q1 2023. This indicates that Burford Capital is maintaining its ability to control costs and generate profits from its revenues.

For investors interested in further insights and tips, there are 7 additional InvestingPro Tips available for Burford Capital, which can be found at https://www.investing.com/pro/BUR. To access these valuable insights, use the coupon code PRONEWS24 to get an additional 10% off a yearly or biyearly Pro and Pro+ subscription.

Full transcript - Burford Capital (BUR) Q1 2024:

Operator: Thank you for standing by. My name is Krista and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Burford Capital First Quarter 2024 Financial Results Conference Call and Webcast. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you. I will now turn the conference over to Christopher Bogart, Chief Executive Officer. Christopher, you may begin your conference.

Christopher Bogart: Thank you very much, and hello, everybody. As usual, I'm joined by Jon Molot, Burford's Chief Investment Officer; and Jordan Licht, Burford's Chief Financial Officer. And in fact, Jordan and I are delighted to be coming to you live from beautiful Copenhagen today, where we have spent the day with investors here, one of Burford's groupings of investors in Continental Europe and it's a lovely day here. Quarterly results as we've said before, we are going to do these calls in what is at least for us we hope a fairly short and efficient manner. The slides really do on these quarters speak for themselves. So we'll give you a little commentary on top of that and then we'll be happy to take your questions but we'll try not to take too much of your time. And in general, when I think about quarters, while we're obviously happy to be talking to you at any time about the business, we just don't pay that much attention to individual quarters in this business. The timescale of the business operates in years, not in three-month intervals. And so you get a lot of period to period variability as you're seeing here. And we just don't as a management team read that much into it. And that's especially true in what we think of as what I'll call almost the dead-ish first and third quarters. Although, to be fair, last year the first quarter was extraordinary because of the YPF win late in the quarter, which obviously makes comparisons with any quarter that comes later, essentially useless. So that's sort of how we think about it. But for those of you who do want to go quarter by quarter, I think, you know obviously I would characterize this as being a mixed quarter. On the cash front, we had terrific cash performance, the highest level of cash receipts in the first quarter that we've ever reported. We had perfectly solid realized gains to realizations above average for the first quarter. When you come though to unrealized gains, there's a lot going on in the accounting there, including some headwinds from changes in the discount rate that Jordan will talk about. But I think the important point to underline there is that -- that all is happening without any material negative case development. So our loss rate is actually still meaningfully below our historical average. So while it's annoying, obviously for us to be printing and accounting loss, when I look at the business as I do on a cash basis, what I fundamentally see is that we brought in cash that was at a level well more than double the total of our operating expenses and financing costs. And so on a cash basis, I regard that as successful, even though from an accounting perspective, this quarter doesn't look as great as some have historically. So that's sort of my overall take on Slide 4. With that I'll move to Slide 5. And Slide 5 really just expands on Slide 4 a little bit. And I will largely leave you to read this on your own, except that I would note just a couple of things. First, that we are swimming in liquidity right now, and that sets us up well to meet future interesting opportunities. And second, we are still sitting with this enormous portfolio, and we've been generating consistent returns as matters from that portfolio come through to conclusion. Slide 6 shows you where we are in terms of new business. And I sort of repeat what I said at the outset about the divergence between first and third quarters on the one hand and second and especially fourth quarters on the other. And this is just sort of the common sense reality of our business. Nobody who can do a fourth quarter deal with us, either law firms with a calendar year end or businesses with fiscal year ends, nobody who can get a fourth quarter deal done just sort of hangs around and waits until the first quarter. And that's why you see these historically depressed levels of activity in the first quarter in this business. And this has existed long before we started reporting on a quarterly basis. And when you get to deployments, deployments depend on lots of factors, not just on new business. And literally, crazy as this sounds, deployments are going to depend on whether law firms are efficient in their billing. So because most law firms are calendar year entities, what they do in December is they scramble to get every dollar billed and paid that they possibly can. But lawyers are notoriously bad and slow at billing. And so then what happens after they put forth that effort is that they don't turn around in January and February necessarily and keep on billing actively and robustly. So that's just one of a number of factors that goes into the level of deployments that you see here. And again, it's not something that I particularly focus on a quarter-by-quarter basis. Slide 7 is the good news slide, and this shows you both the cash that's coming into the business again, at a very high level, showing you the level of portfolio activity. And that's a high level not only on a group-wide basis that you see there, but also on a Burford only basis that you see there. And the bulk of that cash is coming in high returning assets. And again realizations right on top of where we were in the first quarter of last year, well above where we were in the first quarter of 2022. And so fundamentally, we're seeing portfolio velocity continue. We've had in the first half of this year, lots of activity in the cases that continued through into the second quarter. And we're pleased with how courts are dealing with not only newly filed cases, but working through COVID backlogs. We've had people in trial as recently as last week. And we're happy with the status of the portfolio and our ability to continue to see cash generating from it. So with that fairly quick tour through that, let me turn you over to Jon for a few slides.

Jonathan Molot: Thanks Chris and thanks to you all as always for joining. As Chris says, the portfolio is very active. There's tons going on. And so it's very exciting to have our handful with a lot going on in the investments we've made and seeing them move through the system. If we turn to Slide 8, of course there's the very large case that people pay a lot of attention to the YPF cases. Everybody knows that we had a final judgment entered in September. That judgment was stayed during part of the fourth quarter, but that stay was lifted and the judgment is immediately enforceable. In the first quarter, that enforcement process has commenced and been ongoing. As there is in addition, appellate briefing going on, Argentina has appealed its adverse signing to the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and the Plaintiffs have cross-appealed the exclusion of YPF as a defendant from the case. A reminder, we -- Burford is entitled to roughly 35% of the proceeds from the Peterson case and 73% of the proceeds from the Eton Park case. Turning to slide 9, I think as Chris said, when you look quarter-to-quarter, it's important not to miss the fundamentals of the business. And those fundamentals continue and you can look at our performance overall, where it's a combination of adjudication wins, adjudication losses, and settlements that produce the results of our investments. And you can see that the settlements are the largest category. And then for the cases that go to final adjudication, our wins far outstrip our losses, both in number and size. And this ends up producing very attractive returns on invested capital and IRRs. And we just continue to plug away at that core business and see the matters that are producing the sort of results within the litigation process as time goes on. If you turn to slide 10, you also see kind of the other graphic we've showed you in the past that lays out the asymmetric return profile from what I showed on the prior slide, whereas the prior slide shows what it is about the litigation process that leads to lots of decent returns in settlements, but then also some asymmetric returns when cases go to adjudication. And you see those mapped out here, that whereas the loss rate is relatively low and the losses are confined or contained, the wins can be quite outsized. And that just makes for a very, very attractive asset class. And I don't know that I need to spend more time on it, but you can just see that we've got a large chunk of cases that are producing ROICs that are greater than 200%. So with that, I will turn it over to Jordan.

Jordan Licht: Thanks, Jon and Chris. Good morning and good afternoon to everyone on the call today. I'm on page 11, which shows a summary of the Burford-only financials. Chris mentioned comparisons to 2023 for the same period are going to be difficult given that right at the end of March last year, we received the positive news regarding summary judgment on the YPF cases. So I'm going to touch on a couple of the key numbers here and then go into greater detail on the following pages. In total, we had $31 million of revenue for the period. The capital provision income and asset management income breakouts are shown on the right of the page. Net income per share for the quarter was the negative $0.14. Tangible book value is just shy of $10, including the intangible were slightly above $10 level at $10.34 per share. Overall, the loss was impacted and I'll talk more about it by various fair value movements including lots that had nothing to do directly with case development. And as Chris mentioned, there were no material negative case developments in the portfolio. We'll talk more about expenses, but those start to normalize from some of the one-time items that we also saw in 2023. On the asset side, we're at approximately $3.4 billion of capital provision assets. Of that, we've got $1.6 billion in our deployed cost. Of that $3.4 billion, the YPF assets are approximately $1.4 billion. And we have $490 million of fair value gain relative, embedded in that number, relative to the rest of the portfolio excluding YPF. This fair value represents only a 31% uplift to deployed cost of the assets. So in summary there's a lot more room to run with respect to the assets. I'm going to move to page 12 now. This page breaks down capital provision income into all of the components. Gross realized gains in Q1 were $45 million and looking at the details that's a $6 million increase compared to last year's first quarter. We did however have a loss, a partial loss in a subcase associated with a larger portfolio, which drove the net number associated with realized gains lower. Let me go a little deeper into that. So as we've described our business, we look to do multi-case portfolios. When we do that, those are cross-collateralized, so that when one subcase loses, our counterparty is required to make up that loss from other cases. So on a cash basis, we look at the portfolio as one deal and we measured cash inflows and cash outflows and that structure is very efficient and effective in preventing capital loss. However, we do allocate some of that invested capital to each subcase in the portfolio. So when in this case a subcase in the portfolio loses, we could incur a loss and we did, even though we don't actually suffer a loss on a portfolio wide basis. In particular, in this first quarter, that's exactly what happened. A subcase in a large portfolio [lost] (ph), we had allocated $15 million to that case from the portfolio and now book a realized loss for that amount. But the portfolio as a whole is and has been successful. We've already recovered all of our capital back on this asset and some profit. And we do anticipate additional profit going forward from the asset. Moving on, asset valuations are also impacted by duration and time value of money. I know I've talked about that before, and I've also talked about how the accounting movement here doesn't impact the ultimate resolution of any asset. In the first quarter, we saw an increase in discount rates across the portfolio. This increase was approximately 20 basis points, and that represents a $22 million headwind to valuations. The discount rate generally follows market trends and rates, and we would expect to see volatility in quarters when there are broader rate movements for financial instruments. Of course, we focus on cash resolution of our assets and not this interim fluctuation. I'm going to move to Slide 13. This is the overview of our asset management business, which continues to perform. And we enjoy the benefits and rewards of using the funds to augment the core balance sheet business. In quarters where we don't see significant movement with respect to our assets, we wouldn't anticipate seeing significant asset management income. This business is also a cash on cash business, meaning that while we book the income with movements of the fair value movement of the assets, the actual payout is only when we see cash in the funds. We did, though, received $4 million of cash receipts from the business. As we've discussed, the overwhelming majority of this income is driven by our partnership with the Sovereign Wealth partner in BOFC. We think about that as a source of incremental liquidity for a balance sheet business that earns a performance fee. As a reminder that BOFC takes approximately 25% of nearly all of the new commitments on a pure pro rata basis. Moving to page 14, I'm going to shift from revenues to expenses for a moment. We spent a lot of time last year talking about expenses and the various movement in expenses, some which are that period, some which are accruals associated with the accounting driven by different fair value movements or other one-time items. Overall, first quarter expenses are down and we're only 55% of last year's total when looking at the same period. Main components like salary and benefits, the annual incentive comp, share-based comp remain generally flat year-over-year. Annual incentive comp represents, this is a reminder, represents discretionary bonuses for our employees and that gets finalized in the fourth quarter. One of the lines that we've historically spoke about is the legacy asset recovery expense and the accrual that was related to -- for all effective purposes and burnout for the purchase of that business. We had mentioned that there's only one asset left in that arrangement and we've thus collapsed that line item into the long-term incentive compensation line as we don't believe that there'll be any material changes associated with it in the future. Reminder again, those expenses are accruals. So the long-term incentive comp or the legacy asset recovery line were only paid out and are only the [cashers] (ph), only goes out the door when we receive the cash from the investor. You'll see case-related expenditures that are ineligible for inclusion in the asset are down and have reduced significantly from last year, especially period over period. This trend, you know, we looked at this in the fourth quarter, that was approximately $1 million. Now we're down close to half that figure. We would expect to see some volatility in that over time but as of right now you know this year so far only $500,000 I'm going to move to page 15, which is our liquidity and leverage page. Chris pointed out that we sit on a very strong liquidity position at this point with over $500 million of cash and securities, as well as another $132 million of -- are due from settlement or receivables. Just to go a little bit deeper, though, on one of the point from previous slides, the $138 million of cash receipts that came in, that came from a breadth of individual assets with five different assets producing more than $10 million each. So like the depth and breadth in that number. Earlier in the quarter we took advantage of a robust high-yield market issuing $275 million add-on to our June 2023 issuance. And we had done that at 120 basis points inside of the original issue yield on just six months earlier. Focused on a ladder debt schedule, you see that on the right-hand side and you know our next maturity doesn't come due until August of 2025. The rest of the debt as you can see is significantly back-end loaded. We get asked a lot about our debt capacity and how we think about leverage. Earlier this year, I guess with the end of last year, we put out what we believe is the prudent maximum leverage of 1.25 times debt to equity. Right now you can see we're well within that covenant at 0.8 times and well within our threshold. But to be clear, that's a maximum that I talked about, not necessarily a target. And we're always managing our liquidity levels, the anticipated cash needs, as well as receipts as well as our expenditures on the portfolio. So with that I'll stop there and hand it back to Chris.

Christopher Bogart: Thanks Jordan. And slide 16 is a slide you've seen before that just tries to pull together and sum up the key points about the business. And really, just to reemphasize them. The driver of a lot of the value in this business is the core portfolio that we have, and that portfolio continues to perform robustly. The return levels are the same as they were when we last reported to you. Those are desirable uncorrelated returns that keep powering the business forward, as does our market leading origination platform, which causes us to put meaningful capital out the door every year, in a world where we are by far the brand leader, in other words, the brand of litigation finance firm that survey respondents identify first or only as being associated with the category. Then of course, we have additional value being created, as Jordan already discussed from our asset management business. And finally, last but by no means least, we have the YPF assets, which as Jon described, are making their way through the litigation and enforcement process. So in some, if you look at this on a quarter-by-quarter basis, a mixed quarter but a very strong, very strong catch performance for us this year, this quarter, but generally a first quarter that's just not all that busy and active for us. And with that, we appreciate your support and would welcome any questions you have.

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Your first question over the phone comes from Alex Bowers with Berenberg. Please go ahead.

Alexander Bowers: Hi everyone. Just one from me. In terms of I guess, commitments looking forward to the kind of the rest of this year, what sort of level I guess we look to kind of achieve? Are you still kind of aiming for similar levels we saw in 2023 sort of $1.2 billion grew wide just under $700 million to [Burford] (ph). Is that sort of a similar level we'd expect this year or do expectations kind of move?

Christopher Bogart: Thanks. Well we don't guide on future anything really including future new business but let me comment on a couple of things that go into driving the level of new business that we did. And so there are a couple of points here. You asked about that on a group-wide basis. And while we do report group-wide so that people can get a sense of overall activity in the business. There obviously a portion of the group-wide business that we do is not nearly as remunerative to us as our core balance sheet business is. So I think group-wide is again useful for showing activity overall but not really useful in terms of predicting future profitability. If you look at sort of the Burford-only capital provision direct business, that's the core balance sheet litigation finance business that drives the bulk of our profits. What we've said before and what continues to be the case is the level of business that will print in that category in any period, whether it's a quarter or a year, really depends on whether we have sort of zero, one, or two big chunky deals. In other words, we have a pretty sustainable ongoing level of smaller deals that we do. We sort of do period in, period out. And then as we continue to take especially large corporates and do significant monetization transactions with them. You saw an example of that last year with a $325 million transaction with a Fortune 50 company. The question for any period is whether one of those lands. That will have a fairly significant impact on the level of new business that we write in the period. And it's pretty unpredictable because the sales cycle on those deals is long. And they usually start a relationship by doing a smaller transaction with us. So they're in the mix, but it's difficult. It's a little bit like asking an investment banker to predict how many blockbuster M&A deals they are going to be for the rest of the year. It's hard for us to do that and so I don't have a good answer for you except that I remain encouraged by the level of interest that we have from corporates. In fact, you're going to see just in a couple of days from now, we as you probably know, regularly release commissioned research that we do to the legal market. And another release of that research is coming out just in the next couple of days. And it's pretty interesting when you look at the numbers to see just the level of interest in certain, especially in certain industry segments. There are industry segments that you'll see there where either they are half industry participants already say they are using litigation finance or plan to do so in the not-too-distant future.

Alexander Bowers: Thank you.

Operator: We currently have no phone questions at this time. Rob, are there any web questions?

Christopher Bogart: There is not. We have done, I think a very good job of keeping to our promise of making quarters a brief check-in but not too big an event. So in the absence of any other questions that have come in, either on the webcast, and I see there aren't any there, or on the phone lines, I think that's a wrap for us. So thank you all very much for your time and your support of Burford. And as always, we're always happy to talk to you offline and answer any other questions that you may have with anything. And we'll look forward to talking to you in a few months after June 30th numbers arrive.

Operator: This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation and you may now disconnect.

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