Enron Mail

From:v.weldon@enron.com
To:scott.joyce@bankofamerica.com
Subject:Avi Nash - Goldman Sachs - Nylon and Polyester Strategy
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Mon, 29 Jan 2001 04:24:00 -0800 (PST)

---------------------- Forwarded by V Charles Weldon/HOU/ECT on 01/29/2001
12:16 PM ---------------------------


"Paul W Juneau" <Paul.W.Juneau@usa.dupont.com< on 01/29/2001 08:41:02 AM
To: V.Charles.Weldon@enron.com
cc:
Subject: Avi Nash - Goldman Sachs - Nylon and Polyester Strategy



(Embedded Kenneth W Wall
image moved 01/23/2001 01:31 PM
to file: (Embedded image moved to file:
PIC15112.PCX) PIC01729.PCX)




To: Ferdinand Bauerdick/DuPont@DuPont, Mike Estep/DuPont@DuPont, Ben D
Herzog/DuPont@DuPont, Dennis W Broughton/DuPont@DuPont, Patricia S
Murdock/AE/DuPont@DuPont, Hunter H Ficke/AE/DuPont@DuPont, Rick
Otero/AE/DuPont@DuPont, Ignac R Matocha/DuPont@DuPont, Jeffrey
Crudgington/EUR/DuPont@DuPont, Dave K Findlay/DuPont@DuPont, Charlene
D Thomas/AE/DuPont@DuPont, Dilip Kumar/PO/DuPont@DuPont
cc:
Subject: Avi Nash - Goldman Sachs - Nylon and Polyester Strategy

INTERSTING READING!

---------------------- Forwarded by Kenneth W Wall/DuPont on 01/23/2001
01:31 PM ---------------------------

Below is a report written by Avi Nash of Goldman Sachs that was issued this
morning:





< Goldman, Sachs & Co. Investment Research
<
< DuPont: Nylon and Polyester Strategy Crystallizes.
<
<
**************************************************************************
< *
< * We believe there is greater clarity now on DD's strategy in nylon &
< * polyester. 1)DON'T EXPECT OUTRIGHT SALE. No buyers in polyester. Nylon
< * still too close to DD's heart. 2)POLYESTER SOLUTION IS MESSY. Defacto
< * partial disposition via JVs i)films w/Teijin (global), ii)All other:
< * Europe/ Africa w/Sabanci, iii)American staple w/Alfa, iv)American
< * filament w/Unifi, v)American intermediates, resins and all Asian: still
< * looking and vi)engineered plastics: will keep. 3)NYLON: KEEPER FOR NOW,
< * MOSTLY? i)Getting out of 'heavy denier' nylon industrial via JV with
< * Sabanci, global. ii)Keeping the rest? 4)ISSUES. Apparel & carpet mkts
< * are mature & softening near term. Competitive position eroding slowly
< * with time.
< *
<
**************************************************************************
<
< Avi Nash (New York) 1 212-902-9192 - Investment Research
<
< ==================== NOTE 9:14 AM January 23, 2001
<
< Stk Latest 52 Week Mkt Cap YTD Pr
Cur
< Rtg Close Range (mm) Change
< Yield
< --- ------ ------- ------- ------
< -----
< E.I. duPont de Nemours MO 42.31 64-38 43939.1 -12%
< 3.3%
<
< --------------Earnings Per Share---------------
< DD (US$) Mar Jun Sep Dec FY CY
< 2001 FY 2.50
< 2000 FY 0.85A 0.90A 0.51A 0.41 2.68
< 1999 FY(A) 0.66 0.78 0.59 0.56 2.59
<
< -Abs P/E on- -Rel P/E on-- EV/NxtFY LT EPS
< Cur Nxt Cur Nxt EBITDA Growth
< ----- ----- ----- ----- -------- ------
< DD FY 15.8X 16.9X 0.7X 0.8X 7.10 9%
<
<
==========================================================================
< =
< A THIRD OF DUPONT'S SALES COME FROM THE OLD 'FIBERS' BACKBONE.
<
< 1999 5 yr Avg
< sales avg profit margin
<
< Spandex 1650 400 24.2%
< Nylon (1) 5525 480 8.7%
< Polyester (1) 3000 110 3.7%
< (1)Includes engg plastics and auto fibers/plastics that are reported
under
< the 'Performance Coatings and Polymers' segment. The above excludes
< nonwovens and Kevlar/Nomax businesses since they are more 'stand alones'
< with less overlap between them and nylon/polyester.
<
< POLYESTER, AN IMPAIRED ASSET, IS BEING DEALT WITH PIECEMEAL. The combined
< value is unlikely to exceed $2 billion. We estimate $1.5 billion.
<
< Revenue Americas Europe Asia
< $ mn Mid East
<
< 1)Films 850 duPont-Teijin global joint venture
< 2)Staple Alfa Sabanci ?
< 920
< 3)Filament Unifi Sabanci ?
<
< 4)Resin ? Sabanci ?
< 870
< 5)Intermediates ? Sabanci ?
<
< DuPont has a put option 5 years hence that can force Unifi to buy the
< American filament assets within a predetermined price range. There is no
< clear solution yet regarding Asian and US intermediates and PET resin.
< They are making money at present, but are not industry-leading assets and
the
< value continues to erode with time.
<
< IMPLICATION: This asset was impaired enough that it could not be disposed
< of in one swoop. It has ended up requiring multiple, painstakingly
crafted
< deals, each tiny for a company duPont's size.
<
< NYLON IS INTERTWINED WITH OTHER DIVISIONS: COMPLICATES SOLUTION.
< Note the role of nylon in duPont's apparel/textile and in engineered
< plastics businesses.
<
< End Markets Nylon Lycra Polyester Others DD's
total
< 1999 revenue $ mn for end
mkt
<
< Intermediates 750 100 NA NA NA
< Carpet 2000 0 ? - 2000
< Industrial 625 100 NA NA NA
< Apparel, textile 1100 1400 920 880 4300
< Engg plastics 1050 - 300 850 2200
<
< Total 5525 1600 1220 1730 NA
<
< DUPONT'S NYLON ACTION TO-DATE HAS BEEN MINISCULE BUT IS A CLUE TO ITS
< THINKING.
<
< - ACTION TO-DATE: partially disposed of half of the $600 mn industrial
< nylon business. But this RECENT NYLON JV (DIVESTITURE) IS TINY. DuPont
has
< consolidated several JVs with Sabanci in a tiny part of nylon: heavy
< denier industrial nylon. This was barely over $300 mn in revenue. The
inclusion
< of Sabanci's assets raises the revenue but net-net this is a tiny
business.
< DuPont is actually divesting part ownership since Sabanci's contribution
< is smaller.
<
< - CLUES A)DuPont is reluctant to part with the bulk of the nylon
business.
< It doesn't seem ready to let this business go . . . yet. It may want to
< unload the carpet spinning or apparel fiber business . . . but not the
< associated intermediates production.
<
< NYLON'S WEAK LINKS ARE INDUSTRIAL (PART) AND APPAREL: THE LATTER HAS NO
< EASY FIX.
<
< 1)IN OUR VIEW, STAYING IN APPAREL nylon will be painful. DD HAS SAID IT
< WILL RELATIVELY DE-EMPHASIZE THE BUSINESS (in the long run such a
strategy
< is tough to implement without impairing the business . . . better to
< exit). Witness what happened to the polyester chain where disposition is
coming a
< decade late in the minds of some . . . at little value. Meanwhile,
< competitive advantage is eroding slowly. i)Maturity allows others to
close
< the gap. ii)Customers have gotten stronger, especially in carpet (45% of
< div revenue). Several years can go buy waiting for recovery. Unfavorable
< volume and raw material costs are hurting near term. Growth slowed down
< some time back. Its unlikely to resume. Industry mix continues to shift
< slowly towards Nylon 6 in which DD is a tiny regional player, vs Nylon
66.
< Further, growth is in Asia, not a DuPont strong hold.
<
< 2)BACKING OUT OF APPAREL (OR CARPET) WILL BE TRICKY. (It's not even clear
< DuPont is serous about this option). In any event, it will be difficult
to
< find buyers for just the fiber SPINNING operation, if they will need to
< buy raw materials from duPont. Further, nylon does provide critical mass
to
< the large apparel effort, picking up cost allocations that otherwise may
need
< to be shouldered by Lycra! Another problem: All nylon producers seem to
< want to exit the fiber spinning step . . . Solutia, Honeywell, DuPont.
< Makes one wonder about the potential disposition value!
<
< 3)SHUTTING DOWN IS NOT AN OPTION: There is incremental profit in the
< intermediate step and that would be lost. A)Apparel is nearly 25% of the
< nylon polymer outlet and without it the scale of operations is hurt.
< B)Apparel nylon is a very large part of duPont's apparel business, which,
< after automotive, is the largest end market.
<
< Likewise, engineered polymers make up a large part of the nylon family
< (though DD books revenue and profit for these under its
coatings/polymers)
< segment. Shrinking 'the rest of nylon' would hurt profitability of the
< engineered plastics area. The rest of nylon picks up overhead!
<
< DuPont seems to be forced to keep a large chunk of nylon because of its
< presence in Engineered plastics and Lycra.
<
< i)Lycra is largely an apparel business. The $1.65 bn Lycra has been a
high
< margin business. It's growth has slowed and competitive position is
< slipping. Yet DD is increasing its commitment to Lycra. The problem is
< that the Lycra franchise encourages a greater commitment to apparel nylon
than
< otherwise. Apparel nylon is 25% of the nylon div revenue.
<
< ii)The $2 bn engineered plastics business has nylon resin as its
flagship.
< This is NOT included in the nylon division. (Likewise, polyester
< engineered plastic is not included in the polyester div). Part of the
competitive
< advantage in the plastic comes from a low cost position in raw materials,
< in turn partly based on scale.
<
< iii)DD seems to like its nylon ingredients business. (In our view it's
ok,
< not a growth vehicle). The combination of the interest in Lycra, nylon
< intermediates and engineered plastics means DD is forced to keep nylon
< carpet (45% of div) and apparel (25%). These end markets don't make as
< much money and are more vulnerable. But they provide over 60% of the
outlet for
< the intermediates and their sheer volume helps provide greater scale and
< lower cost.
<
< SO THE NYLON PROBLEM IS NOT SOLVED.
< 1)ROC has been poor. How will that improve? Asset monetization has been
< small. 2)Growth has been low. How will that change? If anything, US
< consumer spending is slowing. 3)The competitive edge is not increasing .
.
< it could actually be slipping just a bit as a powerful new competitor,
GE,
< takes shape assuming GE's acquisition of Honeywell goes through.
<
< Important Disclosures (code definitions attached or available upon
< request)
< DD : CF, CP
<
<
< ______________________________________________
< Goldman, Sachs & Co.
< One New York Plaza | New York, NY 10004
< Tel: 212-902-9193 | Fax: 212-346-3703
< email: sandra.vizzacchero@gs.com
<
< Sandra Vizzacchero Goldman
< Executive Assistant to Avi Nash Sachs
< Chemicals Equity Research Team
< ______________________________________________




















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