Summary:
The first five years of Prof Black’s
tenure has delivered $117 million in losses from the core activities of
teaching and research including the relentless pattern of restructuring costs
as UTAS struggles with declining real revenues and increasing costs. Capital
grants of $227 million included as revenue help hide the losses.
Declining cash flows have accompanied
the reduced profits to such an extent that 2023 saw UTAS with negative cash
earnings for the first time in 2023, with no discernible plan to rectify the
mess.
This means operations are unable to
service the current level of borrowings.
Servicing existing borrowings as well as all new capex requires running
down existing cash and investments until there’s no option but to start selling
the family jewels, parts of the Sandy Bay campus.
At the rate of capex spending
undertaken in 2023, UTAS only has another two years before the cash tin runs
dry, which will not be enough time to make core activities sustainable once
again.
The primary focus should be on arresting
the decline in earnings from core operations. Moving to Hobart will only defer
and exacerbate the problem. Building STEM facilities with a sale and leaseback
arrangement won’t fix negative earnings from the core activities of teaching
and research.It’ll make it worse as any investor/lessor will want a rate of
return well in excess of the rate at which UTAS could borrow, if only Treasurer
Ferguson will approve an increase in UTAS’ borrowing limit. UTAS knows this but
sheer bloody mindedness has led it to deliberately pursue the reckless course of
taking UTAS to the brink of insolvency, by trying to force the hand of the Parliament
and the government to allow it to sell parts of Sandy Bay so that it can
continue with its vanity project whilst ignoring the wishes of most other
stakeholders.
Prof Black
has recently railed against the inadequacies of Tasmanian schools’ performances
notably the numbers who make it to Year 12. It may be a heart felt concern, but
in part is likely to have been a reflection on the lack of students moving on
to UTAS.
However less than expected numbers of Tasmanians wishing to study at UTAS
must be in part due to mainland universities being able to attract the best and
brightest, those who can afford it and those wishing more face-to-face learning
and/or a more communal/collegiate setting than lesser quality offerings in a
traffic congested city.
If the edu-migration international student Ponzi scheme was virtually
over even before it started, no doubt ably assisted by the Covid virus, how
long will the current plan last?
Even the mildly sceptic would
question if UTAS racks up $117 million in losses from core activities over five
years what are the odds of it pulling off a much riskier project like the
Hobart move? If it doesn’t who’ll be left holding the can?
Isn’t it time to take a deep breath.
The government and the Parliament
need to show who’s boss. Prof Black or the people of Tasmania?
What the 2023 Annual report revealed:
The 2023 year was by far the worst of the five years since Professor Black assumed the role of Vice Chancellor of UTAS.
UTAS reports on a calendar year. The
2023 result revealed UTAS’ core activities of teaching and research resulted in
a loss of $54.8 million.
This is a crucial metric. Page 70 of
the 2023 Annual Report describes its relevance:
In managing our financial performance, we focus on the result
from core activities. Core activities reflect the underlying operations of the
University, primarily teaching and research. This result provides a more
comparable operating outcome year on year, as it excludes one-off or
particularly volatile items such as capital grants, investment returns, and
statutory funds which have restricted use.
So how does the 2023 result compare
over the 5 years of Prof Black’s tenure? The following chart tells the story.
The excerpt from the Annual Report
stated core activities exclude:
·
Capital
grants from government(s) usually for new buildings, which are included in
overall income but obviously need to be excluded to derive a figure for profits
from core operating activities.
·
Investment
returns refer to returns from UTAS investments. What the Annual Report omitted
to say that investment returns in this context refers to net investment returns.
In other words, investment returns less interest paid. Historically investment
returns far exceeded interest paid. This contributed to UTAS’s profits from
non-core activities and helped offset losses from core activities. But in the
last two years this has changed due to the $350 million Green bond issue. At
the same time investments that grew following the bond issue and the forward
selling of 30 years of rent from Purpose Built Student Accommodation to Spark
Living are now being run down as capex works to reshape Hobart progresses.
Returns from investments net of interest paid will contribute less to UTAS
coffers. A loss in the very near future is likely.
·
Statutory
funds include philanthropic funds and endowments which are restricted. Effectively
they are amounts held in trust by UTAS. They ebb and flow as they are received
and spent and as such are included as revenue and/or expenses but excluded from
the calculation of profits from core activities.
However, the most significant exclusion from core activities didn’t rate
a mention. These are restructuring costs. It is common to exclude one-off
expenses when trying to establish comparative figures, but restructuring costs
are not one offs. They appear with such regularity that, without adequate
explanation, it’s difficult to see why they don’t form part of core activities.
Under Prof Black’s reign restructuring costs have averaged $8.8 million per
year. In 2023 they amounted to $9.5 million.
If restructuring costs are included with core activities, the last five
years look bleak.
Losses in every year culminating in a
whopping $64.4 million loss in 2023.
It’s not difficult to calculate that
core activities and restructure costs have contributed $117.3 million of losses
over the past five years.
One reason it was kept well hidden is
because $227 million of capital grants boosted the balance sheet over that
period.
It must be noted that these losses
include depreciation of UTAS’s assets which principally comprise its buildings.
It is entirely appropriate that wear and tear on buildings be recognised as an
expense. Depreciation is a non-cash expense. And there are others, but
depreciation is the most significant. This means that a profit figure will understate
cash from operations. Profits can be negative, but entities struggle on if cash
flow is positive.
Positive cash flow is the only way any
entity like UTAS can sustain itself, not only being able to pay operating
expenses but to help pay for new capex and to service borrowings. The standard
measure of cash earnings is EBITDA which stands for Earnings Before Interest Tax Depreciation and
Amortisation, essentially the cash earnings before interest and depreciation
(NB UTAS doesn’t pay tax).
As was noted in HERE the UTAS Council meeting on 27th April
2023 noted the Council “discussed the challenging conditions facing the
University in 2023” and how “to generate a positive EBITDA in
the coming years.” The fact that UTAS’ EBITDA was plummeting is now confirmed
by the 2023 Annual Report. This is UTAS’ EBITDA on Prof Black’s watch.
The Council discussed the negative EBITDA
in April 2023 which means management must have known about it for longer,
yet 2023 still posted a negative EBITDA
of $16.6 million. This is extremely serious. Falling real revenues, declining
international students and inflationary effects on expenses may describe what’s
happening but idle descriptions give no hint about solutions.
Turning round a negative EBITDA will
be like turning the Queen Mary in mid-stream with a strong current and an
ebbing tide. Having Captain Queeg on the bridge adds another layer of
difficulty. Tugs will be needed. Will Tug Master Michael Ferguson assist? When
will the government be asked to assist
UTAS with a negative EBITDA is not
something Green bond holders would have expected. When they tipped in $350
million the EBITDA was $60.4 million (posted in 2021). It’s now negative $16.6
million. Interest to pay bondholders must now come from running down existing
cash and investments. It’s not a viable place to be for too long. It certainly
makes the value of bonds much less should they wish to sell to another party.
If they were misled when buying the bonds it could get messy.
Thus far we’ve covered declining
profits and declining cash flows culminating in a negative EBITDA, the
inability to pay interest from current earnings.
So, what did UTAS spend on new capex
in 2023? A total of $162 million was spent. Of this $154 million was added to
the work in progress pool which now has book value of $205 million. These are
yet to be finished buildings.
To finance capex, cash on hand
declined by $53.6 million and investments of $114.2m were sold. Fortunately, 2023
was a better year for shares and investments and UTAS made an unrealised
investment gain of $17.6 m which was included in investment income for the
year.
As well as outlaying $162 million,
the Annual Report notes another $136 million is committed at year’s end.
Committed means it will be payable in this year 2024, of which $111.6 million will
be for the Timberyard Building, Hobart and $17.3 million for the Northern
Transformation project.
A quick snapshot of what’s left to
pay for more capex follows (the 2022 figures are also shown):
Amounts are $ million.
2023 |
2022 |
|
Cash on hand |
76 |
130 |
Investments |
450 |
547 |
Subtotal |
526 |
677 |
Less Restricted funds |
150 |
146 |
Capex commitments |
136 |
130 |
Amount available |
240 |
401 |
At the end of 2023, $240 million was
still available, a decrease of $161 million over the 2023 year. It will be
noted this was all used to pay capex of $162 million for the year. Also of note
are the restricted funds ($150 million at the end of 2023) which are unavailable
to be used to fund capex (as we noted earlier in this blog).
UTAS only has two years at most of
available cash if it keeps spending as it did in 2023.
Cash will also be needed to fund
operating cash deficits until UTAS finds a way to turn the Queen Mary around. There
is an unused $50 million overdraft approved, but a prudent Council will hopefully
reserve that facility to fund operations in an emergency.
Selling off surplus buildings is
sometimes touted as the fall-back position to help UTAS pay its bills. One can’t
lose even if plans change, and surplus buildings need to be sold was the smug reassurance
whenever UTAS was questioned about the wisdom of its investments.
UTAS has recently listed for sale the
Mid City and Fountainside hotels. In its 2023 Annual Report the two buildings were
shifted from property plant and equipment on the balance sheet to an account
labelled ‘assets held for sale’. The latter has a value of $45 million which is
the estimated sale proceeds.
However given the purchase prices,
the ingoing costs, the costs of refurbishment described as ‘recent’ in the sales
brochures and the likely exit costs, the investments will produce losses.
The Mid-City was bought in March 2018
for $25.85 million (NB this is the price on The List website altho’ UTAS told
the Leg Co committee it only paid $23.5 million – the difference could be plant
and equipment?) and the Fountainside for $18.76 million in December 2018.
That’s almost $45 million for starters. Then there’s the ingoings of 5 per cent
plus the sale fees of another possible 5 per cent. Then there’s refurb costs of
who knows what.
With interest rates expected to stay
higher for longer, the effects are starting to flow through to the amount
investors are prepared to pay for commercial property. With higher interest
rates, investors will want a higher return which means that offer prices will
be lower. UTAS is selling property in a market where investors will be seeking
to pay less than they would have in the past.
UTAS is about to be enveloped by a
perfect storm. All the stars are in alignment.
Yet for UTAS it’s business as usual.
To recap:
Declining cash flows have accompanied the reduced profits to such an
extent that 2023 saw UTAS with negative cash earnings for the first time in
2023, with no discernible plan to rectify the mess.
This means operations are unable to service the current level of borrowings. Servicing existing borrowings as well as all
new capex requires running down existing cash and investments until there’s no
option but to start selling the family jewels, parts of the Sandy Bay campus.
At the rate of capex spending undertaken in 2023, UTAS only has another
two years before the cash tin runs dry, which will not be enough time to make
core activities sustainable once again.
To conclude:
The primary focus should be on arresting the decline in earnings from
core operations. Moving to Hobart will only defer and exacerbate the problem. Building
STEM facilities with a sale and leaseback arrangement won’t fix negative
earnings from the core activities of teaching and research. It’ll make it worse
as any investor/lessor will want a rate of return well in excess of the rate at
which UTAS could borrow, if only Treasurer Ferguson will approve an increase in
UTAS’ borrowing limit. UTAS knows this but sheer bloody mindedness has led it
to deliberately pursue the reckless course of taking UTAS to the brink of
insolvency, by trying to force the hand of the Parliament and the government to
allow it to sell parts of Sandy Bay so that it can continue with its vanity
project whilst ignoring the wishes of most other stakeholders.
Prof Black has recently railed against the inadequacies of Tasmanian schools’ performances notably the numbers who make it to Year 12. It may be a heartfelt concern, but in part is likely to have been a reflection on the lack of students moving on to UTAS. Prof Black called for an inquiry into Tasmania's education system. Any inquiry should require a closer look at UTAS.
However less than expected numbers of Tasmanians wishing to study at UTAS
must be in part due to mainland universities being able to attract the best and
brightest, those who can afford it and those wishing more face-to-face learning
and/or a more communal/collegiate setting than lesser quality offerings in a
traffic congested city.
If the edu-migration international student Ponzi scheme was virtually
over even before it started, no doubt ably assisted by the Covid virus, how
long will the current plan last?
Even the mildly sceptic would question if UTAS racks up $117 million in
losses from core activities over five years what are the odds of it pulling off
a much riskier project like the Hobart move? If it doesn’t who’ll be left
holding the can?
Isn’t it time to take a deep breath.
The government and the Parliament need to show who’s boss. Prof Black or
the people of Tasmania?
Extremely valuable analysis
ReplyDeleteThanks John, a very insightful but alarming read. I did enjoy your reference to Captain Queeg from The Caine Mutiny. A very apt comparison. Hoping for a mutiny!
ReplyDeleteSo, at last, we enter the end game as UTAS plays a dangerous game of financial chicken with the Tasmanian Government. Obviously the sooner the people intervene the lower the cost to save UTAS from Capt Queeg.
ReplyDeleteOur best chance to end this madness may come when the Government realises that it cannot both save UTAS and build a stadium - not enough money! Darn. Perhaps if they stop UTAS spaffing money against the wall fast enough they might just have enough to build a stadium too. Action this day!