Susser Holdings Corporation Susser Petroleum Partners LP
Transcription
Susser Holdings Corporation Susser Petroleum Partners LP
Susser Holdings Corporation Susser Petroleum Partners LP Barclays Select Growth Conference November 2013 Safe Harbor Some of the statements in this presentation constitute “forward-looking statements” about Susser Holdings Corporation and/or Susser Petroleum Partners that involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions, including without limitation, our discussion and analysis of our financial condition and results of operations. These forward-looking statements generally can be identified by use of phrases such as “believe,” “plan,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “forecast” or other similar words or phrases in conjunction with a discussion of future operating or financial performance. Descriptions of our objectives, goals, targets, plans, strategies, costs, anticipated capital expenditures, expected cost savings, expansion of our foodservice offerings, potential acquisitions, and potential new store openings and dealer locations, are also forward-looking statements. These statements represent our present expectations or beliefs concerning future events and are not guarantees. Such statements speak only as of the date they are made, and we do not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statement. We caution that forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties and are qualified by important factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any such forward-looking statements. For a discussion of these factors and other risks and uncertainties, please refer to our respective filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“the SEC”), including those contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for our most recent fiscal year and any subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, available at the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. We intend for the forward-looking statements to be covered by the Safe Harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, and are including this statement for purpose of complying with these Safe Harbor provisions. This presentation is not a prospectus and is not an offer to sell securities. Before you invest, you should read our filings with the SEC for more complete information about us. 2 Evolution of Our Business – Past and Present Wholesale Dealer Site Retail Stripes® Site 3 Combined Susser Footprint Sac-N-Pac market 4 Susser Holdings LTM EBITDAR Since IPO in Oct 2006 250 230 210 19% CAGR 170 150 130 110 90 70 Jun-13 Oct-12 Feb-12 Jun-11 Oct-10 Feb-10 Jun-09 Oct-08 Feb-08 Jun-07 50 Oct-06 $Millions 190 5 Current Company Overview Retail stores in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico 576 retail sites 11th largest company operated C-store chain in the U.S. $1.0 billion of LTM merchandise sales 1.5 billion gallons distributed (LTM Q3 ‘13) 571 retail sites with fuel >580 contracted wholesale branded sites >1,800 unbranded commercial customers 24 consecutive years of same store sales growth ~ 70% of retail gross profit inside store $177 million EBITDA (LTM Q3 ‘13) 6 Same Store Merchandise Sales Increase 9.0 8.0 8.0 7.4 6.7 7.0 Percent Increase 6.0 6.6 5.8 5.6 5.8 5.8 6.0 5.0 5.0 4.2 4.0 3.4 3.3 3.0 2.2 2.0 1.0 - Qtr1 Qtr2 2011 Qtr3 2012 2013 Qtr4 YTD 7 Average Per Store Fuel Volume Increase 9.0 8.0 8.0 7.2 6.6 Percent Increase 7.0 5.8 6.0 5.5 5.6 5.8 5.6 5.1 4.9 5.0 4.1 4.0 3.6 3.2 3.1 3.0 2.0 1.0 - Qtr1 Qtr2 2011 Qtr3 2012 2013 Qtr4 YTD 8 Q3 Results Summary LTM REVENUES > $6 Billion LTM Merch + Foodservice > $1 Billion Q3 2012 1,501 Q3 2013 1,600 EBITDA 41.6 49.4 EBITDAR 53.2 61.2 Net Income 6.8 12.9 ($ millions) Total Revenue 9 Highly Attractive, Growing Markets Long-Term Job Growth (1) Texas Market Texas economy outperforming U.S. Ranked #1 for job growth Michigan (121, 000) Relatively strong housing market Lower unemployment than the U.S. California (446,000) Strongest Texas markets benefiting from increased oil and gas drilling Florida (233,000) Texas + 539,000 State’s population growth projected to be one of the highest in the U.S. Grew 25% from 2000 - 2012 26.1 million today 45.3 million projected in 2040 (2) (69% increase over 2010) Texas named “Best State for Business” for the Job Gains Job Losses Population Change ‘00–‘10 (Top 5 States) (in millions) 5 4.3 3.4 2.8 3 1.5 1.5 0.5 0 9th consecutive year- CEO Magazine, May 2013 % Growth Texas California Florida Georgia North Carolina National Avg. + 21% + 10% + 18% + 18% + 19% + 10% ____________________ Source: Unemployment Data: US Department of Labor and economagic.com; Population Data: US Census Bureau and other demographic information. (1) Change in Non-Farm Employment by state from June 2008 - June 2013. (2) Hobby Center for the Study of Texas, Rice University; assumes net migration equal to 2000-2010. 10 Favorable Market Demographics Hispanic Population by Market 100% High density of rapidly growing 95% 89% Hispanic population 75% Hispanics more frequent c-store 57% 44% 50% 35% 34% shoppers than non-Hispanics 37% 32% 25% More likely to buy grocery foods, 16% dairy and bread from c-stores 0% Laredo Rio Grande Valley Corpus MidlandSan Houston Christi Odessa Angelo (2) Lubbock Texas U.S. Fresh food important (1) Favorable core demographic, young Use of C-Stores for Grocery Purchases(3) population 30% 54% of TX male pop. < 35 25% 20% 15% 60% of South TX male pop. <35 27% 23% 10% 5% 19% 18% 13% 7% 6% 5% 13% 7% 11% 2% 0% Dairy, Ice Cream Bread Fresh food Grocery foods prepared on site Non-Hispanics Hispanics Perishable groceries ~ 50% of Texas population <18 is Hispanic Single-served pre-packaged food ____________________ Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2009 estimates. (1) Store base includes Brownsville, Harlingen, McAllen, Falfurrias and Riviera markets. Demographic data for Brownsville-Harlingen and McAllen-Edinburg-Mission MSA’s. (2) Demographic data for Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown MSA. (3) “The C-Store Hispanic Shopper study, by The NPD Group. 11 2012-2013 Milestones Successful completion of SUSP IPO Private Equity Sponsor exit Raised net $206 million Sets market value for stable cash flow fuel distribution business Lowers cost of capital to help accelerate growth Received ~2.5X investment after 6.5 years - $36/share Increased float/liquidity in SUSS stock Redeemed $425mm debt with cash and revolver $500mm new revolver, LIBOR+200 Est. annual pre-tax interest savings $30 - $32mm (based on current rates) 12 Delivering Organic Growth 2012 2013 6.6% est 3% - 4% New Stripes® Stores 25 28-30 total (20 YTD) New Wholesale Contracted Dealer Sites 39 32-40 total (24 YTD) ~800 ~1,000 Same Store Merchandise Sales Growth New Jobs Created 13 Delivering Growth through Acquisitions Acquired Gainesville Fuel, Inc. in September 2013 60 million diesel gallons annual volume Customers are oil & gas producers in North Texas and Oklahoma 2014 expected accretion: SUSP: $0.05 to $0.10 distributable cash flow per unit SUSS: $0.03 to $0.07 earnings per share Definitive agreement to acquire assets and fuel distribution contracts from Sac-N-Pac Stores and 3W Warren Fuels 47 convenience stores in south central Texas Fuel supply to 20 independent dealer locations 7 tracts of land 65 million gallons combined annual fuel volume Anticipating closing in Q1 2014 14 2013 Retail Growth Spring – 6,844 sq. ft. Carrizo Springs– 6,844 sq. ft. Del Rio – 6,844 sq. ft. Plus Lube Center Rosenburg– 6,844 sq. ft. Karnes City – 6,844 sq. ft. Plus Truck Diesel Island New Retail Store Growth 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 E 15 14 19 25 28-30 15 New Stores Delivering ~ 20% Unlevered ROI New Store Returns Unlevered ROI 30% Levered ROI 80% 75% 26% 25% 22% 60% 20% 15% 38% 40% 10% 7% 20% 5% 7% 0% 12-24 (21) 25-36 (20) Months Open (# Stores) >36 (107) 0% 12-24 (21) 25-36 (20) >36 (107) Months Open (# Stores) Unlevered ROI = Store incremental cash flow before rent / Total initial store investment Levered ROI = Store incremental cash flow after rent / Net store investment (after sale/leasebacks) Data reflects 2013 Q3 LTM 16 Wholesale Segment Overview Leading non-refining motor fuel distributor in Texas 1.5 Billion Gallons Sold LTM ~576 Stripes® stores with fuel ~100 contracted consignment locations ~490 contracted branded dealers Commercial 13% ~ 1,850 unbranded commercial customers Scalable wholesale and retail platforms Highly complementary with retail division Dealer Supply 19% Increases purchasing power/diversification Stripes 59% Increases strategic flexibility to rationalize sites between retail and wholesale Enhances acquisition opportunities 4 acquisitions completed since Aug ‘09 Dealer Consignment 9% 17 2013 Wholesale Growth Zippy’s Food Mart Zippy’s Food Mart Killeen, TX Killeen, TX Amigo Mart #2 Houston, TX Fresh Start #1 Porter, TX Edge Mart Katy, TX One Stop Bucker Dallas, TX New Wholesale Growth 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 E 27 20 21 39 32-40 18 FMV for Wholesale Segment: SUSP IPO Successfully executed public offering of wholesale distribution business in September 2012 Establishes FMV of wholesale distribution business tied to our stable cash flow (~$720 million as of 11/14/13 @ $32.79/unit) Creates strategic vehicle for growth Improves cost of capital SUSS retains ~50% of SUSP, 100% of general partner; will continue to consolidate financial results 19 SUSP - Multiple Drivers of Growth Rapid Stripes motor fuel volume growth Dropdown and Organic Growth Through Relationship with SUSS Expand Third-Party Wholesale Motor Fuel Distribution Business Existing locations New locations Significant sale/leaseback opportunities with 75 store option Rental income Built-in distributable cash flow growth at the MLP’s option Organically adding new third-party dealers Adding new unbranded convenience stores and other commercial customers Pursue acquisitions of other wholesalers and supply contracts Acquisitions Leverage relationships with suppliers to improve deal flow Joint strategic acquisition opportunities with SUSS SUSP has ~$97 million of capacity under its revolver to capture growth opportunities as of 9/30/13; $250 revolver can be expanded by $100 million 20 SUSP History of Distributions QTR Ended Sep 2012 (6 days) Dec 2012 Mar 2013 Jun 2013 Sep 2013 Distribution per Annualized LP Unit Rate $ 0.0285 $ 1.75 $ 0.4375 $ 1.75 $ 0.4375 $ 1.75 $ 0.4528 $ 1.81 $ 0.4687 $ 1.87 21 Incentive Distribution Rights (IDR’s) Hypothetical Example Hypothetical Annual Distribution (000's) (a) Hypothetical Total Distribution Hypothetical # Units outstanding Annual LP Dist. % Allocated to (b) per Unit Up To LP Unitholders $1.750 100% $2.013 100% $2.188 85% $2.625 75% >$2.625 50% Total LP Distribution Annual LP Dist. % Allocated to (b) per Unit Up To LP Unitholders $1.750 0% $2.013 0% $2.188 15% $2.625 25% >$2.625 50% Total IDR Distribution Total Distribution, including IDR's $ 40,000 $ 20,000 50,000 $ 20,000 60,000 $ 20,000 70,000 20,000 $ 35,000 $ 5,000 40,000 $ 35,000 $ 5,250 2,975 4,688 47,913 $ 35,000 $ 5,250 2,975 6,563 3,750 53,538 $ 35,000 5,250 2,975 6,563 8,750 58,538 $ $ 525 1,563 2,088 $ $ 525 2,188 3,750 6,463 $ 525 2,188 8,750 11,463 40,000 $ 50,000 $ 60,000 $ 70,000 $ $ $ $ - $ Notes: (a) SUSP actual LTM distribution was $39.3 million. (b) Annualized incremental quarterly distribution tiers per SUSP partnership agreement. 22 MLP Structure Enhances Synergies of our Retail/Wholesale Platform SUSP • Combined fuel volume increases purchasing power • SUSS gallon growth increases SUSP DCF SUSS • MLP currency funds Stripes store growth • Rent payments increase SUSP DCF • DCF growth = LP distribution growth • SUSS receives pro rata share • LP distribution growth trigger IDR’s • SUSS receives 100% 23 Key Investment Highlights – SUSP STABILITY Long-term, fee-based contracts VISIBLE GROWTH Embedded growth with Parent 75 Stripes® store dropdown option (30 10-year fixed fee contract with the completed since IPO, incl. 22 in 2013) Parent 25-30 currently expected in 2013 History of strong growth in Stripes 5-year average remaining term gallons (13.3% CAGR in last 5 years) contracts with diversified 3rd parties De minimis direct commodity risk Very limited working capital needs Strong and resilient industry fundamentals More than 190 net new third-party locations after 2007 Numerous acquisition opportunities in highly fragmented and attractive markets Ability to pursue opportunities jointly Traditional MLP structure with conservative coverage Significant financial capacity for growth at both MLP and Parent 24 Consolidated Financial Strength and Flexibility Provides Opportunity for Growth Reducing Leverage 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 - Net Debt to Adjusted EBITDA $206mm net proceeds from SUSP IPO Sept. 2012 $73mm consolidated cash and 12/07(1) 12/08 12/09 12/10 12/11 12/12 09/13 marketable securities; $411mm available on SUSS/ SUSP revolvers at September ’13 (1) Pro forma for acquisition of Town & Country (168 retail sites) Increasing Liquidity $600 Net debt to EBITDA of 1.7X at 9/29/13 $425mm 8.5% debt redeemed 5/15/13 $500 Financed with ~$233mm of new SUSS $400 $500mm revolver and cash $300 Expect $30-$32mm annual pre-tax $200 interest savings, or $0.90-$0.95 diluted EPS improvement $100 $0 12/05 12/06 12/07 12/08 12/09 12/10 12/11 12/12 09/13 Cash Additional Liquidity (1) (1) Unused availability on revolving credit facilities 25 Key Investment Highlights Strong and resilient industry fundamentals Leading market position in highly attractive markets Synergistic, scalable business model delivering strong growth on retail and wholesale platforms Differentiated retail strategy Innovative information systems and technology Strong liquidity and operating performance Attractive growth opportunities in core markets Experienced team passionately committed to delivering strong growth and performance Proven ability to access capital 26 Helping communities grow and thrive for over 75 years… 27 Appendix Proven Track Record of Growth 3rd generation family led fuel business dating back to 1930s Sam L. Susser joined the Company in 1988 when the Company operated five stores Locations 1200 1000 891 800 600 420 400 Completed 14 significant acquisitions in last 24 years 625 640 637 639 665 692 291 334 332 333 346 367 334 306 305 306 319 325 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 238 200 0 182 2000 Transitioned to a large-format store model in 1999 / Created Laredo Taco Company® restaurant concept in 2001 Completed SUSS initial public offering on October 24, 2006 Completed SUSP initial public offering on September 25, 2012 SUSS EBITDA up > 3x since IPO and increased retail stores by 65% Retail 884 915 957 1106 1138 1163 565 579 587 387 372 390 431 504 512 525 526 541 559 576 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Q3 2013 $229 $225 12 LTM Q3'13 Third-Party Dealers & Consignment Adjusted EBITDAR ($ in millions) $260 $240 $220 $200 $180 $160 $140 $120 $100 $80 $60 $40 $20 $- $213 $145 $26 '00 $37 '01 $51 $51 $59 '02 '03 '04 $64 $68 '05 '06 $163 $129 $84 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 29 EBITDAR Has Tripled Since 2006 IPO Fuel Neutral EBITDAR EBITDAR 5% (in millions) $240 +8% (1) (in millions) $225 +9% +31% -1% +11% $200 $200 +8% $175 +7% +26% $160 +54% $150 +73% -11% $229 $213 $120 $215 $225 $215 $213 $210 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Q3 12 Q3 13 LTM LTM $125 $197 $177 $163 +17% $100 $153 $164 +24% $145 $129 $80 $75 $84 $99 $85 $68 $50 $40 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Q3 12 Q3 13 LTM LTM (1) Normalizes retail CPG after credit cards at a 5-year rolling average of 14.7¢ and wholesale CPG at a 5-year rolling average of 5.5¢. Excludes G&A bonus and 401-K match. Adjusted to reflect impact of MLP on retail fuel margin 30 Susser Holdings EBITDAR Three Months Ended Sept 2013 70 Nine Months Ended Sept 2013 180 175 61 172 170 60 167 53 165 50 160 40 155 30 150 20 145 10 140 2012 2013 2012 2013 931 Key Financial Results Fiscal Year 2011 2012 Q3 YTD 2012 2013 Merchandise Same Store Sales Growth 6.0% 6.6% 5.8% 3.4% Merchandise Margin, Net of Shortages 33.7% 33.9% 33.8% 33.8% Retail Average Per-Store Gallons Growth 4.9% 5.8% 6.6% 5.6% Retail Fuel Margin (CPG) As Reported (1) 23.2¢ 21.8¢ 22.0¢ 17.7¢ Retail Fuel Margin, Pro Forma for MLP 20.2¢ 19.6¢ 19.0¢ 17.7¢ Wholesale Fuel Margin - 3rd Party (CPG) 5.9¢ 6.2¢ 6.1¢ 7.8¢ Wholesale Fuel Margin - Affiliated (2) 0.0¢ 0.8¢ 0.2¢ 3.0¢ 3.0¢ 3.0¢ 3.0¢ 3.0¢ Gross Profit $557 $611 $455 $487 LTM Adjusted EBITDA $167 $183 $169 $177 Wholesale Fuel Margin, Pro Forma for MLP (1) $0.03 per gallon profit markup charged to Retail by SUSP implemented 9/25/12. This change shifts approximately 3 cents per gallon of gross profit from the retail segment to the wholesale segment. The Pro Forma amounts reflect the historical retail margins as if the markup had been implemented for the entire period presented. (2) Beginning September 25, 2013 the Wholesale segment charges the Retail segment approximately 3 cent mark-up. Prior to this date no markup was charged. Amount shown for FY 2012 is full year blended margin. 32 Real Estate Summary As of September 30, 2013 Operating: Retail Wholesale- SPC Wholesale- SUSP Controlled by Fee Leased Franchisee Total Sites 261 315 576 10 26 36 76 12 493 581 Stripes stores owned by SUSP (1) Total Operating Sites 347 Non-Operating: Office / Warehouse Under Construction Land Bank / In Development Income Producing Surplus Total 13 9 53 6 45 126 Total: 473 (30) 323 8 1 3 2 14 337 493 493 (30) 1,163 21 10 53 9 47 140 1,303 (1) Intercompany elimination of Stripes stores dropped down to SUSP since IPO through 9/30/13; these are reflected as “leased” by Retail and “fee” by SUSP. 33 Retail Segment Overview 576 retail sites (~46% fee properties) Retail Segment Gross Profit Contribution (1) Superior real estate and facilities Fuel Strategy to drive customer count and transaction size Non-Fuel 32% 68% C-stores operate under powerful proprietary Stripes® brand 62% have proprietary Laredo Taco Company® restaurants Focus on higher margin food and beverage with less reliance on cigarettes and fuel ____________________ (1) Reflects LTM results as of Q3 2013 34 Retail EBITDAR ($millions) Three Months Ended Sept 2013 55 Nine Months Ended Sept 2013 145 140 50 45 45 40 134 135 130 127 125 40 120 115 110 35 105 30 100 2012 Personnel expense Oth Op ex Credit Cards 2013 % of Merch Sales Impact on 2012 2013 EBITDA 18.4% 19.2% $ (2.2) 11.3% 11.2% $ 0.2 2012 Personnel expense Oth Op ex Credit Cards 2013 % of Merch Sales Impact on 2012 2013 EBITDA 18.2% 19.4% $ (9.3) 11.1% 11.3% $ (1.8) (a) 2012 reflects pro forma results as if MLP had been in place. 35 Retail Gross Profit Three Months Ended Sept 2013 160 140 Nine Months Ended Sept 2013 450 $148 $132 400 17.1¢ 80 60 20 300 $ millions $ millions 18.3¢ 40 $422 19.0¢ 20.0¢ 17.7¢ 17.3¢ 33.4% 33.4% 350 120 100 $396 33.5% 33.4% 33.8% 33.9% - 250 200 150 100 50 33.5% 33.3% 2012 (a) Merch GP 2013 Fuel GP Other GP 2012 (a) Merch GP 2013 Fuel GP Other GP (a) 2012 reflects pro forma results as if MLP had been in place. 36 Growing the Top Line Average Merchandise Sales per Store (thousands) Key Drivers $2,000 $1,900 $1,864 $1,792 $1,800 • New store development $1,700 $1,661 $1,600 • Aggressive category $1,540 +4% $1,488 $1,500 • Leveraging restaurant sales +8% +3% $1,271 $1,300 • Investing capex to maintain +4% quality of existing stores +13% $1,142 • Building suggestive selling +11% $1,100 +8% capabilities $1,000 2006 management +8% $1,437 $1,400 $1,200 • Favorable demographics 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Q3 13 LTM 37 Proprietary Restaurant Service Differentiates Susser 371 locations with a restaurant concept 357 Laredo Taco Company® locations Authentic Mexican food catering to both Hispanic and non-Hispanic customers Wide variety of delicious, spicy food at a great value Foodservice drives higher-than-average gross margins Additional merchandise purchases in ~73% of transactions Laredo Taco Company® customers visit stores 40% more often 38 Built Capability to Execute Our Fuel Strategy (thousands) Average Fuel Gallons Sold per Retail Store 1,700 1,639 1,578 1,600 Utilizing technology to optimize volume and margin over the long term 1,491 1,500 1,421 1,388 1,400 1,355 1,319 +5% 1,300 1,243 1,200 +6% +3% +2% Initiatives +6% +4% New stores built for volume Investment - new fuel +2% dispensers +5% Expansion of diesel 1,100 Leverage scale/procurement 1,000 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Q3 13 LTM # Locations w/ Auto Diesel 173 197 316 337 360 380 419 450 18-Wheel 29 56 57 61 68 70 73 27 39 Recent Operating Trends Merchandise Same Store Sales Growth 8.0% 7.4% 7.3% 6.7% 5.8% 5.6% 5.8% 5.8% 5.0% 4.2% 2.5% Q1 '10 3.1% 3.4% 3.4% 2.2% Q2 '10 Q3 '10 Q4 '10 Q1 '11 Q2 '11 Q3 '11 Q4 '11 Q1 '12 Q2 '12 Q3 '12 Q4 '12 Q1 '13 Q2 '13 Q3 '13 Average Retail Gallons per Store Growth 8.0% 7.2% 3.9% 6.6% 5.8% 5.6% 4.3% 3.2% 3.6% Q1 '11 Q2 '11 5.5% 5.6% Q2 '13 Q3 '13 4.1% 3.1% 1.8% -0.2% Q1 '10 Q2 '10 Q3 '10 Q4 '10 Q3 '11 Q4 '11 Q1 '12 Q2 '12 Q3 '12 Q4 '12 Q1 '13 40 Widening the Gap (in 000’s, based on LTM data) Average Per-Store Merchandise Sales $1,863 $1,792 $1,800 $1,661 $1,540 $1,488 $1,500 $1,437 $1,270 $1,230 $1,217 $1,200 $1,142 $1,055 $978 $954 $900 $1,134 $1,127 $1,088 $1,070 $999 $1,015 $1,001 $991 $912 $898 $1,223 $1,172 $928 $958 2008 2009 $1,230 $1,191 $1,150 $1,075 $1,063 $1,015 $856 $778 $742 $600 $300 2005 2006 2007 SUSS PTRY CASY 2010 2011 2012 2013 Q3 LTM CST Note: Annual data based on each company’s fiscal year. LTM data based on latest fiscal quarter reported. 41 Delivering Best in Class Volume Growth (in 000’s, based on LTM data) Average Per-Store Gallons 1,856 1,820 1,800 1,825 1,817 1,855 1,847 1,819 1,830 1,763 1,639 1,578 1,600 1,491 1,421 1,388 1,400 1,355 1,319 1,306 1,289 1,269 1,243 1,230 1,200 1,255 1,186 1,152 1,117 1,114 1,108 1,000 806 821 859 836 854 869 869 888 896 800 600 2005 2006 2007 2008 SUSS PTRY 2009 CASY 2010 2011 2012 2013 Q3 LTM CST Note: Annual data based on each company’s fiscal year. LTM data based on latest fiscal quarter reported. 42 Growing Merchandise Gross Profit Dollars Merchandise Margin % 38% Store-specific pricing 36% 36.8% 35.7% 34% Key Drivers 36.0% 36.2% 36.3% 36.3% Leveraging scale 35.6% Aggressive category management 32% Capital invested in revenue34.3% 30% 33.3% 32.5% 33.6% 33.7% 33.9% 33.8% generating equipment Driving the business through 28% foodservice 26% 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Q3 13 LTM Merchandise Margin Including Other Income Reported Merchandise Margin 43 Leveraging Hot, Fresh & Delicious $220 Foodservice Sales It’s All About the Food $200 $millions $180 $160 $140 $233 $210 $120 $188 $100 $148 $158 $166 2008 2009 2010 $80 $60 $40 $58 $71 2005 2006 100 2007 2011 2012 2013 Q3 LTM Number of LTC Food Units Sold Annually 80 Millions of Units $88 60 107 40 62 20 23 31 68 75 86 95 39 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Q3 LTM *Foodservice sales include restaurant (QSR), fast food, roller grill, coffee, fountain, and Slush Monkey ™ (frozen carbonated beverage). 44 Growing Merchandise Sales per Square Foot Store Sq. Ft. Distribution New stores deliver strong returns Typical cost is currently $3.0 - $4.0 million Target ROI of approximately 20% by year 3 New stores are 2x the size and 3x the cash flow of legacy stores Merchandise Sales per Sq. Ft. Sq. Ft. Range <2500 2500-3500 3501-4500 >4500 Total @ 9/30/13 Store Count 143 162 83 188 576 Average Building and Land Sq. Ft. per Retail Store $540 3,800 55,000 3,600 50,000 $520 Building Sq Ft $480 $460 $440 $420 $400 $380 45,000 3,400 Land Sq Ft $500 40,000 3,200 35,000 3,000 30,000 2,800 25,000 2,600 20,000 $360 $340 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Q3 13 LTM Average Building Sq Ft Average Land Sq Ft 45 Existing Stores Continue to Grow 144 Stores Opened Prior to 2000 (in millions) Merchandise Sales Merchandise Gross Profit $200 $65 $60 $180 $55 $160 $50 $140 $45 $120 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 $40 2005 2006 Fuel Gallons 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2010 2011 2012 4-Wall Cash Flow $45 135 $40 130 $35 125 $30 120 $25 115 $20 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 46 New Retail Stores Driving Cash Flow Growth Legacy Stores (Prior to 2000) Town & Country Stores Acquired Stores Built(2) All Stores # of Stores (1) 144 154 146 559 Avg. Building Sq. Ft. 2.6K 3.5K 5.2K 3.6K Avg. Lot Sq. Ft. 21K 50-60K 50-100K 50K Avg. Annual Merch Sales (000’s) $1,344 $1,911 $2,466 $1,792 Avg. Annual Fuel Gallons (000’s) 914 1,683 2,358 1,578 Avg. Annual Cash Flow (000’s) $289 $474 $633 $440 (1) All store counts are as of 12/30/12 (2) Reflects stores built from 2000 to December 30, 2012 (FY2012 results). Results annualized for stores open < 12 months. 47 Post-MLP Organization Structure Susser Holdings Corporation and subsidiaries (“Parent”) 100% Ownership Interest Susser Petroleum Partners GP LLC (the “general partner”) Common Units Subordinated Units Incentive Distribution Rights (NASDAQ: SUSS) Common Units 49.8% Limited Partner Interest Retail operations Stripes® c-stores Sale of motor fuel at consignment locations Owned properties for ~250 Stripes® locations (2) 50.2% Limited Partner Interest 0% Non-economic General Partner Interest Public Unitholders What Remains at the Parent? What is in SUSP? Susser Petroleum Partners LP (the “Partnership”) (NYSE: SUSP) 100% Ownership Interest Wholesale operations Motor fuel distribution to Stripes® c-stores Motor fuel distribution to the Parent for supplying consignment locations Motor fuel distribution to supply dealers Motor fuel distribution to unbranded cstores and other commercial customers 41 owned stores and 12 leased sites leased / sublet to independent operators (2) Operating Subsidiaries (1) ____________________ (1) One of Susser Petroleum Partners LP’s operating subsidiaries, Susser Petroleum Property Company LLC (‘‘Susser Propco’’), will be treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Susser Petroleum Partners LP expects that this subsidiary will own all Stripes® convenience stores purchased from SHC in connection with Susser Petroleum Partners LP’s option to execute sale and leaseback transactions under the omnibus agreement or otherwise. (2) At time of SUSP IPO. Excludes any subsequent sites added or closed. 48 Wholesale Gross Profit Three Months Ended Sept 2013 Nine Months Ended Sept 2013 30 70 $66 $25 60 25 $19 $56 50 15 6.1¢ 7.8¢ $ millions $ millions 20 40 30 20.0¢ 6.1¢ 17.3¢ 6.8¢ 10 20 5 33.8% 3.0¢ 33.9% 3.0¢ - 10 33.5% 3.0¢ 3.0¢ 33.3% 0 Fuel GP - Stripes Stripes 3rd Party Total 0 Fuel GP - 3rd Pty 2012 (a) Other GP Gallons Growth 2012 2013 % Change 218 239 10% 150 162 8% 367 401 9% Fuel GP - Stripes Stripes 3rd Party Total 2013 Fuel GP - 3rd Pty Other GP Gallons Growth 2012 2013 % Change 643 693 8% 445 465 4% 1,088 1,157 6% (a) 2012 reflects pro forma results as if MLP had been in place. 749 Wholesale EBITDAR Three Months Ended Sept 2013 20 19 Nine Months Ended Sept 2013 19 48 18 46 17 44 16 49 50 44 42 15 15 40 14 38 13 36 12 34 11 32 10 30 2012 2013 2012 2013 (a) 2012 reflects pro forma results as if MLP had been in place. 850 Our Strong, Long-Term Fuel Supplier Relationships Key Brands Overview Valuable supply contracts with major oil companies and refiners More than 20 branded and unbranded suppliers 2012 Volumes by Supplier Long-term relationships with suppliers provides attractive terms and ability to grow Others 44% Valero 36% Chevron 19% Among the largest U.S. branded distributors of Valero and Chevron motor fuel 51 SUSP: Stable & Growing Operating and Financial Performance Gallons Sold (1) 1,600 1,448 1,202 1,517 1,312 1,233 $60 1,200 ($ in millions) Gallons (millions) Fuel Gross Profit (1) 800 400 $50.2 $51.4 2012 LTM Q3'13 $44.5 $45 $35.1 $39.1 $30 $15 $0 0 2009 2010 2011 Third-Party 2012 2009 LTM Q3'13 Total 2010 2011 Stripes & Consignment Locations Third-Party Cents Per Gallon – Motor Fuel Margin (1) LTM Q3’13 2009 2010 2011 2012 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 Third-Party 2.7 3.5 4.2 4.4 4.9 Average Fuel Margin: 2.9 3.2 3.4 3.5 3.6 Stripes® & Consignment (2) ____________________ (1) Pro forma for the Parent distribution contract and application of this contract to Stripes & consignment volumes for all historic periods shown prior to IPO. Actual results following IPO. (2) Represents supply dealers and other commercial customers. 52 Retail Quarterly Volatility Consistent on LTM Basis, Wholesale Margins Even More Stable Quarterly Fuel Margin – Cents per Gallon (1) 35.0¢ 30.0¢ 5 year: 27.7 24.8 25.0¢ 20.0¢ 32.4 31.2 24.1 22.8 19.7 15.2 15.0¢ 15.0 11.9 11.8 20.1 18.6 17.7 15.3 19.6 21.2 21.3 Low = 11.1¢ 11.1¢ 13.3 11.1 10.0¢ 5.0¢ 0.0¢ Q4 '08 Q1 '09 Q2 '09 Q3 '09 Q4 '09 Q1 '10 Q2 '10 Q3 '10 Q4 '10 Q1 '11 Q2 '11 MLP Impact 8.0¢ 7.2 7.0 7.0¢ 5.8 6.0¢ 4.0¢ 3.5 Q4 '11 Q1 '12 Retail PF Q2 '12 Q3 '12 Q4 '12 Q1 '13 6.4 5.1 5.1 Avg = 19.1¢ 19.8¢ LTM = 18.5¢ 21.5¢ Q3 '13 6.3 6.4 5 year: 5.0 Low = 3.5¢ 4.2 4.0 32.4¢ 7.8 7.2 6.5 5.9 5.1 Q2 '13 High = 32.4¢ LTM 5.9 5.1 5.0¢ Q3 '11 Pro Actual Forma 3.7 High = 7.8¢ 3.0¢ 2.0¢ Avg = 5.7¢ 1.0¢ LTM = 6.6¢ 0.0¢ Q4 '08 Q1 '09 Q2 '09 Q3 '09 Q4 '09 Q1 '10 Q2 '10 Q3 '10 Q4 '10 Q1 '11 Q2 '11 Q3 '11 Q4 '11 Wholesale Third Party (1) Q1 '12 Q2 '12 Q3 '12 Q4 '12 Q1 '13 Q2 '13 Q3 '13 LTM Reflects historic fuel margins by segment, as reported, prior to SUSP IPO. Effective 9/25/12, retail fuel margin reduced by ~3 CPG for profit mark-up charged by SUSP. Retail pro forma includes the add back of the 3 cent profit margin now reported in wholesale gross profit. 53 Retail Fuel Margin (cents per gallon) 25¢ 23.2 - 22.6 PF 21.8 Rpt 22.6 0.8 5.5 20¢ 18.4 17.8 15¢ 14.8 13.7 - 2.7 4.2 14.6 scale/procurement 3.0 4.3 5.6 Building facilities designed for volume 3.5 Shift in product mix – 10¢ 16.3 5¢ Leverage - 2.9 10.8 Key Drivers 5.5 - - 21.5 PF 18.5 21.5 Rpt 12.1 13.6 11.1 14.1 higher margin in diesel 12.9 17.7 Consistent execution Availability of information 0¢ 2006 2007 2008 Credit Card Fee CPG 2009 2010 2011 MLP Impact on CPG 2012 Q3 13 LTM PF CPG Note: Effective 9/25/12, retail fuel margin reduced by ~3 CPG for profit mark-up charged by SUSP. The Pro Forma margins shown above reflect the add back of the 3 cent margin that is now reported in wholesale gross profit. 54 Fuel Margin History 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 (1) 2013 (1) Retail Fuel Margin As Reported Q1 Q2 Q3 9.3 15.4 21.1 12.0 17.3 15.9 12.0 19.5 22.3 11.8 15.2 19.7 11.1 24.8 22.8 15.3 31.2 27.7 13.3 32.4 20.1 16.6 18.2 18.3 Q4 9.2 14.1 17.7 11.9 15.0 18.6 21.1 - YTD 13.7 14.8 17.8 14.6 18.4 23.2 21.8 17.7 High* Low* Average* 15.3 9.3 12.1 32.4 15.2 22.2 27.7 15.9 21.4 21.1 9.2 15.4 23.2 13.7 17.8 High* Low* Average* 10.3 6.6 8.4 26.8 11.5 18.0 21.9 13.4 17.0 15.6 7.5 11.5 17.7 10.8 13.7 Median* 12.0 19.5 21.1 15.0 17.8 Median* 8.1 15.2 17.1 11.0 13.6 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Retail Fuel Margin Pro Forma (2) Q1 Q2 Q3 6.3 12.4 18.1 9.0 14.3 12.9 9.0 16.5 19.3 8.8 12.2 16.7 8.1 21.8 19.8 12.3 28.2 24.7 10.3 29.4 17.1 16.6 18.2 18.3 Q4 6.2 11.1 14.7 8.9 12.0 15.6 21.1 - YTD 10.7 11.8 14.8 11.6 15.4 20.2 19.6 17.7 High* Low* Average* 12.3 6.3 9.1 29.4 12.2 19.2 24.7 12.9 18.4 21.1 6.2 12.8 20.2 10.7 14.9 High* Low* Average* 7.3 3.6 5.4 23.8 8.5 15.0 18.9 10.4 14.0 12.6 4.5 8.5 14.7 7.8 10.8 Median* 9.0 16.5 18.1 12.0 14.8 Median* 5.1 12.2 14.1 8.0 10.6 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Retail Fuel Margin, net of Credit Cards As Reported Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 6.6 12.0 17.5 7.5 9.6 14.8 13.4 11.0 8.1 15.2 17.1 14.2 9.1 11.5 15.8 8.2 7.0 20.2 18.5 10.4 10.3 25.3 21.9 13.3 7.9 26.8 14.5 15.6 11.0 12.7 12.6 - Retail Fuel Margin, net of Credit Cards Pro Forma (2) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 3.6 9.0 14.5 4.5 6.6 11.8 10.4 8.0 5.1 12.2 14.1 11.2 6.1 8.5 12.8 5.2 4.0 17.2 15.5 7.4 7.3 22.3 18.9 10.3 4.9 23.8 11.5 12.6 11.0 12.7 12.6 - YTD 10.8 12.1 13.6 11.1 14.1 17.7 16.3 12.1 YTD 7.8 9.1 10.6 8.1 11.1 14.7 14.1 12.1 * Includes full years only Note: We report Retail fuel margins before credit card expenses, which are included in other operating expense. Our Wholesale segment absorbs certain credit card expenses, which are included in the reported fuel margin. (1) Effective September 25, 2012, the retail fuel margin reflects a reduction of approximately three cents per gallon as SUSP began charging a gross profit mark-up on gallons sold to our retail segment. Prior to this date, no gross profit mark-up was charged by the wholesale segment to the retail segment. (2) The retail fuel margin reflects a pro forma reduction of approximately three center per gallon mark-up from SUSP for all periods presented. 55 Fuel Margin History Wholesale Third Party Fuel Margin (3) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total Consolidated Fuel Margin YTD 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 4.8 3.9 4.9 3.5 4.2 5.1 5.0 5.9 5.9 5.3 6.0 4.0 5.8 7.0 7.2 6.4 6.9 6.4 7.3 5.1 5.9 6.5 6.1 7.8 4.8 6.4 7.2 3.7 5.1 5.1 6.3 - 5.6 5.5 6.4 4.1 5.3 5.9 6.2 6.2 High* Low* Average* 5.1 3.5 4.5 7.2 4.0 5.9 7.3 5.1 6.3 7.2 3.7 5.5 6.4 4.1 5.6 Median* 4.8 5.9 6.4 5.1 5.6 Total Consolidated Fuel Margin, net of Credit Cards Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 YTD 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 7.0 7.7 9.1 8.4 8.4 11.4 10.0 14.3 10.3 11.0 13.7 10.5 17.0 21.6 21.9 15.5 13.4 10.9 15.9 13.6 16.1 19.3 14.9 16.1 6.9 10.6 13.4 8.7 11.0 13.0 16.9 - 9.4 10.1 13.0 10.3 13.1 16.3 16.0 15.3 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 High* Low* Average* 11.4 7.0 8.9 21.9 10.3 15.2 19.3 10.9 14.9 16.9 6.9 11.5 16.3 9.4 12.6 Median* 8.4 13.7 14.9 11.0 13.0 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 5.7 6.6 6.8 6.8 5.9 8.3 6.7 11.0 8.7 9.8 11.2 8.4 14.3 18.1 18.6 12.2 11.8 9.7 12.9 11.3 13.5 15.8 11.6 12.7 6.0 8.9 11.3 6.4 8.2 9.9 13.7 - YTD 8.1 8.8 10.6 8.2 10.5 13.0 12.7 12.0 High* Low* Average* 8.3 5.7 6.7 18.6 8.4 12.7 15.8 9.7 12.4 13.7 9.2 13.0 8.1 10.3 Median* 6.7 11.2 11.8 8.9 10.5 * Includes full years only Note: We report Retail fuel margins before credit card expenses, which are included in other operating expense. Our Wholesale segment absorbs certain credit card expenses, which are included in the reported fuel margin. (3) The wholesale margin from third parties excludes gross profit from the retail segment. 56 Tracking the Texas Economy Key Economic Indicators Yearly Totals Year Median Sales Price Value of Active Gasoline Diesel Existing Auto Crude Oil Natural Gas Oil & Gas (Millions of (Millions of Single Sales Net Packages Produced Produced Drilling Taxed Taxed Family Value Taxed (Millions) (Millions) Rigs Gallons) Gallons) Homes (Millions) (Millions) 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 $ 19,657.50 $ 21,622.10 $ 30,631.30 $ 18,363.90 $ 26,054.90 $ 39,406.00 $ 54,825.20 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 19,852.10 18,858.50 23,258.80 9,317.40 11,482.50 13,485.60 12,713.10 746 613 640 396 670 849 912 11,372.80 11,624.80 11,709.70 11,916.30 12,141.80 11,948.40 12,261.50 3,731.60 3,886.90 3,854.00 3,475.80 3,698.10 3,835.20 3,963.40 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 143,100 146,450 145,850 143,750 146,750 147,800 158,600 $45,756.20 $48,992.80 $44,442.40 $34,792.60 $38,797.50 $44,235.20 $52,866.30 1,280.2 1,004.9 1,077.0 949.9 951.2 951.7 958.2 Note: The cigarette packages taxed number was previously based on cigarette tax collections. The cigarette packages taxed number is now based on the number of cigarette tax stamps sold. All historical cigarette package taxed numbers have been revised to reflect this new method. Crude oil and natural gas figures are net taxable values. Gasoline gallons include gasohol. Auto sale values are calculated from motor vehicle taxes collected on new and used vehicle sales. All figures are not seasonally adjusted, except for industrial production, leading indicators and employment/unemployment. Figures are based on the most recent available data. Annual figures are for calendar years. Annual numbers for active oil and gas drilling rigs are the median for that calendar year. ____________________ Sources: Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts (Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Motor Fuel, Auto Sales, Cigarettes) Baker-Hughes Incorporated (Active Oil & Gas Drilling Rigs) The Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University (Median Sale Price, Existing Single-family Home Sales) 57 Tracking the Texas Economy Key Economic Indicators Monthly Totals Median Sales Price Value of Value of Active Gasoline Diesel Existing Auto Cigarette Crude Oil Natural Gas Oil & Gas (Millions of (Millions of Single Sales Net Packages Produced Produced Drilling Taxed Taxed Family Value Taxed Month/Year (Millions) (Millions) Rigs Gallons) Gallons) Homes (Millions) (Millions) 12-Jun 12-Jul 12-Aug 12-Sep 12-Oct 12-Nov 12-Dec 13-Jan 13-Feb 13-Mar 13-Apr 13-May 13-Jun 13-Jul 13-Aug 13-Sep 13-Oct $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 3,813.30 4,390.80 4,874.90 4,869.80 5,000.90 4,819.00 4,899.30 5,328.60 4,928.80 5,753.60 5,599.50 5,903.60 5,709.60 6,237.00 6,217.17 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 793.80 987.60 1,119.50 1,037.90 1,219.80 1,284.20 1,290.80 1,211.00 1,148.50 1,287.30 1,407.50 1,493.60 1,414.00 932 910 901 876 867 850 838 821 833 833 836 838 841 841 848 837 820 1,065.50 1,038.00 1,034.60 1,063.70 993.10 1,047.30 1,008.40 1,018.10 973.20 933.70 1,069.60 1,035.80 1,081.50 1,059.20 1,053.70 1,091.40 340.8 332.1 331.4 347.9 324.9 379.1 304.6 319.4 322.8 283.7 361.0 341.6 353.3 333.6 334.1 350.7 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 165,500 163,800 160,600 158,500 156,500 158,700 162,900 149,400 157,100 164,600 171,700 177,700 180,900 179,600 177,700 173,000 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 4,628.10 4,775.00 4,993.40 4,554.60 4,688.70 4,063.30 4,256.60 4,675.00 4,518.80 4,431.60 3,980.30 4,777.60 4,901.50 5,363.00 72.2 74.8 89.1 67.3 93.1 85.8 66.2 73.1 73.2 74.8 84.3 91.6 69.7 83.1 91.9 60.2 ____________________ Sources: Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts (Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Motor Fuel, Auto Sales, Cigarettes) Baker-Hughes Incorporated (Active Oil & Gas Drilling Rigs) The Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University (Median Sale Price, Existing Single-family Home Sales) 58 Population Growth Forecast: 2010–2030 Laredo McAllen-Edinburg-Mission Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos Sherman-Denison Brownsville-Harlingen Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington El Paso San Antonio-New Braunfels Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown Texas Average College Station-Bryan Killeen-Temple-Ft. Hood Corpus Christi Amarillo Victoria U.S. Average Odessa Tyler Waco Midland Texarkana Longview San Angelo Lubbock Beaumont-Port Aurthur Wichita Falls Abilene 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50% 55% 60% 65% From 2010 to 2030, the Texas population is expected grow by ~32% vs. ~21% for the total U.S. population ____________________ Source: U.S. Census Bureau and Texas A&M Real Estate Center. 59 Texas Employment by Industry (June 2012– June 2013) 2.5% Education & Health Services Mining & Logging Other Services Transportation, Warehousing, & Utilities Construction Financial Activities Manufacturing Leisure & Hospitality Government Source: Texas A&M Real Estate Center Professional Business Services Financial Activities Other Services Education & Health Services Trade Mining & Logging Professional Business Services 4.0% Leisure & Hospitality Information 0.0% Construction 12.0% Information Government 8.0% Transportation, Warehousing, & Utilities Share of Employment in Texas Trade 20.0% Manufacturing Oil & Gas Included 16.0% Texas Employment Growth Oil & Gas Included 3.8% 8.0% 7.0% 6.0% 5.0% 4.0% 3.0% 2.0% 1.0% 0.0% -1.0% 60 Recent Texas Headlines Energy firms sign oil pipeline pact… Trafigura AG, operates a terminal in Corpus Christi, will soon be getting as much as 100,000 barrels of Eagle Ford crude oil per day through a pipeline from McMullen County – Caller Times 11/08/13 Quintana Corpus Christ Infrastructure, LLC developing mid-stream 50,000 barrel-per-day processing plant operating in 2016. – Caller Times 8/16/13 Occidental Petroleum Corp. plans to build propane export facility in Ingleside….. Project expected to approach $1 billion and bring dozens of jobs to San Patricio County – Corpus Christi Caller Times 7/25/13 Houston area employers created 118,200 new jobs between Jan 2012 and Jan 2013…..a 4.5% year-over-year increase – Houston Chronicle 3/11/13 Tenaris announced on February 15, 2013 that it will build its first US seamless pipe mill in Bay City, Matagorda County, Texas… estimates investment of $1.5 million (USD).– Tenaris Area to see $28bn bonanza…investing est $28bn in Eagle Ford in 2013, 27% of industry’s 2013 capital investment in lower 48 states will go to the Eagle Ford – San Antonio Express News 12/9/12 Houston is expected to add the most households of any U.S. metropolitan area over the next five years. – Houston Business Journal 11/27/12 Cheniere has applied for permits to build an LNG plant on 660 acres in San Patricio County…worth in excess of $10 billion – Corpus Christi Caller Times Pangea LNG (Daewoo and Statoil) is seeking federal approval for an LNG export facility….estimate a $5bn investment – Corpus Christi Caller Times 11/30/12 Texas coast wins largest single manufacturing investment by a Chinese company in the U.S….a skilled work force and strategic location helped a Texas coastal city win a $1 billion pipe manufacturing facility – Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts Best mid-sized cities for jobs….No. 2: Corpus Christi, TX – Forbes China takes big role in Texas plant …$2.5bn power plant and chemical plant in Odessa – WSJ 9/13/12 Home sales are strong in the Woodlands, where Exxon Mobil is constructing a new corporate campus where 10,000 people will work – Culture Map: Houston Exxon Mobil moves to expand chemical plant….the company joins other petrochemical producers, including Dow Chemical Co. and Chevron Phillips Chemical Co., that have announced natural gas-fueled expansion plans in the Houston area in recent months – Houston Chronicle 61 Partial List of Sources for Economic Data http://www.window.state.tx.us/ http://www.texasahead.org/economy/tracking/ http://www.dallasfed.org/ http://texaseconomicdevelopmentguide.com/ http://recenter.tamu.edu/ http://texascenter.tamiu.edu/ http://www.ccredc.com/ http://www.mcallenedc.org/ http://www.ldfonline.org/ http://www.midlandtxedc.com/ http://www.houston.org/ http://www.mywesttexas.com/business/ 62 Susser Holdings Corporation Reconciliation of Net Income to EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDAR Fiscal Year Ended December 31, December 30, December 28, January 3, January 2, January 1, December 30, 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2012 2012 Net income attributable to Susser Holdings Corporation $ Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest Depreciation, amortization and accretion Interest expense, net Income tax expense (3,746) $ 16,252 $ 16,477 $ 2,068 $ 786 $ 47,457 $ 61 42 48 39 3 14 22,780 25,201 48 29,469 16,152 (5,753) 40,842 39,256 10,396 44,382 38,103 1,805 43,998 64,039 4,994 47,320 40,726 26,347 46,725 Twelve Months Ended Sept 30, Sept 29, 2012 2013 $ 41,435 $ 18,994 4,572 299 18,014 51,434 41,019 33,645 50,812 41,415 29,625 57,943 55,091 19,547 EBITDA Non-cash stock based compensation Loss on disposal of assets Other miscellaneous expense $ 44,344 $ 803 (452) 56,162 $ 2,429 190 (435) 107,019 $ 86,397 $ 113,820 $ 161,864 $ 3,946 3,433 2,825 3,588 9 2,402 3,193 1,220 (278) 55 174 346 177,395 4,337 694 471 $ 163,586 $ 4,910 88 455 169,589 5,318 1,712 601 Adjusted EBITDA $ 45,286 $ 58,346 $ 110,696 $ 92,287 $ 120,012 $ 167,018 $ 182,897 $ 169,039 $ 177,220 $ 22,694 67,980 $ 25,822 84,168 $ 34,620 36,899 42,623 45,738 145,316 $ 129,186 $ 162,635 $ 212,756 $ 46,407 229,304 $ 46,225 215,264 $ 47,405 224,625 Rent Adjusted EBITDAR 63 Susser Holdings Corporation Reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDAR to Fuel Neutral Adjusted EBITDAR Fiscal Year Ended January 3, 2010 Adjusted EBITDAR, Actual Adjustments: CPG neutral adjustment - retail (1) CPG neutral adjustment - wholesale (1) G&A bonus & 401(k) match adjustment (3) $ Fuel-Neutral Adjusted EBITDAR $ 129,186 $ 26,476 7,192 1,077 163,931 $ January 2, 2011 162,635 $ 4,557 1,347 8,558 177,097 $ Twelve Months Ended January 1, 2012 December 30, 2012 212,756 $ 229,304 (23,784) (2,093) 9,927 (19,850) (3,816) 9,617 196,806 $ 215,255 Percent change from prior period (4) 7% 8% 11% 9% CPG adjustment - retail fuel (1) (2) CPG adjustment - wholesale fuel (1) 3.7¢ 1.5¢ 0.6¢ 0.3¢ -3.0¢ -0.4¢ -2.3¢ -0.6¢ (1) (2) (3) (4) September 30, September 29, 2012 2013 $ $ 215,264 $ 224,625 (8,781) (2,099) 9,087 (11,338) (7,268) 4,333 213,471 $ 210,352 -1% -1.0¢ -0.4¢ -1.2¢ -1.2¢ Normalizes retail CPG after credit cards at a 5 year rolling average of 14.5 cents and wholesale 3rd-party CPG at a 5-year rolling average of 5.6 cents. Adjusted to eliminate impact of MLP structure on retail margin. Excludes all G&A bonus and 401-K match, as these are partly based on results including actual fuel margins. Calendar year periods compared to prior calendar year. Twelve-month period ended September 29, 2013 is compared to the twelve months ended September 30, 2012. 64 Susser Petroleum Partners Reconciliation of Net Income to EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA and Distributable Cash Flow Net income Depreciation, amortization and accretion Interest expense, net Income tax expense EBITDA Non-cash stock based compensation (a) Loss on disposal of assets and impairment charge Other miscellaneous expense Adjusted EBITDA Cash interest expense State franchise tax expense (cash) Maintenance capital expenditures Distributable cash flow Three Months Ended September 30, September 30, 2012 2013 Nine Months Ended September 30, September 30, 2012 2013 Predecessor (in thousands) Predecessor (in thousands) $ $ 3,617 2,016 113 1,739 7,485 247 194 7,926 $ $ $ 9,597 2,432 921 145 13,095 546 112 13,753 825 24 211 12,693 $ $ 8,994 5,793 293 4,813 19,893 816 229 20,938 $ $ $ 27,504 6,090 2,370 298 36,262 1,351 206 37,819 2,084 165 538 35,032 65
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