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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
(Mark One)
| x | ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED December 31, 2007
OR
| ¨ | TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
FOR THE TRANSITION PERIOD FROM TO .
Commission File Number: 000-50910
STONEMOR PARTNERS L.P.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
| Delaware | 80-0103159 | |
| (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) |
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) | |
| 311 Veterans Highway, Suite B Levittown, Pennsylvania |
19056 | |
| (Address of principal executive offices) | (Zip Code) |
Registrants telephone number, including area code (215) 826-2800
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
| Title of each class |
Name of exchange on which registered | |
| Common Units |
The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC |
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes ¨ No x
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes ¨ No x
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes x No ¨
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrants knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. x
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of large accelerated filer, accelerated filer and smaller reporting company in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act (Check one):
Large accelerated filer ¨ Accelerated filer x Non-accelerated filer ¨ Smaller Reporting Company ¨
(do not check if a smaller reporting company)
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ¨ No x
The aggregate market value of the common units held by non-affiliates of the registrant was approximately $103.4 million as of June 29, 2007 based on $24.71 per unit, the closing price of the common units as reported on the NASDAQ on that date.1
The number of the registrants outstanding common units at March 14, 2008 was 8,595,850.
Documents incorporated by reference: None
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The aggregate market value of the common units set forth above equals the number of the registrants common units outstanding, reduced by the number of common units held by executive officers, directors and persons owning 10% or more of the registrants common units, multiplied by the last reported sale price for the registrants common units on June 29, 2007, the last business day of the registrants most recently completed second fiscal quarter. The information provided shall in no way be construed as an admission that any person whose holdings are excluded from this figure is an affiliate of the registrant or that any person whose holdings are included in this figure is not an affiliate of the registrant and any such admission is hereby disclaimed. The information provided herein is included solely for record keeping purposes of the Securities and Exchange Commission. |
FORM 10-K OF STONEMOR PARTNERS, L.P.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
| PART I | ||||
| Item 1. |
1 | |||
| Item 1A. |
8 | |||
| Item 1B. |
21 | |||
| Item 2. |
22 | |||
| Item 3. |
24 | |||
| Item 4. |
24 | |||
| PART II | ||||
| Item 5. |
25 | |||
| Item 6. |
31 | |||
| Item 7. |
Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations |
35 | ||
| Item 7A. |
59 | |||
| Item 8. |
61 | |||
| Item 9. |
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure |
92 | ||
| Item 9A. |
92 | |||
| Item 9B. |
95 | |||
| PART III | ||||
| Item 10. |
96 | |||
| Item 11. |
100 | |||
| Item 12. |
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters |
109 | ||
| Item 13. |
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence |
111 | ||
| Item 14. |
116 | |||
| PART IV | ||||
| Item 15. |
117 | |||
| Item 1. | Business |
We were formed as a Delaware limited partnership in April 2004 to own and operate the assets and businesses previously owned and operated by Cornerstone Family Services, Inc., or Cornerstone, which was converted into CFSI LLC, a limited liability company, prior to our initial public offering of common units representing limited partner interests on September 20, 2004. Cornerstone was founded in 1999 by members of our management team and a private equity investment firm, which we refer to as McCown De Leeuw, in order to acquire a group of 123 cemetery properties and 4 funeral homes.
We are the second largest owner and operator of cemeteries in the United States. As of December 31, 2007, we operated 223 cemeteries in 25 states and Puerto Rico, located primarily in the eastern United States. We own 209 of these cemeteries, and we operate the remaining 14 under long-term management agreements with the cemetery associations that own the cemeteries. The cemetery products and services that we sell are:
| Interment Rights |
Merchandise |
Services | ||
| burial lots lawn crypts mausoleum crypts cremation niches perpetual care rights |
burial vaults caskets grave markers and grave marker bases memorials |
installation of burial vaults installation of caskets installation of other cemetery merchandise |
We sell these products and services both at the time of death, which we refer to as at-need, and prior to the time of death, which we refer to as pre-need. Whenever possible, we sell burial lots with pre-installed vaults. Our sales of real property, including burial lots (with and without installed vaults), lawn and mausoleum crypts and cremation niches, generate qualifying income sufficient for us to be treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes. In 2007, we performed more than 29,300 burials and sold more than 20,425 interment rights (net of cancellations). Based on our sales of interment spaces in 2007, our cemeteries have a weighted average sales life of 202 years.
Our cemetery properties are located in Alabama, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, New Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, Iowa, Hawaii, South Carolina, Puerto Rico, Indiana, and California. One cemetery in Hawaii that we acquired in December 2007, pursuant to the Transition Agreement discussed below in Acquisition, is still awaiting regulatory approval and has not yet been conveyed to us. In 2007, our cemetery operations accounted for approximately 92.6% of our revenues.
We also own and operate 57 funeral homes in Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Florida, Kansas, Maryland, Missouri, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, South Carolina, Puerto Rico, and California. Twenty five of our 57 funeral homes are located on the grounds of cemeteries that we own. One funeral home in Florida that we acquired in December 2007, pursuant to the Transition Agreement discussed below in Acquisition, is still awaiting regulatory approval and has not yet been conveyed to us. In 2007, more than 3,200 funerals were performed at our funeral homes, and our funeral home revenues accounted for approximately 7.4% of our revenues.
Operations
Segment Reporting and Related Information. We historically had two operating segments: cemeteries and funeral homes. Since funeral homes accounted for less than 10% of each identifying criteria, funeral home operating results were aggregated within the cemetery classification for purposes of segment reporting and disclosed as one segment, death care services. In conjunction with its September 2006 acquisition of 21 cemeteries and 14 funeral homes from Service Corporation International and as part of its strategic planning, we continuously conduct marketing studies of our potential customers. Additionally, we expect to grow not only
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through cemetery, but also through funeral home, acquisitions in the future. For these reasons, we have decided to add to our segment information the details of our funeral homes and have disaggregated our cemeteries into three distinct classifications. The factors used to identify our reportable segments (classifications), designated as West, Southeast, and Northeast, have been identified by the nature of our customers served in each marketplace. As cremation is on the rise and we have with our recent acquisitions entered the states of Oregon, Washington, and Colorado, have established a Western Region where cremation rates are projected to be high (in Washington and Oregon, 65% of burials). Statistics indicate that customers who select cremation have certain attributes. The other two regions, Southeast and Northeast, have significantly lower cremation rates and customers with different attributes than the West. Cremation rates in Alabama and Kentucky, for instance, are only projected to be 12%, while cremation rates in the Northeast fall generally between the other two regions. We have different regional sales managers, maintenance superintendents, and administrative supervisors in each region. As such, we have determined that due to the nature of customer behavior, which is consistent in the geographic regions described above, we have chosen to organize our enterprise and to aggregate our cemeteries and funeral homes, which we have determined are individual segments, in this manner. See Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements included in Item 8 of this Form 10-K.
Cemetery Operations. Our cemetery operations include sales of cemetery interment rights, merchandise and services and the performance of cemetery maintenance and other services. An interment right entitles a customer to burial space in one of our cemeteries and the perpetual care of that burial space. Burial spaces, or lots, are parcels of property that hold interred human remains. Our cemeteries require a burial vault be placed in each burial lot. A burial vault is a rectangular container, usually made of concrete but also made of steel or plastic, which sits in the burial lot and in which the casket is placed. The top of the burial vault is buried approximately 18 to 24 inches below the surface of the ground, and the casket is placed inside the vault. Burial vaults prevent ground settling that otherwise occurs when a casket placed directly in the ground begins to decay creating uneven ground surface. Ground settling typically results in higher maintenance costs and increased potential liability for slip-and-fall accidents on the property. Lawn crypts are a series of closely spaced burial lots with preinstalled vaults and other improvements, such as landscaping, sprinkler systems and drainage. A mausoleum crypt is an above-ground structure that may be designed for a particular customer, which we refer to as a private mausoleum; or it may be a larger building that serves multiple customers, which we refer to as a community mausoleum. Cremation niches are spaces in which the ashes remaining after cremation, sometimes referred to as cremains, are stored. Cremation niches are often part of community mausoleums, although we sell a variety of cremation niches to accommodate our customers preferences.
Grave markers, monuments and memorials are above-ground products that serve as memorials by showing who is remembered, the dates of birth and death and other pertinent information. These markers, monuments and memorials include simple plates, such as those used in a community mausoleum or cremation niche, flush-to-the-ground granite or bronze markers, headstones or large stone obelisks.
One of the principal services we provide at our cemeteries is an opening and closing, which is the digging and refilling of burial spaces to install the vault and place the casket into the vault. With pre-need sales, there are usually two openings and closings. During the initial opening and closing, we install the burial vault in the burial space. We usually perform this service shortly after the customer signs a pre-need contract. Advance installation allows us to withdraw the related funds from our merchandise trusts, making the amount in excess of our cost to purchase and install the vault available to us for other uses, and eliminates future merchandise trusting requirements for the burial vault and its installation. During the final opening and closing, we remove the dirt above the vault, open the lid of the vault, place the casket into the vault, close the vault lid and replace the ground cover. With at-need sales, we typically perform the initial opening and closing at the time we perform the final opening and closing. Our other services include the installation of other cemetery merchandise and the perpetual care related to interment rights.
Managed Cemeteries. We provide management services to 14 cemeteries in New Jersey, Ohio and California under management agreements with the 10 nonprofit cemetery corporations that own the cemetery properties. These nonprofit cemetery corporations are organized as such either because state law requires
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cemetery properties to be owned by nonprofit entities, such as in New Jersey, or because they were originally established as nonprofit entities. We have voting rights, along with member owners of burial spaces, in the four New Jersey nonprofit cemetery corporations as a result of owning all of their outstanding certificates of indebtedness or interest. The remaining nonprofit cemetery corporations have self-sustaining governing structures. To obtain the benefit of professional management services, these 10 nonprofit cemetery corporations have entered into management agreements with us. The management agreements under which we operate these 14 cemeteries generally have terms ranging from 3 to 10 years and provide us with management fees that approximate what we would earn if we owned those cemeteries and held them in for-profit entities. Under some of the management agreements, we are entitled to termination fees if the agreements are terminated without our consent.
Funeral Home Operations. We own and operate 57 funeral homes, 25 of which are located on the grounds of cemetery properties that we own, in Alabama, California, Kansas, Maryland, Ohio, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and Washington. Since 1999, we have built two funeral homes and purchased 51. Our funeral homes offer a range of services to meet a familys funeral needs, including family consultation, the removal and preparation of remains, provision of caskets and related funeral merchandise, the use of funeral home facilities for visitation, worship and funeral services and transportation services. Funeral home operations primarily generate revenues from at-need sales, for which there is a smaller potential customer base than pre-need sales, and have low barriers to entry by competitors. By focusing primarily on cemeteries and deriving significant revenues from pre-need sales, we minimize our exposure to these types of challenges.
We purchase caskets from Thacker Caskets, Inc. under a supply agreement that expires on December 31, 2015. This agreement entitles us to specified discounts on the price of caskets but gives Thacker Caskets, Inc. the right of first refusal on all of our casket purchases. We do not have minimum purchase requirements under this supply agreement.
Cremation Products and Services. We operate nine crematories on nine of our cemeteries or funeral homes, but our primary cremation operations are sales of receptacles for cremains, such as urns, and the inurnment of cremains in niches or scattering gardens. While cremation products and services usually cost less than traditional burial products and services, they yield higher margins on a percentage basis and take up less space than burials. We sell cremation products and services on both a pre-need and at-need basis.
Seasonality. The death care business is relatively stable and predictable. Although we experience seasonal increases in deaths due to extreme weather conditions and winter flu, these increases have not historically had any significant impact on our results of operations. In addition, we perform fewer initial openings and closings in the winter when the ground is frozen.
Sales Contracts
Pre-need products and services are typically sold on an installment basis. At-need products and services are generally required to be paid for in full in cash by the customer at the time of sale. Please see Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of OperationsOverviewCemetery OperationsPre-need Sales and At-need Sales.
Trusts
Sales of cemetery products and services are subject to a variety of state regulations. In accordance with these regulations, we are required to establish and fund two types of trusts, merchandise trusts and perpetual care trusts, to ensure that we can meet our future obligations. Our funding obligations are generally equal to a percentage of sales proceeds of the products and services we sell. For a detailed discussion of these trusts, please read Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of OperationsOverviewCemetery OperationsTrusting.
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Sales Personnel, Training and Marketing
As of December 31, 2007, we employed approximately 537 commissioned salespeople and 142 sales support and telemarketing employees. We have seven regional sales managers covering our cemeteries, who report to our Senior Vice President of Sales. Individual salespersons are typically located at the cemeteries they serve and report directly to the cemetery manager. We have made a strong commitment to the ongoing education and training of our sales force and to salesperson retention in order to ensure that our customers receive the highest quality customer service. Our training program includes classroom training at our headquarters, field training, continuously updated training materials that utilize media, such as the Internet, for interactive training and participation in industry seminars. We place special emphasis on training property sales managers, who are key elements to a successful pre-need sales program.
We reward our salespeople with incentives for generating new customers. Sales force performance is evaluated by sales budgets, sales mix and closing ratios, which are equal to the number of contracts written divided by the number of presentations that are made. Substantially all of our sales force is compensated based solely on performance. Commissions are augmented with various bonus and incentive packages to ensure a high quality, motivated sales force. We pay commissions to our sales personnel based on a percentage of the price of the products and services, which varies from 6% to 22%, of the total contract price for pre-need sales and is generally equal to 5% of the total contract price for at-need sales. In addition, cemetery managers receive an override commission generally equal to 4% to 6% of the gross sales price of the contracts entered into by the salespeople assigned to the cemeteries they manage.
We generate sales leads through focused telemarketing, direct mail, television advertising, funeral follow-up and sales force cold calling, with the assistance of database mining and other marketing resources. We have created a marketing department to allow us to use more sophisticated marketing techniques to more effectively focus our telemarketing and direct sales efforts. Sales leads are referred to the sales force to schedule an appointment, most often at the customers home.
Acquisitions
On December 21, 2007 we entered into the Asset Purchase and Sale Agreement with Service Corporation International (NYSE: SCI) and certain other entities, pursuant to which we agreed to acquire or manage, as applicable, 45 cemeteries and 30 funeral homes, except for conveyances of one cemetery in Hawaii and one funeral home in Florida, the acquisitions of which are subject to state regulatory approval. Pending the conveyance of these two locations, StoneMor entered into a Transition Agreement with SCI (the Transition Agreement) pursuant to which SCI will continue to operate, for StoneMors benefit, any elements of the business for which regulatory approval to transfer ownership is has not been obtained. Under the Transition Agreement, the StooneMor is obligated to reimburse SCI for all costs incurred by SCI while operating these locations for the benefit of the Buyer. We paid $68.0 million in cash. In addition, we assumed the merchandise and service liabilities associated with certain pre-arranged contracts related to the properties.
The properties are located in Alabama (2 cemeteries and 2 funeral homes), Arkansas (2 funeral homes), California (7 cemeteries and 10 funeral homes), Florida (1 funeral home), Hawaii (1 cemetery), Iowa (1 cemetery), Illinois (5 cemeteries and 2 funeral homes), Indiana (5 cemeteries), Kentucky (1 cemetery), Missouri (2 cemeteries and 1 funeral home), North Carolina (3 cemeteries), Ohio (7 cemeteries and 1 funeral homes), Oregon (2 cemeteries and 3 funeral homes), South Carolina (2 cemeteries and 2 funeral homes), Tennessee (3 cemeteries and 4 funeral homes), Washington (2 cemeteries), West Virginia (1 funeral home), and Puerto Rico (2 cemeteries and 1 funeral home). In the aggregate, in 2006, the 45 cemeteries and 30 funeral homes performed approximately 8,300 interments and 3,700 calls, respectively. In 2006, these locations produced annual revenues of approximately $44.0 million.
We acquired two additional cemeteries during the third quarter of 2007 with an aggregate purchase price of approximately $2.4 million.
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Competition
Our cemeteries and funeral homes generally serve customers that live within a 10- to 15-mile radius of a propertys location. Within this localized area, we face competition from other cemeteries and funeral homes located in the area. Most of these cemeteries and funeral homes are independently owned and operated, and most of these owners and operators are smaller than we are and have fewer resources than we do. We generally face limited competition from the three publicly held death care companies that have U.S. operationsService Corporation International, Stewart Enterprises, Inc. and Carriage Services, Inc.as they do not directly operate cemeteries in the geographic areas where we operate.
Within a localized area of competition, we compete primarily for at-need sales because many of the independently owned, local competitors either do not have pre-need sales programs or have pre-need programs that are not as developed as ours. Most of these competitors do not have as many of the resources that are available to us to launch and grow a substantial pre-need sales program. The number of customers that cemeteries and funeral homes are able to attract is largely a function of reputation and heritage, although competitive pricing, professional service and attractive, well maintained and conveniently located facilities are also important factors. The sale of cemetery and funeral home products and services on a pre-need basis has increasingly been used by many companies as an important marketing tool. Due to the importance of reputation and heritage, increases in customer base are usually gained over a long period of time.
Competitors within a localized area have an advantage over us if a potential customers family members are already buried in the competitors cemetery. If any of the three publicly held death care companies operated, or in the future were to operate, cemeteries within close proximity of our cemeteries, they may have a competitive advantage over us because they have greater financial resources available to them because of their size and access to the capital markets.
We believe that we currently face limited competition for cemetery acquisitions. The three publicly held death care companies identified above have historically been the industrys primary consolidators but have largely curtailed cemetery acquisition activity since 1999. Furthermore, these companies continue to generate a majority of their revenues from funeral home operations. Based on the relative levels of cemetery operations and funeral home operations of the three publicly traded death care companies, which are disclosed in their SEC filings, we are the only public death care company that focuses primarily on cemetery operations.
Robert B. Hellman Jr., who serves as one of our directors, as the Chief Executive Officer and a Managing Director of McCown De Leeuw & Co., LLC and in various other positions with McCown De Leeuw, has applied for a U.S. patent on a technology entitled, Apparatus and Method for Operating a Death Care Business as a Master Limited Partnership. The computer-implemented method defines death care master limited partnership assets based upon qualifying death care business income sources and non-qualifying death care business income sources. The pending patent application was filed on November 27, 2002, and claims priority to an earlier patent application filed November 30, 2001. The United States Patent and Trademark Office has not issued a communication regarding the substantive merits of the application. Mr. Hellman assigned the patent application to McCown De Leeuw & Co. IV, L.P. in February 2003 and recorded the assignment in the United States Patent and Trademark Office in March 2003. McCown De Leeuw & Co. IV, L.P. assigned a 50% ownership interest in the patent application and, if issued, the patent to the partnership. We cannot assure you that the patent will be issued or, if it is issued and subsequently challenged, that it will be determined to be valid.
If a patent is issued relating to this patent application, no other entity will be able to practice the claimed invention without the consent of McCown De Leeuw & Co. IV, L.P. and us. The patent will not prevent corporations, such as the three publicly held death care companies, or privately held partnerships that do not operate as master limited partnerships from competing with us in the death care business. As a result, the issuance of the patent is not expected to have a material impact on our business.
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Regulation
General. Our operations are subject to regulation, supervision and licensing under federal, state and local laws which impacts the goods and services that we may sell and the manner in which we may furnish goods and services.
Cooling-Off Legislation. Each of the states where our current cemetery properties are located has cooling-off legislation with respect to pre-need sales of cemetery and funeral home products and services. This legislation requires us to refund proceeds from pre-need sales contracts if canceled by the customer for any reason within three to thirty days, from the date of the contract, depending on the state.
Trusting. Sales of cemetery interment rights and pre-need sales of cemetery and funeral home merchandise and services are subject to trusting requirements imposed by state laws in all of the states where we operate. See Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of OperationsOverviewCemetery OperationsTrusting.
Truth in Lending Act and Regulation Z. Our pre-need installment contracts are subject to the federal Truth-in-Lending Act, or TILA, and the regulations thereunder, which are referred to as Regulation Z. TILA and Regulation Z promote the informed use of consumer credit by requiring us to disclose, among other things, the annual percentage rate, finance charges and amount financed when extending credit to customers.
Do Not Call Implementation Act. We are subject to the requirements of two federal statutes governing telemarketing practices, the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, or TCPA, and the Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act, or TCFAPA. These statutes impose significant penalties on those who fail to comply with their mandates. The Federal Communications Commission, or FCC, is the federal agency with authority to enforce the TCPA, and the Federal Trade Commission, or FTC, has jurisdiction under the TCFAPA. The FTC has established and implemented a national no-call registry under the TCFAPA. The legislation also establishes a private right of action for consumers against telemarketing entities under certain circumstances. The FCC has adopted regulations that mirror the no-call registry legislation. Primarily as a result of implementation of the do not call legislation, the percentage of our pre-need sales generated from telemarketing leads has decreased from 24% in 1999 to 9.5% in 2007. We are also subject to similar telemarketing consumer protection laws in the states of Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia and Puerto Rico. These states statutes permit consumers to prevent unwanted telephone solicitations.
Occupational Safety and Health Act and Environmentai Law Requirements. We are subject to the requirements of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Act, or OSHA, and comparable state statutes. The OSHA hazard communication standard, the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act EPCRA and similar state statutes require us to report information about hazardous materials used or produced in our operations to state, federal and local authorities. We may also be subject to Tier 1 or Tier 2 Emergency and Hazardous Chemical Inventory reporting requirements under EPCRA depending on the amounts of hazardous materials maintained on-site. We are also subject to the federal Americans with Disabilities Act and similar laws which, among other things, may require that we modify our facilities to comply with minimum accessibility requirements for disabled persons.
Federal Trade Commission. Our funeral home operations are comprehensively regulated by the Federal Trade Commission under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act and a trade regulation rule for the funeral industry promulgated thereunder referred to as the Funeral Rule. The Funeral Rule requires funeral service providers to disclose the prices for their goods and services as soon as the subject of price arises in a discussion with a potential customer (this entails presenting an itemized price list, referred to as the General Price List, if the consultation is in person, and readily answering all price-related questions posed over the telephone),
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and to offer their goods and services on an unbundled basis. Through these regulations, the Federal Trade Commission sought to give consumers the ability to compare prices among funeral service providers and to avoid buying packages containing goods or services that they did not want. The unbundling of goods from services has also opened the way for third-party, discount casket sellers to enter the market, although they currently do not possess substantial market share.
Future Enactments and Regulation. Federal and state legislatures and regulatory agencies frequently propose new laws, rules and regulations and new interpretations of existing laws, rules and regulations which, if enacted or adopted, could have a material adverse effect on our operations and on the death care industry in general. A significant portion of our operations is located in California, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina and West Virginia and any material adverse change in the regulatory requirements of those states applicable to our operations could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations. We cannot predict the outcome of any proposed legislation or regulations or the effect that any such legislation or regulations, if enacted or adopted, might have on us.
Environmental Regulations and Liabilities
Our operations are subject to federal, state and local regulations in three principal areas: (1) crematories for emissions to air that may trigger requirements under the Clean Air Act, (2) funeral homes for the handling of hazardous materials and medical wastes and (3) cemeteries and funeral homes for the management of solid waste, underground and above-ground storage tanks and discharges to septic systems.
Clean Air Act. The Federal Clean Air Act and similar state and local laws, which regulate emissions into the air, can affect crematory operations through permitting and emissions control requirements. Our cremation operations may be subject to Clean Air Act regulations under federal and state law and may be subject to enforcement actions if these operations do not conform to the requirements of these laws.
Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act. As noted above, federal, state and local regulations apply to the use of hazardous materials at our funeral homes. Depending on the types and quantities of materials we handle at any particular location, we may be required to maintain and submit to authorities inventories of these materials present at that location and reports in compliance with the EPCRA or similar state statutes.
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act. The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, or CERCLA and similar state laws affect our cemetery and funeral home operations by, among other things, imposing remediation obligations for threatened or actual releases of hazardous substances that may endanger public health or welfare or the environment. Under CERCLA and similar state laws, joint and several liability may be imposed on waste generators, site owners and operators, and others regardless of fault or the legality of the original disposal activity. Our operations include the use of some materials that may meet the definition of hazardous substances under CERCLA and thus may give rise to liability if released to the environment through a spill or discharge. Should we acquire new properties with pre-existing conditions triggering CERCLA or similar state liability, we may become liable for responding to those conditions under CERCLA or similar state laws. We may become involved in proceedings, litigation or investigations at one or more sites where releases of hazardous substances have occurred, and we cannot assure you that the associated costs and potential liabilities would not be material.
Underground and Aboveground Storage Tank Laws and Solid Waste Laws. Federal and state laws regulate the installation, removal, operations and closure of underground storage tanks, or USTs and above-ground storage tanks ASTs, which are located at some of our facilities as well as the management of solid waste. Most of these USTs and ASTs contain petroleum for heating our buildings or are used for vehicle maintenance, or general operations. Depending upon the age and integrity of the USTs and ASTs, they may require upgrades, removal and/or closure, and remediation may be required if there has been a discharge or release of petroleum into the
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environment. All of the aforementioned activities may require us to incur costs to ensure continued compliance with environmental requirements. Should we acquire properties with existing USTs and ASTs that are not in compliance with environmental requirements, we may become liable for responding to releases to the environment or for costs associated with upgrades, removal and/or closure costs, and we can not assure you that the costs or liabilities will not be material in that event. Solid wastes have been disposed of at some of our cemeteries, both lawfully and unlawfully. Prior to acquiring a cemetery, an environmental investigation is usually conducted to determine, among other conditions, if a solid waste disposal area or landfill exists on the parcel which requires removal, cleaning or management. Depending upon the existence of any such solid waste disposal areas, we may be required by the applicable regulatory authority to remove the waste or to conduct remediation and we cannot assure you that the costs or liabilities will not be material in that event.
Employees
As of December 31, 2007 our general partner and its affiliates employed approximately 2,111 full-time and approximately 58 part-time employees. A total of 9 full time employees at one of our cemeteries located in New Jersey are represented by a union and are subject to collective bargaining agreements that expire in December 2009 and June 2011. Thirty eight employees at 11 of our cemeteries located in Pennsylvania are represented by four different unions and are subject to collective bargaining agreements that expire between April 2008 and June 2010. Seven employees at three of our cemeteries located in Illinois are represented by three different unions and are subject to collective bargaining agreements that expire in November 2008. An additional 15 employees at one of our locations in California are represented by one union and are subject to a collective bargaining agreement that expires in January 2010. We believe that our relationship with our employees is good.
Available Information
We maintain an internet website with the address of http://www.stonemor.com. The information on this website is not, and should not be considered part, of this annual report on Form 10-K and is not incorporated by reference into this document. This website address is only intended to be an inactive textual reference. Copies of our reports filed with, or furnished to, the SEC on Forms 10-K, 10-Q, and 8-K and any amendments to such reports are available for viewing and copying at such internet website, free of charge, as soon as reasonably practicable after filing such material with, or furnishing it to, the SEC.
| Item 1A. | Risk Factors |
Risk Factors Related to Our Business
Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations include, but are not limited to, the risks set forth below. The risks described below should not be considered comprehensive and all-inclusive. Additional risks that we do not yet know of or that we currently think are immaterial may also impair our business operations, financial condition and results of operations. If any events occur that give rise to the following risks, our business, financial condition or results of operations could be materially and adversely impacted. These risk factors should be read in conjunction with other information set forth in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, including our condensed consolidated financial statements and the related notes. Many such factors are beyond our ability to control or predict. Investors are cautioned not to put undue reliance on forward-looking statements.
We may not have sufficient cash from operations to pay the minimum quarterly distribution after we have paid our expenses, including the expenses of our general partner, funded merchandise and perpetual care trusts and established necessary cash reserves.
The amount of cash we can distribute on our units principally depends upon the amount of cash we generate from operations, which fluctuates from quarter to quarter based on, among other things:
| | the volume of our sales; |
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| | the prices at which we sell our products and services; and |
| | the level of our operating and general administrative costs. |
In addition, the actual amount of cash we will have available for distribution will depend on other factors, such as working capital borrowings, capital expenditures and funding requirements for trusts and our ability to withdraw amounts from trusts.
If we do not generate sufficient cash to pay the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units or the subordinated units, the market price of the common units may decline materially. We expect that we will need working capital borrowings of approximately $11.7 million during the twelve-month period ending December 31, 2008 in order to have sufficient operating surplus to pay the full minimum quarterly distributions on all of our common units and subordinated units for that period, although the actual amount of working capital borrowings could be materially more or less. These working capital borrowings enable us to finance the build up in our accounts receivables and to construct mausoleums and purchase products for our pre-need sales in advance of the time of need which, in turn, allows us to generate available cash for operating surplus over time by accessing the funds held in trust for the products purchased.
Our indebtedness limits cash flow available for our operations and for distribution to our partners.
As of December 31, 2007, we had $146.2 million in debt. Leverage makes us more vulnerable to economic downturns. Because we are obligated to dedicate a portion of our cash flow to service our debt obligations, our cash flow available for operations and for distribution to our partners will be reduced. The amount of indebtedness we have could limit our flexibility in planning for, or reacting to, changes in the markets in which we compete, limit our ability to obtain additional financing, if necessary, for working capital expenditures, acquisitions or other purposes, and require us to dedicate more cash flow to service our debt than we desire. Our ability to satisfy our indebtedness as required by the terms of our debt will be dependent on, among other things, the successful execution of our long-term strategic plan. Subject to limitations in our credit facility and under our senior secured notes, we may incur additional debt in the future, for acquisitions or otherwise, and servicing this debt could further limit our cash flow.
Restrictions in our credit facility may prevent us from declaring dividends or making any distributions and may limit our ability to capitalize on acquisition and other business opportunities.
The operating and financial restrictions and covenants in our credit facility and any future financing agreements could restrict our ability to finance future operations or capital needs or to expand or pursue our business activities. For example, our credit facility contains covenants that restrict or limit our ability to:
| | enter into a new line of business; |
| | enter into any agreement of merger or acquisition; |
| | sell, transfer, assign or convey assets; |
| | grant certain liens; |
| | incur or guarantee additional indebtedness; |
| | make certain loans, advances and investments; |
| | declare and pay dividends and distributions; |
| | enter into transactions with affiliates; and |
| | make voluntary payments or modifications of indebtedness |
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Furthermore, our credit facility contains covenants requiring us to maintain certain financial ratios and tests. Our ability to comply with the covenants and restrictions contained in our credit facility may be affected by events beyond our control, including prevailing economic, financial and industry conditions. If market or other economic conditions deteriorate, our ability to comply with these covenants may be impaired. If we violate any of the restrictions, covenants, ratios or tests in our credit facility, the lenders will be able to accelerate the maturity of all borrowings under the credit facility and demand repayment of amounts outstanding, our lenders commitment to make further loans to us may terminate, and we will be prohibited from declaring dividends or making any distributions. We might not have, or be able to obtain, sufficient funds to make these accelerated payments. Any subsequent replacement of our credit facility or any new indebtedness could have similar or greater restrictions.
Adverse conditions in the financial markets may reduce the principal and earnings of the investments held in merchandise and perpetual care trusts and adversely affect our revenues and cash flow.
A substantial portion of our revenues is generated from investment returns that we realize from merchandise and perpetual care trusts. Earnings and investment gains and losses on investments by merchandise and perpetual care trusts are affected by financial market conditions that are not within our control. Because a significant portion of merchandise and perpetual care trust principal is invested in fixed-income securities, investments held in these trusts are particularly susceptible to changes in interest rates. Merchandise trust principal invested in equity securities is also sensitive to the performance of the stock market. Earnings are also affected by the mix of fixed-income and equity securities that our investment managers choose to maintain in the trusts and by the fact that our investment managers may not choose the optimal mix for any particular market condition.
Declines in earnings from merchandise and perpetual care trusts could cause declines in current and future revenues and cash flow. In addition, any significant or sustained investment losses could result in merchandise trusts having insufficient funds to cover our cost of delivering products and services, or in perpetual care trusts offsetting less of our cemetery maintenance costs. In either case, we would be required to use our operating cash to deliver those products and perform those services, which could decrease our cash available for distribution. These events could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and results of operations.
Pre-need sales typically generate low or negative cash flow in the periods immediately following sales which could adversely affect our ability to service our debt and make distributions to our partners.
When we sell cemetery merchandise and services on a pre-need basis, we pay commissions on the sale to our salespeople and are required by state law to deposit a portion of the sales proceeds into a merchandise trust. In addition, most of our customers finance their pre-need purchases under installment contracts over a number of years. Depending on the trusting requirements of the states in which we operate, the applicable sales commission rates and the amount of the down payment, our cash flow from sales to customers through installment contracts is typically negative until we have paid the sale commission due on the sale or until we purchase the products or perform the services and are permitted to withdraw funds we have deposited in the merchandise trust. To the extent we increase pre-need activities, state trusting requirements are increased or we delay the purchase of the products or performance of the services we sell on a pre-need basis, our cash flow immediately following pre-need sales may be further reduced, and our ability to service our debt and make distributions to our partners could be adversely affected.
Because fixed costs are inherent in our business, a decrease in our revenues can have a disproportionate effect on our cash flow and profits.
Our business requires us to incur many of the costs of operating and maintaining facilities, land and equipment regardless of the level of sales in any given period. For example, we must pay salaries, utilities, property taxes and maintenance costs on our cemetery properties and funeral homes regardless of the number of interments or funeral services we perform. Because we cannot decrease these costs significantly or rapidly when
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we experience declines in sales, declines in sales can cause our margins, profits and cash flow to decline at a greater rate than the decline in our revenues.
Our failure to attract and retain qualified sales personnel and management could have an adverse effect on our business and financial condition.
Our ability to attract and retain a qualified sales force and other personnel is an important factor in achieving future success. Buying cemetery and funeral home products and services, especially at-need products and services, is very emotional for most customers, so our sales force must be particularly sensitive to our customers needs. We cannot assure you that we will be successful in our efforts to attract and retain a skilled sales force. If we are unable to maintain a qualified and productive sales force, our revenues may decline, and our cash available for distribution may decrease.
We are also dependent upon the continued services of our key officers. The loss of any of our key officers could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. We may not be able to locate or employ on acceptable terms qualified replacements for senior management or key employees if their services were no longer available. We do not maintain key employee insurance on any of our executive officers.
We may not be able to identify, complete, fund or successfully integrate additional cemetery acquisitions which could have an adverse affect on our results of operations.
A primary component of our business strategy is to grow through acquisitions of cemeteries and, to a lesser extent, funeral homes. We cannot assure you that we will be able to identify and acquire cemeteries on terms favorable to us or at all. We may face competition from other death care companies in making acquisitions. Our ability to make acquisitions in the future may be limited by our inability to secure adequate financing, restrictions under our existing or future debt agreements, competition from third parties or a lack of suitable properties. For example, we are not permitted to make acquisitions for more than $2.5 million, or any series of acquisitions aggregating more than $20.0 million in any consecutive 12-month period, without the requisite consent of the lenders under our credit facility. Also, when we acquire cemeteries that do not have a robust pre-need sales program, the operation of the cemetery and implementation of a pre-need sales program after acquisition may require significant amounts of working capital. This may make it more difficult for us to make acquisitions.
We may be unable to successfully integrate our acquisition of certain assets from SCI Funeral Services, Inc. or our other acquisitions with our operations or realize all of the anticipated benefits of these acquisitions.
Integration of the Service Corporation Internationals businesses and operations that we acquired with our existing business and operations is a complex, time-consuming and costly process, particularly given that the acquisition has significantly increased our size. Failure to successfully integrate the SCI Funeral Services, Inc. businesses and operations with our existing business and operations in a timely manner may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows. Similarly, our ongoing acquisition program exposes us to integration risks as well. The difficulties of combining the acquired operations include, among other things:
| | operating a significantly larger combined organization and integrating additional assets to our existing operations; |
| | coordinating geographically disparate organizations, systems and facilities; |
| | integrating personnel from diverse business backgrounds and organizational cultures; |
| | consolidating partnership, technological and administrative functions; |
| | integrating internal controls, compliance under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and other governance matters; |
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| | the diversion of managements attention from other business concerns; |
| | customer or key employee loss from the acquired businesses; and |
| | potential environmental and regulatory liabilities and title problems. |
In addition, we may not realize all of the anticipated benefits from our acquisition of certain assets from SCI Funeral Services, Inc., such as cost savings and revenue enhancements, for various reasons, including difficulties integrating operations and personnel and higher costs.
If the trend toward cremation in the United States continues, our revenues may decline which could have an adverse effect on our business and financial condition and could impact our ability to make cash distributions.
We and other death care companies that focus on traditional methods of interment face competition from the increasing number of cremations in the United States. Industry studies indicate that the percentage of cremations has steadily increased and that cremations will represent approximately 39% of the United States death care market by the year 2010, compared to approximately 33.5% in 2007. Because the products and services associated with a cremation, such as niches and urns, produce lower revenues than the products and services associated with a traditional interment, a continuing trend toward cremations may reduce our revenues and, therefore, our cash available for distribution.
Regulatory and Legal Risks
Our operations are subject to regulation, supervision and licensing under numerous federal, state and local laws, ordinances and regulations, including extensive regulations concerning trusts, pre-need sales, cemetery ownership, marketing practices, crematories, environmental matters and various other aspects of our business.
If state laws or interpretations of existing state laws change or if new laws are enacted, we may be required to increase trust deposits or to alter the timing of withdrawals from trusts, which may have a negative impact on our revenues and cash flow.
We are required by state laws to deposit specified percentages of the proceeds from our pre-need and at-need sales of interment rights into perpetual care trusts and proceeds from our pre-need sales of cemetery products and services into merchandise trusts. These laws also determine when we are allowed to withdraw funds from those trusts. If those laws or the interpretations of those laws change or if new laws are enacted, we may be required to deposit more of the sales proceeds we receive from our sales into the trusts or to defer withdrawals from the trusts, thereby decreasing our cash flow until we are permitted to withdraw the deposited amounts. This could also reduce our cash available for distribution.
If state laws or their interpretations change, or new laws are enacted relating to the ownership of cemeteries and funeral homes, our business, financial condition and results of operations could be adversely affected.
Some states require cemeteries to be organized in the nonprofit form but permit those nonprofit entities to contract with for-profit companies for management services. If state laws change or new laws are enacted that prohibit us from managing cemeteries in those states, then our business, financial condition and results of operations could be adversely affected.
We are subject to legal restrictions on our marketing practices that could reduce the volume of our sales which could have an adverse effect on our business, operations and financial condition.
The enactment or amendment of legislation or regulations relating to marketing activities may make it more difficult for us to sell our products and services. For example, the federal do not call legislation has adversely affected our ability to market our products and services using telephone solicitation by limiting who we may call
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and increasing our costs of compliance. As a result, we rely heavily on direct mail marketing and telephone follow-up with existing contacts. Additional laws or regulations limiting our ability to market through direct mail, over the telephone, through internet and e-mail advertising or door-to-door may make it difficult to identify potential customers, which could increase our costs of marketing. Both increases in marketing costs and restrictions on our ability to market effectively could reduce our revenues and could have an adverse effect on our business, operations and financial condition, as well as our ability to make cash distributions to you.
We are subject to environmental and health and safety regulations that may adversely affect our operating results.
Our cemetery and funeral home operations are subject to numerous federal, state and local environmental and health and safety regulations. We may become subject to liability for the removal of hazardous substances and solid waste under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) and similar state laws. Under CERCLA and similar state laws, joint and several liability may be imposed on various parties, regardless of fault or the legality of the original disposal activity. Our funeral home, cemetery and crematory operations include the use of some materials that may meet the definition of hazardous substances under CERCLA and thus may give rise to liability if released to the environment through a spill or discharge. We cannot assure you that we will not face liability under CERCLA for any conditions at our properties, and we cannot assure you that these liabilities will not be material. Our cemetery and funeral home operations are subject to regulation of underground and above ground storage tanks and laws managing the disposal of solid waste. If new requirements under local, state or federal laws were to be adopted, and were more stringent than existing requirements, new permits or capital expenditures may be required.
Our funeral home operations are generally subject to federal and state regulations regarding the disposal of medical waste, and are also subject to regulation by federal, state or local authorities under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA). We are required to maintain, and report, if applicable thresholds are met, a list of any hazardous materials we use under EPCRA to state, federal, and local agencies.
Our crematory operations are subject to regulation under the federal Clean Air Act and any analogous state laws. If new regulations applicable to our crematory operations were to be adopted, they could require permits or capital expenditures that would increase our costs of operation and compliance.
In 2006, a material weakness was identified in our internal controls over financial reporting.
A material weakness or combination of significant deficiencies in our system of internal controls over financial reporting could result in our consolidated financial statements not being prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
In 2006, we restated previously issued financial statements and material audit adjustments necessary to present the 2005 and third quarter 2006 financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The restatement related to our failure to recognize revenue at the time pre-need burial vaults were installed. Specifically, revenue should be recognized once vaults are installed, and management did not have controls in place to ensure that such revenue was recognized once the vault had been installed.
Because of this material weakness, we concluded that we did not maintain effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2006 based on the criteria in Internal ControlIntegrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.
To remediate the material weakness, we made changes to our automated revenue recognition systems which capture revenue recognition events that were previously excluded. Management believes that such procedures have remediated the material weaknesses associated with the restatements.
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Risks Inherent in an Investment in Us
Our general partner and its affiliates have conflicts of interest and limited fiduciary duties, which may permit them to favor their own interests to your detriment.
As of December 31, 2007, CFSI LLC owned an aggregate 26.7% limited partner interest in us and owned all of the Class A units of our general partner. Conflicts of interest may arise between CFSI LLC and its affiliates, including our general partner, on the one hand, and us and our unitholders, on the other hand. As a result of these conflicts, our general partner may favor its own interests and the interests of its affiliates over the interests of the unitholders. These conflicts include, among others, the following situations:
| | The board of directors of our general partner is elected by the owners of our general partner. Although our general partner has a fiduciary duty to manage us in good faith, the directors of our general partner also have a fiduciary duty to manage our general partner in a manner beneficial to the owners of our general partner. By purchasing common units, unitholders will be deemed to have consented to some actions and conflicts of interest that might otherwise constitute a breach of fiduciary or other duties under applicable law. |
| | Our partnership agreement limits the liability of our general partner, reduces its fiduciary duties and restricts the remedies available to unitholders for actions that might, without the limitations, constitute breaches of fiduciary duty. |
| | Our general partner determines the amount and timing of asset purchases and sales, capital expenditures, borrowings, issuances of additional limited partner interests and reserves, each of which can affect the amount of cash that is distributed to unitholders. |
| | Our partnership agreement does not restrict our general partner from causing us to pay it or its affiliates for any services rendered to us or entering into additional contractual arrangements with any of these entities on our behalf. |
| | Our general partner controls the enforcement of obligations owed to us by our general partner and its affiliates. |
| | In some instances, our general partner may cause us to borrow funds or sell assets outside of the ordinary course of business in order to permit the payment of distributions, even if the purpose or effect of the borrowing is to make a distribution on the subordinated units, to make incentive distributions or to hasten the expiration of the subordination period. |
Holders of our common units have limited voting rights and are not entitled to elect our general partner or its directors, which could reduce the price at which the common units will trade.
Unitholders have only limited voting rights on matters affecting our business and, therefore, limited ability to influence managements decisions regarding our business. Unitholders did not select our general partner or elect the board of directors of our general partner and will have no right to select our general partner or elect its board of directors in the future. We are not required to have, and do not have, a majority of independent directors on our board. The board of directors of our general partner, including the independent directors, are chosen entirely by the owners of our general partner and not our unitholders. As a result of these limitations, the price at which the common units will trade could be diminished because of the absence or reduction of a takeover premium in the trading price.
Our partnership agreement restricts the voting rights of unitholders owning 20% or more of our common units.
Unitholders voting rights are further restricted by the partnership agreement provision providing that any units held by a person that owns 20% or more of any class of units then outstanding, other than the general partner, its affiliates, their transferees and persons who acquired such units with the prior approval of the board of
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directors of our general partner, cannot be voted on any matter. In addition, the partnership agreement contains provisions limiting the ability of unitholders to call meetings or to acquire information about our operations, as well as other provisions limiting the unitholders ability to influence the manner or direction of management.
Our general partner can transfer its ownership interest in us without unitholder consent under certain circumstances, and the control of our general partner may be transferred to a third party without unitholder consent.
Our general partner may transfer its general partner interest to a third party in a merger or in a sale of all or substantially all of its assets without the consent of the unitholders. Furthermore, there is no restriction in the partnership agreement on the ability of the owners of our general partner to transfer their ownership interest in the general partner to a third party. The new owner of our general partner would then be in a position to replace the board of directors and officers of the general partner with its own choices and thereby influence the decisions taken by the board of directors and officers.
We may issue additional common units without your approval, which would dilute your existing ownership interests.
During the subordination period, our general partner may cause us to issue up to 2,119,891 additional common units without your approval. Our general partner may also cause us to issue an unlimited number of additional common units or other equity securities of equal rank with the common units, without your approval, in numerous circumstances during the subordination period, including, but not limited to, in connection with an acquisition or an expansion capital improvement that increases cash flow from operations per unit on an estimated pro forma basis; if the proceeds of the issuance are used to repay indebtedness, the cost of which to service is greater than the distribution obligations associated with the units issued in connection with its retirement; or the redemption of common units or other equity interests of equal rank with the common units from the net proceeds of an issuance of common units or parity units, but only if the redemption price equals the net proceeds per unit, before expenses, to us.
After the end of the subordination period, we may issue an unlimited number of limited partner interests of any type without the approval of the unitholders. You will not have the right to approve our issuance at any time of equity securities ranking junior to the common units.
The issuance of additional common units or other equity securities of equal or senior rank will have the following effects:
| | your proportionate ownership interest in us will decrease; |
| | the amount of cash available for distribution on each unit may decrease; |
| | because a lower percentage of total outstanding units will be subordinated units, the risk that a shortfall in the payment of the minimum quarterly distribution will be borne by the common unitholders will increase; |
| | the relative voting strength of each previously outstanding unit may be diminished; and |
| | the market price of the common units may decline. |
| | the ratio of taxable income to distributions may increase; |
Cost reimbursements due our general partner may be substantial and will reduce the cash available for distribution to you.
Prior to making any distribution on the common units, we will reimburse our general partner and its affiliates, including CFSI LLC and the officers and directors of our general partner, for all expenses they incur on
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our behalf. The reimbursement of expenses could adversely affect our ability to pay cash distributions to you. Our general partner determines the amount of these expenses. In addition, our general partner and its affiliates may provide us with other services for which we will be charged fees as determined by our general partner.
In establishing cash reserves, our general partner may reduce the amount of available cash for distribution to you.
The partnership agreement requires our general partner to deduct from operating surplus cash reserves that it establishes to fund our future operating expenditures. The partnership agreement also permits the general partner to reduce available cash by establishing cash reserves for the proper conduct of our business, to comply with applicable law or agreements to which we are a party or to provide funds for future distributions to partners. These reserves will affect the amount of cash available for distribution to you.
Our general partner has a limited call right that may require you to sell your common units at an undesirable time or price.
If, at any time, our general partner and its affiliates own more than 80% of the common units, our general partner will have the right, but not the obligation, which it may assign to any of its affiliates or to us, to acquire all, but not less than all, of the remaining common units held by unaffiliated persons at a price not less than their then-current market price. As a result, you may be required to sell your common units at an undesirable time or price and may not receive any return on your investment. You may also incur a tax liability upon the sale of your common units.
You may be required to repay distributions that you have received from us.
Under certain circumstances, unitholders may have to repay amounts wrongfully returned or distributed to them. Under Section 17-607 of the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act, we may not make a distribution to you if the distribution would cause our liabilities to exceed the fair value of our assets. Delaware law provides that for a period of three years from the date of the impermissible distribution, limited partners who received the distribution and who knew at the time of the distribution that it violated Delaware law will be liable to the limited partnership for the distribution amount. Assignees who become substituted limited partners are liable for the obligations of the assignor to make contributions to the partnership. However, assignees are not liable for obligations unknown to the assignee at the time the assignee became a limited partner if the liabilities could not be determined from the partnership agreement. Liabilities to partners on account of their partnership interest and liabilities that are non-recourse to the partnership are not counted for purposes of determining whether a distribution is permitted.
Tax Risks to Common Unitholders
In addition to reading the following risk factors, you should read Material Tax Considerations included in our Registration Statement on Form S-3 (Registration No. 333-144453) for a further discussion of the expected material federal income tax consequences of owning and disposing of common units.
We may have tax liabilities related to periods before our initial public offering and less net operating losses available to reduce taxable income and therefore tax liabilities for future taxable periods.
Because our business was conducted by an affiliated group of corporations during periods prior to the completion of our initial public offering, we may have federal and state income tax liabilities that relate to our prior operations and to transactions related to our formation. In addition, the amount of cash distributions we receive from our corporate subsidiaries over the next several years will depend in part upon the amount of net operating losses available to those subsidiaries to reduce the amount of income subject to federal income tax they would otherwise pay. These net operating losses will begin to expire in 2019 and are available to reduce future
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taxable income that would otherwise be subject to federal income taxes. The amount of net operating losses available to reduce the income tax liability of our corporate subsidiaries in future taxable years could be reduced as a result of the prior operations and the transactions occurring immediately before our initial public offering.
CFSI LLC has agreed to indemnify us against additional income tax liabilities, if any, that arise from our operations prior to our initial public offering, and income tax liabilities, if any, that arise from the consummation of the transactions related to our formation in excess of $600,000 if those liabilities are asserted by the IRS or any state taxing authority prior to the expiration of the applicable statutes of limitations for income taxes of Cornerstone, for its taxable period ending with the conversion of Cornerstone into CFSI LLC (generally, three years from the filing of the tax return for such period). Also, CFSI LLC has agreed to indemnify us against any liabilities we may be subject to in the future resulting from a reduction in our net operating losses as a result of such prior operations or as a result of such formation transactions in excess of that which is believed to result from them at the time of our initial public offering. We cannot assure you that we will not ultimately be responsible for any or all of these liabilities, if they occur. Any increase in the tax liabilities of our corporate subsidiaries because of a reduction in net operating losses not recouped under the indemnity will reduce our cash available for distribution.
Changes in the ownership of our units, including the changes occurring as a result of our initial public offering may result in annual limitations on our use of net operating losses available to reduce taxable income, which could increase our tax liabilities and decrease cash available for distribution in future taxable periods.
The use of the net operating losses by our corporate subsidiaries may be limited if the ownership of our units changes such that our corporate subsidiaries are deemed to have an ownership change under applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. In general, an ownership change will occur if the percentage of our units, based on the value of the units, owned by certain unitholders or groups of unitholders increases by more than fifty percentage points during a three-year period. For this purpose, the unitholders who acquired interests in us pursuant to our initial public offering will be treated as a single group, as will those persons who acquire units in this or any subsequent offering we may make. The public group that acquired units in our initial public offering acquired approximately 49% of the total partnership interests that were outstanding immediately after completion of the initial public offering. Those units likely constituted more than 50% of the value of all ownership interests in us. However, applicable Treasury Regulations provide generally that if in a public offering units are issued solely for cash, for purposes of calculating the percentage of ownership change resulting from the transaction, the acquiring unitholders will be deemed to acquire only up to 50% of the number of units they actually acquire. At the time of our initial public offering, our tax counsel opined that the initial public offering should not result in an ownership change. No ruling has been or will be requested from the IRS regarding this issue, and an opinion of counsel represents only the counsels legal judgment and does not bind the IRS or the courts. Thus there remains some risk that our initial public offering resulted in an ownership change. If an ownership change did occur, each of our corporate subsidiaries would be restricted annually in its ability to use its net operating losses to reduce its federal taxable income to an amount equal to the value of the corporation on the date of the ownership change multiplied by the applicable federal long-term tax-exempt rate in effect at such time. In the event that the initial public offering did not create an ownership change, our issuance of common units in November of 2005 likely created an ownership change with respect to the shares of our corporate subsidiaries for the purposes of Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code. However, we do not believe this ownership change will have a material effect on the use by our corporate subsidiaries of their remaining net operating losses. Nonetheless, to the extent that an annual net operating loss limitation for any one year does restrict the ability of our corporate subsidiaries to use their remaining net operating losses, an increase in tax liabilities of our corporate subsidiaries could result, which would reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to you.
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Our tax treatment depends on our status as a partnership for federal income tax purposes, as well as our not being subject to a material amount of additional entity-level taxation by individual states. If the IRS treats us as a corporation or we become subject to additional entity-level taxation for state tax purposes, it would reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to you.
The after-tax economic benefit of an investment in the common units depends largely on our being treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes. We have not requested, and do not plan to request, a ruling from the IRS on this or any other tax matter affecting us.
If we were treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes, we would pay federal income tax on our taxable income at the corporate tax rate, which is currently a maximum of 35% and would likely pay state income tax at varying rates. Distributions to you would generally be taxed again as corporate distributions, and no income, gains, losses or deductions would flow through to you. Because a tax would be imposed upon us as a corporation, our cash available for distribution to you would be substantially reduced. Therefore, treatment of us as a corporation would result in a material reduction in the anticipated cash flow and after-tax return to the unitholders, likely causing a substantial reduction in the value of our common units.
Current law may change so as to cause us to be treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes or otherwise subject us to entity-level taxation. In addition, because of widespread state budget deficits and other reasons, several states are evaluating ways to subject partnerships to entity-level taxation through the imposition of state income, franchise and other forms of taxation. If any of these states were to impose a tax on us, the cash available for distribution to you would be reduced. The partnership agreement provides that if a law is enacted or existing law is modified or interpreted in a manner that subjects us to taxation as a corporation or otherwise subjects us to entity-level taxation for federal, state or local income tax purposes, the minimum quarterly distribution amount and the target distribution amounts will be adjusted to reflect the impact of that law on us.
We have subsidiaries that will be treated as corporations for federal income tax purposes and subject to corporate-level income taxes.
Some of our operations are conducted through subsidiaries that are organized as C corporations. Accordingly, these corporate subsidiaries are subject to corporate-level tax, which reduces the cash available for distribution to our partnership and, in turn, to you. If the IRS were to successfully assert that these corporations have more tax liability than we anticipate or legislation was enacted that increased the corporate tax rate, the cash available for distribution could be further reduced.
If the IRS contests the federal income tax positions we take, the market for our common units may be adversely impacted, and the cost of any IRS contest will reduce our cash available for distribution to you.
We have not requested a ruling from the IRS with respect to our treatment as a partnership for federal income tax purposes or any other matter affecting us. The IRS may adopt positions that differ from the positions we take. It may be necessary to resort to administrative or court proceedings to sustain some or all of the positions we take. A court may not agree with some or all of the positions we take. Any contest with the IRS may materially and adversely impact the market for our common units and the price at which they trade. In addition, our costs of any contest with the IRS will be borne indirectly by our unitholders and our general partner because the costs will reduce our cash available for distribution.
You may be required to pay taxes on income from us even if you do not receive any cash distributions from us.
Because our unitholders will be treated as partners to whom we will allocate taxable income that could be different in amount than the cash we distribute, you will be required to pay any federal income taxes and, in some cases, state and local income taxes on your share of our taxable income even if you receive no cash distributions from us. You may not receive cash distributions from us equal to your share of our taxable income or even equal to the actual tax liability that results from that income.
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Tax gain or loss on disposition of our common units could be more or less than expected.
If you sell your common units, you will recognize a gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized and your tax basis in those common units. Because distributions in excess of your allocable share of our net taxable income decrease your tax basis in your common units, the amount, if any, of such prior excess distributions with respect to the units you sell will, in effect, become taxable income to you if you sell such units at a price greater than your tax basis in those units, even if the price you receive is less than your original cost. Furthermore, a substantial portion of the amount realized, whether or not representing gain, may be taxed as ordinary income due to potential recapture items, including depreciation recapture. In addition, because the amount realized includes a unitholders share of our nonrecourse liabilities, if you sell your units, you may incur a tax liability in excess of the amount of cash you receive from the sale.
Tax-exempt entities and foreign persons face unique tax issues from owning common units that may result in adverse tax consequences to them.
Investment in common units by tax-exempt entities, such as individual retirement accounts (known as IRAs) and non-U.S. persons raises issues unique to them. For example, virtually all of our income allocated to organizations that are exempt from federal income tax, including individual retirement accounts and other retirement plans, will be unrelated business taxable income and will be taxable to them. Distributions to non-U.S. persons will be reduced by withholding taxes at the highest applicable effective tax rate, and non-U.S. persons will be required to file United States federal tax returns and pay tax on their share of our taxable income. If you are a tax-exempt entity or a non-U.S. person, you should consult your tax advisor before investing in our common units.
We will treat each purchaser of common units as having the same tax benefits without regard to the actual common units purchased. The IRS may challenge this treatment, which could adversely affect the value of the common units.
Because we cannot match transferors and transferees of common units and because of other reasons, we will take depreciation and amortization positions that may not conform to all aspects of the existing Treasury Regulations. A successful IRS challenge to those positions could adversely affect the amount of tax benefits available to you. It also could affect the timing of these tax benefits or the amount of gain from the sale of common units and could have a negative impact on the value of our common units or result in audit adjustments to your tax returns
We will adopt certain valuation methodologies that may result in a shift of income, gain, loss and deduction between the general partner and the unitholders. The IRS may challenge this treatment, which could adversely affect the value of the common units.
When we issue additional units or engage in certain other transactions, we will determine the fair market value of our assets and allocate any unrealized gain or loss attributable to our assets to the capital accounts of our unitholders and our general partner. Our methodology may be viewed as understating the value of our assets. In that case, there may be a shift of income, gain, loss and deduction between certain unitholders and the general partner, which may be unfavorable to such unitholders. Moreover, under our valuation methods, subsequent purchasers of common units may have a greater portion of their Internal Revenue Code Section 743(b) adjustment allocated to our tangible assets and a lesser portion allocated to our intangible assets. The IRS may challenge our valuation methods, or our allocation of the Section 743(b) adjustment attributable to our tangible and intangible assets, and allocations of income, gain, loss and deduction between the general partner and certain of our unitholders.
A successful IRS challenge to these methods or allocations could adversely affect the amount of taxable income or loss being allocated to our unitholders. It also could affect the amount of gain from our unitholders sale of common units and could have a negative impact on the value of the common units or result in audit adjustments to our unitholders tax returns without the benefit of additional deductions.
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The sale or exchange of 50% or more of our capital and profits interests during any twelve-month period will result in the termination of our partnership for federal income tax purposes.
We will be considered to have terminated for federal income tax purposes if there is a sale or exchange of 50% or more of the total interests in our capital and profits within a twelve-month period. Our termination would, among other things, result in the closing of our taxable year for all unitholders and could result in a deferral of depreciation deductions allowable in computing our taxable income. In the case of a unitholder reporting on a taxable year other than a fiscal year ending December 31, the closing of our taxable year may result in more than twelve months of our taxable income or loss being includable in his taxable income for the year of termination. Our termination currently would not affect our classification as a partnership for federal income tax purposes, but instead, we would be treated as a new partnership for tax purposes. If treated as a new partnership, we must make new tax elections and could be subject to penalties if we are unable to determine that a termination occurred. Please read Material Tax ConsiderationsDisposition of Common UnitsConstructive Termination for a discussion of the consequences of our termination for federal income tax purposes.
You will likely be subject to state and local taxes and filing requirements in jurisdictions where you do not live as a result of an investment in units.
In addition to federal income taxes, you will likely be subject to other taxes, including state and local taxes, unincorporated business taxes and estate, inheritance or intangible taxes that are imposed by the various jurisdictions in which we do business or own property, even if you do not live in any of those jurisdictions. You will likely be required to file state and local income tax returns and pay state and local income taxes in some or all of these jurisdictions. Further, you may be subject to penalties for failure to comply with those requirements. Following the acquisition of SCI Assets, we will own assets or conduct business in a majority of states and in Puerto Rico. Most of these various jurisdictions currently impose, or may in the future impose, an income tax on individuals, corporations and other entities. As we make acquisitions or expand our business, we may own assets or do business in additional states that impose a personal income tax. It is your responsibility to file all United States federal, state and local tax returns. Our counsel has not rendered an opinion on the state or local tax consequences of an investment in the common units.
A unitholder whose units are loaned to a short seller to cover a short sale of units may be considered as having disposed of those units. If so, the unitholder would no longer be treated for tax purposes as a partner with respect to those units during the period of the loan and may recognize gain or loss from the disposition.
Because a unitholder whose units are loaned to a short seller to cover a short sale of units may be considered as having disposed of the loaned units, the unitholder may no longer be treated for tax purposes as a partner with respect to those units during the period of the loan to the short seller and the unitholder may recognize gain or loss from such disposition. Moreover, during the period of the loan to the short seller, any of our income, gain, loss or deduction with respect to those units may not be reportable by the unitholder and any cash distributions received by the unitholder as to those units could be fully taxable as ordinary income. Unitholders desiring to assure their status as partners and avoid the risk of gain recognition from a loan to a short seller are urged to modify any applicable brokerage account agreements to prohibit their brokers from borrowing their units.
The tax treatment of publicly traded partnerships or an investment in our common units could be subject to potential legislative, judicial or administrative changes and differing interpretations, possibly on a retroactive basis.
The present federal income tax treatment of publicly traded partnerships, including us, or an investment in our common units may be modified by administrative, legislative or judicial interpretation at any time. For example, members of Congress are considering substantive changes to the existing federal income tax laws that affect certain publicly traded partnerships. Any modification to the federal income tax laws and interpretations
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thereof may or may not be applied retroactively. Although the currently proposed legislation would not appear to affect our federal income tax treatment as a partnership, we are unable to predict whether any of these changes, or other proposals, will ultimately be enacted. Any such changes could negatively impact the value of an investment in our common units.
We prorate our items of income, gain, loss and deduction between transferors and transferees of our units each month based upon the ownership of our units on the first day of each month, instead of on the basis of the date a particular unit is transferred. The IRS may challenge this treatment, which could change the allocation of items of income, gain, loss and deduction among our unitholders.
We prorate our items of income, gain, loss and deduction between transferors and transferees of our units each month based upon the ownership of our units on the first day of each month, instead of on the basis of the date a particular unit is transferred. The use of this proration method may not be permitted under existing Treasury regulations, and, accordingly, our counsel is unable to opine as to the validity of this method. If the IRS were to challenge this method or new Treasury regulations were issued, we may be required to change the allocation of items of income, gain, loss and deduction among our unitholders.
| Item 1B. | Unresolved Staff Comments |
None.
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Cemeteries and Funeral Homes. The following table summarizes the distribution of our cemetery and funeral home properties by state as of December 31, 2007 and their weighted average estimated remaining sales life in years based on number of interment spaces sold during 2007:
| Cemeteries (1) | Funeral Homes |
Total Net Acres |
Weighted Average Estimated Remaining Sales Life |
Number of Interment Spaces Sold in 2007 | ||||||
| Pennsylvania |
51 | 8 | 2,479 | 465 | 3,106 | |||||
| West Virginia |
32 | 3 | 1,404 | 336 | 2,146 | |||||
| Virginia |
29 | 2 | 773 | 144 | 2,842 | |||||
| North Carolina |
14 | | 331 | 146 | 2,325 | |||||
| Maryland |
10 | 1 | 716 | 196 | 1,272 | |||||
| Alabama |
9 | 6 | 305 | 149 | 1,777 | |||||
| Ohio |
9 | 2 | 772 | 189 | 2,473 | |||||
| California |
7 | 10 | 270 | 36 | 2,276 | |||||
| Georgia |
7 | | 135 | 125 | 1,015 | |||||
| Illinois |
7 | 2 | 243 | 183 | 887 | |||||
| Oregon |
7 | 9 | 181 | 328 | 568 | |||||
| Indiana |
6 | | 422 | 190 | 1,312 | |||||
| New Jersey |
6 | | 341 | 39 | 2,148 | |||||
| Tennessee |
5 | 4 | 354 | 530 | 487 | |||||
| Michigan |
3 | | 87 | 429 | 242 | |||||
| Missouri |
3 | 1 | 116 | 167 | 602 | |||||
| Washington |
3 | 2 | 33 | 41 | 228 | |||||
| Colorado |
2 | | 12 | 245 | 58 | |||||
| Kansas |
2 | 1 | 35 | 102 | 404 | |||||
| Kentucky |
2 | | 59 | 93 | 333 | |||||
| Puerto Rico |
2 | 1 | 64 | 432 | 133 | |||||
| Rhode Island |
2 | | 70 | 966 | 27 | |||||
| South Carolina |
2 | 2 | 134 | 268 | 341 | |||||
| Delaware |
1 | | 12 | 175 | 27 | |||||
| Hawaii* |
1 | | 6 | 166 | 31 | |||||
| Iowa |
1 | | 89 | 81 | 403 | |||||
| Arkansas |
| 2 | | | | |||||
| Florida* |
| 1 | | | | |||||
| Total |
223 | 57 | 9,443 | 202 | 27,463 | |||||
| * | Hawaii and Florida properties acquired on December 21, 2007 are awaiting state approval prior to conveyance. |
| (1) | Includes six cemeteries in New Jersey , seven cemeteries in Ohio and 1 cemetery in California that we operated under long-term management agreements. |
We calculated estimated remaining sales life for each of our cemeteries by dividing the number of unsold interment spaces by the number of interment spaces sold at that cemetery in the most recent year. For purposes of estimating remaining sales life, we defined unsold interment spaces as unsold burial lots and unsold spaces in existing mausoleum crypts as of December 31, 2007. We defined interment spaces sold in 2007 as:
| | the number of burial lots sold, net of cancellations; |
| | the number of spaces sold in existing mausoleum crypts, net of cancellations; and |
| | the number of spaces sold in mausoleum crypts that we have not yet built, net of cancellations. |
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We count the sale of a double-depth burial lot as the sale of one interment space even though a double-depth burial lot includes two interment rights. We count an unsold double-depth burial lot as one unsold interment space. Because our sales of cremation niches were immaterial, we did not include cremation niches in the calculation of estimated remaining sales life. When calculating estimated remaining sales life, we did not take into account any future cemetery expansion. In addition, sales of an unusually high or low number of interment spaces in a particular year affect our calculation of estimated remaining sales life. Future sales may differ from previous years sales, and actual remaining sales life may differ from our estimates. We calculated weighted average remaining sales life by aggregating unsold interment spaces and interment spaces sold on a state-by-state or company-wide basis. Based on the number of interment spaces sold in 2007, we estimate that our cemeteries have an aggregate weighted average remaining sales life of 202 years.
The following table shows the cemetery properties that we owned or operated as of December 31, 2007, grouped by estimated remaining sales life:
| 0-25 Years |
26-49 Years |
50-100 Years |
101-150 Years |
151-200 Years |
Over 200 Years | |||||||
| Pennsylvania |
2 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 1 | 38 | ||||||
| West Virginia |
5 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 19 | ||||||
| Virginia |
1 | 2 | 5 | 7 | 1 | 13 | ||||||
| North Carolina |
| 1 | 2 | 2 | 5 | 4 | ||||||
| Maryland |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | | 4 | ||||||
| Alabama |
| 2 | 1 | 4 | | 2 | ||||||
| Ohio |
| 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 3 | ||||||
| Georgia |
1 | | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | ||||||
| Oregon |
| | 1 | 2 | | 4 | ||||||
| Illinois |
| 1 | 2 | | | 4 | ||||||
| California |
2 | 3 | 1 | | 1 | | ||||||
| New Jersey |
2 | 1 | 2 | | | 1 | ||||||
| Indiana |
1 | | | 2 | | 3 | ||||||
| Tennessee |
| | | | | 5 | ||||||
| Michigan |
| | | | | 3 | ||||||
| Missouri |
| | 1 | | | 2 | ||||||
| Washington |
| 3 | | | | | ||||||
| Colorado |
| | | | 1 | 1 | ||||||
| South Carolina |
| | | | 1 | 1 | ||||||
| Puerto Rico |
| | | | | 2 | ||||||
| Kansas |
| | 1 | | 1 | | ||||||
| Rhode Island |
| | | | | 2 | ||||||
| Kentucky |
| 1 | | | 1 | | ||||||
| Hawaii* |
| | | | 1 | | ||||||
| Iowa |
| | 1 | | | | ||||||
| Delaware |
| | | | 1 | | ||||||
| Total |
14 | 19 | 24 | 33 | 20 | 113 | ||||||
| * | Hawaii property acquired on December 21, 2007 is awaiting state approval prior to conveyance. |
We believe that we have either satisfactory title to or valid rights to use all of our cemetery properties. The 14 cemetery properties that we operate under long-term management agreements are held by cemetery associations that are owned by the cemetery lot holders or have no legal owners. We believe that the cemetery associations have either satisfactory title to or valid rights to use these 14 cemetery properties and that we have valid rights to use these properties under the management agreements. Although title to the cemetery properties is subject to encumbrances such as liens for taxes, encumbrances securing payment obligations, easements,
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restrictions and immaterial encumbrances, we do not believe that any of these burdens should materially detract from the value of these properties or from our interest in these properties, nor should these burdens materially interfere with the use of our cemetery properties in the operation of our business as described above. Many of our cemetery properties are located in zoned regions, and we believe that cemetery use is permitted for those cemeteries either (1) as expressly permitted under applicable zoning ordinances; (2) through a special exception to applicable zoning designations; or (3) as an existing non-conforming use.
Other. Our corporate headquarters occupy approximately 37,000 square feet of leased office space in Levittown, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. The lease has a term expiring in 2020, and we consider the space to be adequate for our present and anticipated future requirements. In 2007, we occupied approximately 22,500 of leased office space in Bristol, Pennsylvania. Our January 28, 2008 move from Bristol to Levittown was necessitated by our December 2007 acquisition of 45 cemeteries and 30 funeral homes. We are also tenants under various leases covering office spaces other than our corporate headquarters.
In addition, we own a 13,500-square-foot plant in Butler County, Pennsylvania, where we manufacture burial vaults used in our cemetery operations, and we own a 4,800-square-foot building in Marion, Virginia, which is no longer being used in our business.
| Item 3. | Legal Proceedings |
We, and certain of our subsidiaries, are parties to legal proceedings that have arisen in the ordinary course of business. While the outcome of these proceedings cannot be predicted with certainty, we do not expect these matters to have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and adequate financial condition or cash flows. We carry insurance with coverage and coverage limits that we believe to be customary in the funeral home and cemetery industries. Although there can be no assurance that such insurance will be sufficient to protect us against all contingencies, we believe that our insurance protection is reasonable in view of the nature and scope of our operations.
| Item 4. | Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders |
None.
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PART II
| Item 5. | Market for the Registrants Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities |
Market Information
Our common units are listed on The NASDAQ Global Market (Nasdaq) under the symbol STON. As of March 17, 2008, there were 8,595,850 common units outstanding, representing a 71.5% limited partner interest in us. As of that date, there were 3,179,837 subordinated units outstanding, representing a 26.5% limited partner interest in us. As of February 21, 2008, there were 47 unitholders of record, representing approximately 6,390 beneficial holders. There is no established public trading market for our subordinated units. The following table sets forth the high and low sale prices of our common units for the periods indicated, based on the daily composite listing of common unit transactions for the Nasdaq.
| Quarter Ended |
Price Range | Declared Distributions (1) | |||||||
| High | Low | ||||||||
| March 31, 2006 |
$ | 22.50 | $ | 20.09 | $ | .4800 | |||
| June 30, 2006 |
$ | 21.00 | $ | 18.00 | $ | .4800 | |||
| September 30, 2006 |
$ | 21.74 | $ | 19.44 | $ | .4900 | |||
| December 31, 2006 |
$ | 25.90 | $ | 20.91 | $ | .5000 | |||
| March 31, 2007 |
$ | 28.68 | $ | 22.80 | $ | .5000 | |||
| June 30, 2007 |
$ | 28.00 | $ | 23.57 | $ | .5150 | |||
| September 30, 2007 |
$ | 26.58 | $ | 21.32 | $ | .5150 | |||
| December 31, 2007 |
$ | 26.46 | $ | 19.10 | $ | .5150 | |||
| (1) | Distributions were declared and paid within 45 days following the close of each quarter on May 12, 2006, August 11, 2006, November 14, 2006 , February 14, 2007, May 15, 2007, August 14, 2007, October 26, 2007 and February 14, 2008 respectively. |
CASH DISTRIBUTION POLICY
Quarterly Distributions of Available Cash
General. Within approximately 45 days after the end of each quarter, we will distribute all of our available cash to unitholders of record on the applicable record date.
Available cash for any quarter consists of cash on hand at the end of that quarter, plus cash on hand from working capital borrowings made after the end of the quarter but before the date of determination of available cash for the quarter, less cash reserves. Cash and other investments held in merchandise trusts and perpetual care trusts are not treated as available cash until they are distributed to us.
Minimum Quarterly Distribution. Common units are entitled to receive distributions from operating surplus of $0.4625 per unit per quarter, or $1.85 per unit per year, before any such distributions are paid on our subordinated units. We cannot guarantee you that we will be able to pay the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units in any quarter. We are prohibited from making any distributions to unitholders if the distributions would cause an event of default, or if an event of default is existing, under our debt agreements.
General Partner Interest and Incentive Distribution Rights. Our general partner is entitled to 2% of all distributions that we make prior to our liquidation. Our general partner has the right, but not the obligation, to contribute a proportionate amount of capital to us to maintain its 2% general partner interest. The general partners 2% interest in these distributions may be reduced if we issue additional units in the future and our general partner does not contribute a proportionate amount of capital to us to maintain its 2% general partner interest.
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Our general partner also currently holds incentive distribution rights that entitle it to receive increasing percentages, up to a maximum of 50%, of the cash we distribute from operating surplus in excess of $0.5125 per unit. The maximum distribution of 50% includes distributions paid to the general partner on its 2% general partner interest but does not include any distributions that the general partner may receive on units that it owns.
Operating Surplus and Capital Surplus
General. All cash distributed to unitholders is characterized as either operating surplus or capital surplus. We distribute available cash from operating surplus differently than available cash from capital surplus. We treat all available cash distributed as coming from operating surplus until the sum of all available cash distributed since we began operations equals the operating surplus as of the most recent date of determination of available cash. We will treat any amount distributed in excess of operating surplus, regardless of its source, as capital surplus.
Operating Surplus. Operating surplus consists of:
| | our cash balance on September 20, 2004; plus |
| | $5.0 million (as described below); plus |
| | cash receipts from our operations, including cash withdrawn from merchandise and perpetual care trusts; plus |
| | working capital borrowings made after the end of a quarter but before the date of determination of operating surplus for that quarter; less |
| | operating expenditures, including cash deposited in merchandise and perpetual care trusts, maintenance capital expenditures and the repayment of working capital borrowings; less |
| | the amount of cash reserves for future operating expenditures and maintenance capital expenditures. |
As reflected above, operating surplus includes $5.0 million in addition to our cash balance on September 20, 2004, cash receipts from our operations and cash from working capital borrowings. This amount does not reflect actual cash on hand at closing that is available for distribution to our unitholders. Rather, it is a provision that will enable us, if we choose, to distribute as operating surplus up to $5.0 million of cash we receive in the future from non-operating sources, such as asset sales outside the ordinary course of business, sales of our equity and debt securities, and long-term borrowings, that would otherwise be distributed as capital surplus.
As described above, operating surplus is reduced by the amount of our maintenance capital expenditures but not our expansion capital expenditures. For our purposes, maintenance capital expenditures are those capital expenditures required to maintain, over the long term, the operating capacity of our capital assets, and expansion capital expenditures are those capital expenditures that increase, over the long term, the operating capacity of our capital assets.
Examples of maintenance capital expenditures include costs to build roads and install sprinkler systems on our cemetery properties and purchases of equipment for those purposes and, in most instances, costs to develop new areas of our cemeteries. Examples of expansion capital expenditures include costs to identify and complete acquisitions of new cemeteries and funeral homes and to construct new funeral homes. Costs to construct mausoleum crypts and lawn crypts may be considered to be a combination of maintenance capital expenditures and expansion capital expenditures. Our general partner, with the concurrence of its conflicts committee, may allocate capital expenditures between maintenance capital expenditures and expansion capital expenditures and may determine the period over which maintenance capital expenditures will be subtracted from operating surplus.
As described above, operating surplus is reduced by the amount of our operating expenditures. Our partnership agreement specifically excludes certain items from the definition of operating expenditures, such as cash expenditures made for acquisitions or capital improvements, including, without limitation, all cash
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expenditures, whether or not expensed or capitalized for tax or accounting purposes, incurred during the first four years following an acquisition in order to bring the operating capacity of the acquisition to the level expected to be achieved in the projections forming the basis on which our general partner approved the acquisition. Examples of such cash expenditures include certain maintenance capital expenditures and cash expenditures that we believe are necessary to develop the pre-need sales programs of businesses or assets we acquire. Where cash expenditures are made in part for acquisitions or capital improvements and in part for other purposes, our general partner, with the concurrence of our conflicts committee, will determine the allocation between the amounts paid for each and the period over which cash expenditures made for other purposes will be subtracted from operating surplus.
Capital Surplus. Capital surplus consists of:
| | borrowings other than working capital borrowings; |
| | sales of our equity and debt securities; and |
| | sales or other dispositions of assets for cash (other than sales or other dispositions of excess cemetery property in an aggregate amount not to exceed $1.0 million in any four-quarter period; sales or other dispositions of inventory, accounts receivable and other current assets in the ordinary course of business; and sales or other dispositions of assets as a part of normal retirements or replacements). |
The $1.0 million exception for sales of excess cemetery property may be increased by our general partner, with the concurrence of its conflicts committee, if the size of our operations increases as a result of acquisitions or other expansions.
Distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus
The following table illustrates the priority of distributions of available cash from operating surplus between the unitholders and our general partner during the subordination period. During the subordination period the common units will have the right to receive distributions of available cash from operating surplus in an amount equal to the minimum quarterly distribution of $0.4625 per unit, plus any arrearages in the payment of the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units from prior quarters, before any distributions of available cash from operating surplus may be made on the subordinated units. The amounts set forth in the table in the column titled Marginal Percentage Interest in Distributions are the percentage interests of our general partner and the unitholders in any available cash from operating surplus we distribute up to and including the corresponding amount in the column titled Total Quarterly Distribution Target Amount, until the available cash from operating surplus that we distribute reaches the next target distribution level, if any. The percentage interests shown for our general partner include its 2% general partner interest and assume the general partner has contributed any additional capital required to maintain its 2% general partner interest and has not transferred the incentive distribution rights.
| Total Quarterly Distribution Target Amount |
Marginal Percentage Interest in Distributions | ||||||||||||||
| Common Unitholders |
Subordinated Unitholders |
Common and Subordinated Unitholders |
General Partner |
||||||||||||
| Minimum Quarterly Distribution |
up to $0.4625 | 98 | % | | | 2 | % | ||||||||
| Arrearages on Minimum Quarterly Distribution |
up to $0.4625 | 98 | % | | | 2 | % | ||||||||
| Minimum Quarterly Distribution |
up to $0.4625 | | 98 | % | | 2 | % | ||||||||
| First Target Distribution |
above $0.4625 up to $0.5125 | | | 98 | % | 2 | % | ||||||||
| Second Target Distribution |
above $ | 0.5125 up to $0.5875 | | | 85 | % | 15 | % | |||||||
| Third Target Distribution |
above $0.5875 up to $0.7125 | | | 75 | % | 25 | % | ||||||||
| Thereafter |
above $0.7125 | | | 50 | % | 50 | % | ||||||||
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When the subordination period ends, all remaining subordinated units will convert into common units on a one-for-one basis and will then participate, pro rata, with the other common units in distributions of available cash.
Distributions of Available Cash from Capital Surplus
We do not currently expect to make any distributions of available cash from capital surplus. However, to the extent that we make any distributions of available cash from capital surplus, they will be made in the following manner:
| | first, 98% to all unitholders, pro rata, and 2% to our general partner, until we have distributed for each common unit an amount of available cash from capital surplus equal to the initial public offering price; |
| | second, 98% to the common unitholders, pro rata, and 2% to our general partner, until we have distributed for each common unit an amount of available cash from capital surplus equal to any unpaid arrearages in payment of the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units; and |
| | thereafter, we will make all distributions of available cash from capital surplus as if they were from operating surplus |
The partnership agreement treats a distribution of capital surplus as the repayment of the initial unit price from the initial public offering, which is a return of capital. The initial public offering price less any distributions of capital surplus per unit is referred to as the unrecovered initial unit price. Each time a distribution of capital surplus is made, the minimum quarterly distribution and the target distribution levels will be reduced in the same proportion as the corresponding reduction in the unrecovered initial unit price.
Because distributions of capital surplus will reduce the minimum quarterly distribution, after any of these distributions are made, it may be easier for the general partner to receive incentive distributions and for the subordinated units to convert into common units. Any distribution of capital surplus before the unrecovered initial unit price is reduced to zero cannot be applied, however, to the payment of the minimum quarterly distribution or any arrearages in the payment of the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units from prior quarters.
If we distribute capital surplus on a unit in an amount equal to the initial unit price and have paid all arrearages on the common units, the minimum quarterly distribution and the target distribution levels will be reduced to zero. Once the minimum quarterly distribution and target distribution levels are reduced to zero, all subsequent distributions will be from operating surplus, with 50% being paid to the holders of units and 50% to our general partner.
Subordination Period
General. During the subordination period the common units will have the right to receive distributions of available cash from operating surplus in an amount equal to the minimum quarterly distribution of $ 0.4625 per unit, plus any arrearages in the payment of the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units from prior quarters, before any distributions of available cash from operating surplus may be made on the subordinated units. Upon expiration of the subordination period, all subordinated units will convert into common units on a one-for-one basis and will then participate, pro rata, with the other common units in distributions of available cash, and the common units will no longer be entitled to arrearages.
Expiration of Subordination Period. The subordination period will extend until the first day of any quarter beginning after September 30, 2009 that each of the following tests are met:
| | distributions of available cash from operating surplus on each of the outstanding common units and subordinated units for the three consecutive four-quarter periods immediately preceding that date equaled or exceeded the minimum quarterly distribution; |
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| | the adjusted operating surplus (as defined below) generated during the three consecutive four-quarter periods immediately preceding that date equaled or exceeded the sum of the minimum quarterly distributions on all of the outstanding common units and subordinated units and the related distribution on the 2% general partner interest; and |
| | there are no arrearages in payment of the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units. |
In addition, if the unitholders remove our general partner other than for cause and units held by our general partner and its affiliates are not voted in favor of that removal:
| | the subordination period will end and each subordinated unit will immediately convert into one common unit; |
| | any existing arrearages in payment of the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units will be extinguished; and |
| | our general partner will have the right to convert its general partner interest and its incentive distribution rights into common units or to receive cash in exchange for those interests. |
Early Conversion of Subordinated Units. If the tests for ending the subordination period are satisfied for any three consecutive four-quarter periods ending on or after September 30, 2007, 25% of the subordinated units will convert into an equal number of common units. We met certain financial tests for the three four-quarter periods ending on September 30, 2007. Accordingly, on October 30, 2007, 25% of our subordinated units, or 1,059,945 subordinated units, converted into 1,059,945 common units. Similarly, if those tests are also satisfied for any three consecutive four-quarter periods ending on or after September 30, 2008, an additional 25% of the subordinated units will convert into an equal number of common units. The second early conversion of subordinated units may not occur, however, until at least one year following the end of the period for the first early conversion of subordinated units.
Adjusted Operating Surplus. Adjusted operating surplus is a measure that we use to determine the operating surplus that is actually earned in a test period by excluding items from prior periods that affect operating surplus in the test period. Adjusted operating surplus consists of:
| | operating surplus generated with respect to that period; less |
| | any net increase in working capital borrowings with respect to that period but only to the extent that outstanding working capital borrowings exceed $5.0 million as a result of such increase; less |
| | any net decrease in cash reserves for operating expenditures with respect to that period not relating to an operating expenditure made with respect to that period; less |
| | the amount, if any, by which the aggregate principal amount withdrawn from merchandise trusts with respect to that period exceeds the aggregate amount deposited into merchandise trusts with respect to that period; plus |
| | any net decrease in working capital borrowings with respect to that period but only to the extent that such decrease would reduce outstanding working capital borrowings to an amount not less than $5.0 million; plus |
| | any net increase in cash reserves for operating expenditures with respect to that period required by any debt instrument for the repayment of principal, interest or premium; plus |
| | the amount, if any, by which the aggregate amount deposited into merchandise trusts with respect to that period exceeds the aggregate principal amount withdrawn from merchandise trusts with respect to that period. |
The limitations on the effect of net increases and net decreases in working capital borrowings set forth in the second and fifth bullet points above became inoperative and have no further effect with respect to any period ending after September 30, 2006.
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Adjustment of Minimum Quarterly Distribution and Target Distribution Levels
In addition to adjusting the minimum quarterly distribution and target distribution levels to reflect a distribution of capital surplus, if we combine our units into fewer units or subdivide our units into a greater number of units, we will proportionately adjust:
| | the minimum quarterly distribution; |
| | the target distribution levels; |
| | the unrecovered initial unit price; |
| | the number of common units issuable during the subordination period without a unitholder vote; and |
| | the number of common units into which a subordinated unit is convertible. |
For example, if a two-for-one split of the common units should occur, the minimum quarterly distribution, the target distribution levels and the unrecovered initial unit price would each be reduced to 50% of its initial level, the number of common units issuable during the subordination period without a unitholder vote would double and each subordinated unit would be convertible into two common units. We will not make any adjustment by reason of the issuance of additional units for cash or property.
In addition, if legislation is enacted or if existing law is modified or interpreted in a manner that causes us to become taxable as a corporation or otherwise subject to taxation as an entity for federal, state or local income tax purposes, we will reduce the minimum quarterly distribution and the target distribution levels for each quarter by multiplying each distribution level by a fraction, the numerator of which is available cash for that quarter and the denominator of which is the sum of available cash for that quarter plus our general partners estimate of our aggregate liability for the income taxes payable by reason of that legislation or interpretation. To the extent that the actual tax liability differs from the estimated tax liability for any quarter, the difference will be accounted for in subsequent quarters.
Distributions of Cash Upon Liquidation
If we dissolve in accordance with the partnership agreement, we will sell or otherwise dispose of our assets in a process called liquidation. We will first apply the proceeds of liquidation to the payment of our creditors. We will distribute any remaining proceeds to the unitholders and our general partner, in accordance with their respective capital account balances, as adjusted to reflect any taxable gain or loss upon the sale or other disposition of our assets in liquidation.
The allocations of taxable gain upon liquidation are intended, to the extent possible, to allow the holders of common units to receive proceeds equal to their unrecovered initial unit price plus the minimum quarterly distribution for the quarter during which liquidation occurs plus any arrearages in the payment of the minimum quarterly distribution on the common units from prior quarters prior to any allocation of gain to the common units. There may not be sufficient taxable gain upon our liquidation to enable the holders of common units to fully recover all of these amounts, even though there may be cash available for distribution to the holders of subordinated units. Any additional taxable gain will be allocated in a manner intended to allow our general partner to receive proceeds in respect of its incentive distribution rights.
If there are losses upon liquidation, they will first be allocated to the subordinated units and the general partner interest until the capital accounts of the subordinated units have been reduced to zero and then to the common units and the general partner interest until the capital accounts of the common units have been reduced to zero. Any remaining loss will be allocated to the general partner interest.
Additional Restrictions on Distributions
Equity Compensation Plan Information
See the equity compensation plan table set forth in Part III, Item 12 Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters.
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| Item 6. | Selected Financial Data |
On April 2, 2004, StoneMor was created to own and operate the cemetery and funeral home business conducted by Cornerstone. On September 20, 2004, in connection with StoneMors initial public offering of common units, Cornerstone contributed to the Partnership substantially all of the assets, liabilities and businesses owned and operated by it, and then converted into CFSI LLC, a limited liability company. This transfer represented a reorganization of entities under common control and was recorded at historical cost.
The following table presents selected financial and operating data of StoneMors predecessor, Cornerstone, and of StoneMor for the periods and as of the dates indicated. The selected financial data for Cornerstone as of and for the year ended December 31, 2003 are derived from the audited consolidated financial statements of Cornerstone. The selected financial data as of and for the year ended December 31, 2004 are derived from the audited consolidated financial statements of StoneMor, which comprise the operations of StoneMor from September 20, 2004 to December 31, 2004 and Cornerstone for the period January 1, 2004 to September 19, 2004, and the selected financial data as of and for the years ended December 31, 2005, 2006 and 2007 is derived from the audited consolidated financial statements of StoneMor.
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The following table should be read together with, and is qualified in its entirety by reference to, the audited financial statements and the accompanying notes included in Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. The table should also be read together with Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations included in Item 7 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
| Cornerstone Family Services, Inc. (1) |
StoneMor Partners L.P. (1) | ||||||||||||||||
| Year Ended December 31, | |||||||||||||||||
| 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | |||||||||||||
| Statement of Operations Data: |
|||||||||||||||||
| Cemetery revenues |
|||||||||||||||||
| Merchandise |
$ | 41,029 | $ | 47,111 | $ | 54,421 | $ | 58,219 | $ | 74,509 | |||||||
| Services |
16,118 | 18,865 | 19,346 | 25,555 | 28,547 | ||||||||||||
| Investment and Other |
20,831 | 21,329 | 24,095 | 25,221 | 31,476 | ||||||||||||
| Funeral home revenues |
|||||||||||||||||
| Merchandise |
689 | 765 | 1,200 | 2,696 | 4,655 | ||||||||||||
| Services |
1,035 | 1,188 | 1,598 | 3,422 | 6,127 | ||||||||||||
| Total Revenues |
79,702 | 89,258 | 100,660 | 115,113 | 145,314 | ||||||||||||
| Cost of goods sold (exclusive of depreciation shown seperately below): |
|||||||||||||||||
| Perpetual care |
2,585 | 2,692 | 2,575 | 3,109 | 3,553 | ||||||||||||
| Merchandise |
7,469 | 9,682 | 11,323 | 11,583 | 16,118 | ||||||||||||
| Cemetery expense |
17,732 | 19,648 | 20,942 | 24,344 | 30,767 | ||||||||||||
| Selling expense |
15,584 | 19,158 | 20,072 | 23,186 | 29,245 | ||||||||||||
| General and administrative expense |
9,407 | 9,797 | 10,553 | 12,801 | 15,684 | ||||||||||||
| Overhead (including $1,178 of stock-based compensation in 2003 , $433 in 2004, $1,212 in 2006 and $4,741 in 2007) (2) |
12,672 | 12,658 | 16,304 | 19,795 | 24,991 | ||||||||||||
| Depreciation and amortization |
5,001 | 4,547 | 3,510 | 3,501 | 3,891 | ||||||||||||
| Funeral home expense |
|||||||||||||||||
| Merchandise |
210 | 233 | 397 | 1,004 | 1,575 | ||||||||||||
| Services |
710 | 809 | 1,082 | 2,285 | 4,198 | ||||||||||||
| Other |
593 | 670 | 903 | 1,547 | 2,649 | ||||||||||||
| Total costs and expenses |
71,963 | 79,894 | 87,661 | 103,155 | 132,671 | ||||||||||||
| Operating profit |
7,739 | 9,364 | 12,999 | 11,958 | 12,643 | ||||||||||||
| Expenses related to terminated debt offering and refinancing (3) |
| 4,200 | | | 157 | ||||||||||||
| Interest expense |
11,376 | 9,480 | 6,457 | 7,491 | 9,075 | ||||||||||||
| Income (loss) before income taxes |
(3,637 | ) | (4,316 | ) | 6,542 | 4,467 | 3,411 | ||||||||||
| Income taxes (benefit) |
|||||||||||||||||
| State |
1,362 | 663 | 587 | 438 | 398 | ||||||||||||
| Federal |
1,010 | (1,141 | ) | 1,250 | 989 | 227 | |||||||||||
| Total income taxes (benefit) |
2,372 | (478 | ) | 1,837 | 1,427 | 625 | |||||||||||
| Net Income (loss) |
$ | (6,009 | ) | $ | (3,838 | ) | $ | 4,705 | $ | 3,040 | $ | 2,786 | |||||
| Net income per limited partner (common) unit (basic and diluted) (4) |
$ | .27 | $ | .54 | $ | .34 | $ | .31 | |||||||||
| Balance Sheet Data (at period end): |
|||||||||||||||||
| Cemetery property |
$ | 151,200 | $ | 150,215 | $ | 164,772 | $ | 171,714 | $ | 187,552 | |||||||
| Total assets (5) |
381,230 | 523,092 | 550,641 | 627,025 | 811,757 | ||||||||||||
| Deferred cemetery revenues, net (6) |
140,778 | 156,051 | 167,035 | 196,103 | 220,942 | ||||||||||||
| Total debt |
130,708 | 80,000 | 86,945 | 103,492 | 146,164 | ||||||||||||
| Redeemable preferred stock (par value $0.01, 12,764 and 15,514 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2002 and 2003, respectively) (7) |
15,514 | | | | | ||||||||||||
| Total stockholders/ partners equity |
41,980 | 115,317 | 109,600 | 101,288 | 136,746 | ||||||||||||
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| Cornerstone Family Services, Inc. (1) |
StoneMor Partners L.P. (1) |
|||||||||||||||||||
| Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | ||||||||||||||||
| Cash Flow Data: |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Net cash provided by (used in): |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Operating activities |
$ | 7,146 | $ | 7,485 | $ | 17,589 | $ | 18,339 | $ | 18,973 | ||||||||||
| Investing activities |
(3,129 | ) | (5,887 | ) | (15,286 | ) | (14,625 | ) | (86,777 | ) | ||||||||||
| Financing activities |
(4,022 | ) | 7,321 | (9,852 | ) | (725 | ) | 71,690 | ||||||||||||
| Other Financial Data: |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Change in assets and liabilities that provided (used) cash: |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Merchandise trusts receivable |
$ | (128 | ) | $ | | $ | | $ | | $ | | |||||||||
| Due from merchandise trust |
(170 | ) | | | | | ||||||||||||||
| Merchandise trusts |
| (1,333 | ) | 10,473 | (3,517 | ) | (5,223 | ) | ||||||||||||
| Merchandise liability |
(3,224 | ) | (7,397 | ) | (7,224 | ) | (8,109 | ) | (7,171 | ) | ||||||||||
| Capital expenditures: |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Maintenance capital expenditures |
1,184 | 2,620 | 2,192 | 2,059 | 3,051 | |||||||||||||||
| Expansion capital expenditures, including acquisitions and dispositions |
1,945 | 3,267 | 18,994 | 20,532 | 83,726 | |||||||||||||||
| Distributions declared per common unit in respect of the period |
0.5128 | 1.8625 | 1.9500 | 2.0450 | ||||||||||||||||
| Operating Data: |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Interments performed |
22,281 | 22,114 | 22,263 | 26,003 | 29,380 | |||||||||||||||
| Cemetery revenues per interment performed (8) |
$ | 3,500 | $ | 3,948 | $ | 4,396 | $ | 4,192 | $ | 4,579 | ||||||||||
| Interment rights sold (9): |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Lots (8) |
12,442 | 12,136 | 12,758 | 13,769 | 17,509 | |||||||||||||||
| Mausoleum crypts (including pre-construction) |
2,314 | 2,224 | 2,163 | 2,361 | 2,314 | |||||||||||||||
| Niches |
445 | 442 | 409 | 440 | 602 | |||||||||||||||
| Total interment rights sold (8)(9) |
15,201 | 14,802 | 15,330 | 16,570 | 20,425 | |||||||||||||||
| Cemetery revenues per interment right sold (8)(9) |
$ | 5,130 | $ | 5,889 | $ | 6,384 | $ | 6,578 | $ | 6,587 | ||||||||||
| Number of contracts written |
47,939 | 46,149 | 46,510 | 54,675 | 63,026 | |||||||||||||||
| Aggregate contract amount, in thousands (excluding interest) |
$ | 90,551 | $ | 91,983 | $ | 96,642 | $ | 116,407 | $ | 138,588 | ||||||||||
| Average amount per contract (excluding interest) |
$ | 1,889 | $ | 1,993 | $ | 2,078 | $ | 2,129 | $ | 2,199 | ||||||||||
| Number of pre-need contracts written |
22,276 | 21,079 | 21,306 | 24,999 | 29,546 | |||||||||||||||
| Aggregate pre-need contract amount, in thousands (excluding interest) |
$ | 60,854 | $ | 60,040 | $ | 63,415 | $ | 74,301 | $ | 89,486 | ||||||||||
| Average amount per pre-need contract (excluding interest) |
$ | 2,732 | $ | 2,848 | $ | 2,976 | $ | 2,972 | $ | 3,029 | ||||||||||
| Number of at-need contracts written |
25,663 | 25,070 | 25,204 | 29,676 | 33,480 | |||||||||||||||
| Aggregate at-need contract amount, in thousands |
$ | 29,698 | $ | 31,943 | $ | 33,227 | $ | 42,106 | $ | 49,102 | ||||||||||
| Average amount per at-need contract |
$ | 1,157 | $ | 1,274 | $ | 1,318 | $ | 1,419 | $ | 1,467 | ||||||||||
| (1) | Includes results of operations of cemeteries that we operate under management agreements with the cemetery associations that own them. Prior to September 2004 we operated 12 cemeteries under management agreements and have subsequently converted five of these cemetery associations (one in September 2004 and 4 in April 2005) into for-profit entities owned by us and ceased operating these cemeteries under management agreements. In 2007, we terminated the management contract for one location and acquired the rights to operate 7 additional locations. |
| (2) | Includes write-off of $715,000 in 2003 and $571,000 in 2007 incurred in connection with a potential acquisition of a group of cemeteries in Michigan that we determined would be unlikely to take place. Also includes $1.7 million in bonuses in 2003, $1.5 million in bonuses in 2004, $2.0 million in bonuses in 2006, $3.2 million in bonuses in 2007, an annual payment of $0.4 million to $0.8 million in management fees to MDC Management Company IV, LLC from 2003 to 2004, and $1.2 million of stock-based compensation in 2003, $0.4 million of stock based compensation in 2004, $1.2 million of stock based compensation in 2006 and $4.7 million in stock based compensation in 2007 and $883,000 in 2006 to reserve for the write-off of our investment in a management agreement at one of our locations that was terminated subsequent to year-end 2006. |
| (3) | In 2004 represents expenses incurred in connection with the refinancing of our debt in connection with our initial public offering in September 2004. These expenses include a $3.9 million write-off of debt issuance costs and $0.3 million of expenses related to early extinguishment of debt. In 2007 represents a $157,000 write-off of debt issuance costs in connection with our August 2007 refinancing. |
| (4) | In 2004 represents the net income per common unit (basic and diluted) from September 20, 2004, the date of our initial public offering, through December 31, 2004. |
33
| (5) | Includes principal of perpetual care and merchandise trusts stated on our balance sheet at fair value as of December 31, 2004 in accordance with FASB Interpretation No. 46 and No. 46 revised, Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities: an Interpretation of Accounting Research Bulletin No. 51 , which we adopted as of March 31, 2004. |
| (6) | Represents revenues to be recognized from sales of pre-need products and services and the related income and capital gains on merchandise trusts. We recognize revenues from sales of pre-need interment rights to constructed mausoleums when we have collected at least 10% of the sales price. We defer recognition of revenues from sales of pre-need interment rights to unconstructed mausoleums until we have collected at least 10% of the sales price, at which point we recognize revenues on the percentage-of-completion basis. We recognize revenues from sales of pre-need merchandise and services, other than perpetual care services, when we satisfy the criteria for delivery of the merchandise to the customer or perform the services for the customer. At that time, we also recognize the related income and capital gains from merchandise trusts. See Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of OperationsOverviewCemetery OperationsSources of Revenues and Trusting. |
| (7) | Represents shares of preferred stock issued to the McCown De Leeuw funds and members of management that were converted into Class A membership interests of CFSI LLC prior to our initial public offering. |
| (8) | Excludes in 2005 the sale of a tract of land equivalent to 1,881 burial lots to a municipality in New Jersey for $1.7 million. |
| (9) | Net of cancellations. Counts the sale of a double-depth burial lot as the sale of two interment rights. |
34
| Item 7. | Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations |
You should read the following discussion of our financial condition and results of operations in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and notes thereto included in Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Those notes also give more detailed information regarding the basis of presentation for the following information.
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain statements contained in this press release, including, but not limited to, information regarding the status and progress of our operating activities, the plans and objectives of our management, assumptions regarding our future performance and plans, and any financial guidance provided, as well as certain information in other filings with the SEC and elsewhere are forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The words believe, may, will, estimate, continues, anticipate, intend, project, expect, predict and similar expressions identify these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are made subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those stated, including, but not limited to, the following: uncertainties associated with future revenue and revenue growth; the impact of our significant leverage on our operating plans; the ability of us to service our debt; our ability to attract, train and retain an adequate number of sales people; uncertainties associated with the volume and timing of pre-need sales of cemetery services and products; variances in death rates; variances in the use of cremation; changes in the political or regulatory environments, including potential changes in tax accounting and trusting policies; our ability to successfully implement a strategic plan relating to producing operating improvement, strong cash flows and further deleveraging; uncertainties associated with the integration or the anticipated benefits of our acquisitions and various other uncertainties associated with the death care industry and our operations in particular.
When considering forward-looking statements, you should keep in mind the risk factors and other cautionary statements set forth under Risk Factors in Part I, Item 1A. We assume no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements made herein or any other forward-looking statements made by us, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
Overview
On April 2, 2004, StoneMor Partners L.P. (StoneMor or the Partnership) was created to own and operate the cemetery and funeral home business conducted by Cornerstone. On September 20, 2004, in connection with the initial public offering by the Partnership of common units representing limited partner interests, Cornerstone contributed to the Partnership substantially all of the assets, liabilities and businesses owned and operated by it, and then converted into CFSI LLC, a limited liability company. This transfer represented a reorganization of entities under common control and was recorded at historical cost. In exchange for these assets, liabilities and businesses, CFSI LLC received 564,782 common units and 4,239,782 subordinated units representing limited partner interests in the Partnership.
Cornerstone was founded in 1999 by members of our management team and a private equity investment firm, which we refer to as McCown De Leeuw, in order to acquire a group of 123 cemetery properties and 4 funeral homes.
As of December 31, 2007, the Company operated 223 cemeteries in 25 states and Puerto Rico. The Company owns 209 of these cemeteries and operates the remaining 14 under long-term management agreements with cemetery associations that own the cemeteries. As a result of the agreements and other control arrangements, we consolidate the results of the 14 managed cemeteries in our historical consolidated financial statements. We also own and operate 57 funeral homes in 16 states and Puerto Rico.
35
StoneMor sells cemetery products and services both at the time of death, which the Company refers to as at-need, and prior to the time of death, which the Company refers to as pre-need. During the year ended December 31, 2007, StoneMor performed over 29,300 burials and sold more then 20,400 interment rights (net of cancellations) compared to over 26,000 and more than 16,500, respectively, for the same period of 2006.
On December 21, 2007, StoneMor completed a public offering of 2,650,000 common units at a price of $20.26 per unit representing 22.2% interest in us on that date, making a total of 8,505,725 common units outstanding. In conjunction with this offering, our general partner contributed $1.1 million to maintain its 2% general partner interest. Total gross proceeds from these sales were $54.8 million, before offering costs and underwriting discounts. The net proceeds to the Partnership, after deducting underwriting discounts but before paying offering costs, from these sales of common units was $51.8 million. Concurrent with the public offering, the Partnerships wholly owned subsidiary, StoneMor Operating LLC and its subsidiaries (collectively StoneMor LLC), all as borrowers, issued $17.5 million in aggregate principal amount of senior secured notes under the note purchase agreement described below. The net proceeds of the public offering and the sale of senior secured notes and borrowings of $6.3 million under our acquisition line of credit were used to purchase 45 cemeteries and 30 funeral homes from Service Corporation International (NYSE: SCI).
Segment Reporting and Related Information. The Company historically had two operating segments: cemeteries and funeral homes. Since funeral homes accounted for less than 10% of each identifying criteria, funeral home operating results were aggregated within the cemetery classification for purposes of segment reporting and disclosed as one segment, death care services. In conjunction with its September 2006 acquisition of 21 cemeteries and 14 funeral homes from Service Corporation International and as part of its strategic planning, the Company continuously conducts marketing studies of its potential customers. Additionally, the Company expects to grow not only through cemetery, but also through funeral home, acquisitions in the future. For these reasons, the Company has decided to add to its segment information the details of its funeral homes and has disaggregated its cemeteries into three distinct classifications. The factors used to identify our reportable segments (classifications), designated as West, Southeast, and Northeast, have been identified by the nature of our customers served in each marketplace. As cremation is on the rise and the Company has with its recent acquisitions entered the states of Oregon, Washington, and Colorado, it has established a Western Region where cremation rates are projected to be high (in Washington and Oregon, 65% of burials). Statistics indicate that customers who select cremation have certain attributes. The other two regions, Southeast and Northeast, have significantly lower cremation rates and customers with different attributes than the West. Cremation rates in Alabama and Kentucky, for instance, are only projected to be 12%, while cremation rates in the Northeast fall generally between the other two regions. The Company has different regional sales managers, maintenance superintendents, and administrative supervisors in each region. As such, the Company has determined that due to the nature of customer behavior, which is consistent in the geographic regions described above, it has chosen to organize its enterprise and to aggregate its cemeteries and funeral homes, which it has determined are individual segments, in this manner. See Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements included in Item 8 of this Form 10-K.
Cemetery Operations
Sources of Revenues. Our results of operations are determined primarily by the volume of sales of products and services and the timing of product delivery and performance of services. We derive our revenues primarily from:
| | at-need sales of cemetery interment rights, merchandise and services, which we recognize as revenues at the time of sale; |
| | pre-need sales of cemetery interment rights, which we generally recognize as revenues when we have collected 10% of the sales price from the customer; |
| | pre-need sales of cemetery merchandise, which we recognize as revenues when we satisfy the criteria specified below for delivery of the merchandise to the customer; |
36
| | pre-need sales of cemetery services, other than perpetual care services, which we recognize as revenues when we perform the services for the customer; |
| | accumulated merchandise trust earnings related to the delivery of pre-need cemetery merchandise and the performance of pre-need cemetery services, which we recognize as revenues when we deliver the merchandise or perform the services; |
| | income from perpetual care trusts, which we recognize as revenues as the income is earned in the trust; and |
| | other items, such as interest income on pre-need installment contracts and sales of land. |
Revenues from pre-need sales of cemetery merchandise and the related accumulated merchandise trust earnings are deferred until the merchandise is delivered to the customer, which generally means that:
| | the merchandise is complete and ready for installation or, in the case of merchandise other than burial vaults, storage on third-party premises; |
| | the merchandise is either installed or stored at an off-site location, at no additional cost to us, and specifically identified with a particular customer, except as described below; and |
| | the risks and rewards of ownership have passed to the customer. |
We generally satisfy these delivery criteria by purchasing the merchandise and either installing it on our cemetery property or storing it, at the customers request, in third-party warehouses, at no additional cost to us, until the time of need. With respect to burial vaults, we install the vaults rather than storing them to satisfy the delivery criteria. When merchandise is stored for a customer, we may issue a certificate of ownership to the customer to evidence the transfer to the customer of the risks and rewards of ownership.
Deferred Cemetery Revenues, Net. Deferred revenues from pre-need sales and related merchandise trust earnings are reflected on our balance sheet in deferred cemetery revenues, net, until we recognize the amounts as revenues. Deferred cemetery revenues, net, also includes deferred revenues from pre-need sales that were entered into by entities we acquired prior to the time we acquired them. These entities include those that we acquired at the time of the formation of Cornerstone and other entities we subsequently acquired. We recognize revenues from these acquired pre-need sales in the manner described abovethat is, when we deliver the merchandise to, or perform the services for, the customer. Our profit margin on these pre-need sales is generally less than our profit margin on other pre-need sales because, in accordance with industry practice at the time these acquired pre-need sales were made, none of the selling expenses were recognized at the time of sale. As a result, we are required to recognize all of the expenses (including deferred selling expenses) associated with these acquired pre-need sales when we recognize the revenues from those sales. We recognize certain expenses, such as indirect selling costs, maintenance costs and general and administrative costs, at the time the pre-need sale is made and defer other expenses, such as direct selling costs and costs of goods sold, until we recognize revenues on the sale. As a result, our profit margin on current pre-need sales is generally higher than on the pre-need sales we acquired.
37
Revenues by State. The following table shows the percentage of revenues attributable to each of the states in which we operate for the periods presented:
| Year Ended December 31, | |||||||||
| 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | |||||||
| Pennsylvania |
29.3 | % | 29.0 | % | 27.8 | % | |||
| Virginia |
16.0 | % | 15.4 | % | 12.6 | % | |||
| New Jersey |
18.1 | % | 15.9 | % | 12.4 | % | |||
| West Virginia |
14.4 | % | 11.0 | % | 9.7 | % | |||
| Maryland |
12.8 | % | 10.9 | % | 8.6 | % | |||
| North Carolina |
0.4 | % | 5.5 | % | 5.9 | % | |||
| Alabama |
0.8 | % | 1.9 | % | 4.6 | % | |||
| Ohio |
5.2 | % | 5.8 | % | 4.2 | % | |||
| Oregon |
0.0 | % | 0.3 | % | 2.9 | % | |||
| Kansas |
0.0 | % | 0.2 | % | 2.1 | % | |||
| Georgia |
0.2 | % | 1.8 | % | 2.0 | % | |||
| Michigan |
0.0 | % | 0.2 | % | 1.7 | % | |||
| Missouri |
0.0 | % | 0.3 | % | 1.3 | % | |||
| Tennessee |
1.8 | % | 0.9 | % | 1.2 | % | |||
| Kentucky |
0.0 | % | 0.1 | % | 0.7 | % | |||
| Illinois |
0.0 | % | 0.1 | % | 0.5 | % | |||
| Washington |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.4 | % | |||
| Indiana |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.3 | % | |||
| Colorado |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.3 | % | |||
| California |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.2 | % | |||
| Delaware |
0.2 | % | 0.2 | % | 0.2 | % | |||
| Colorado |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.1 | % | |||
| Iowa |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.1 | % | |||
| South Carolina |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.1 | % | |||
| Rhode Island |
0.2 | % | 0.2 | % | 0.1 | % | |||
| Hawaii |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | |||
| Puerto Rico |
0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | 0.0 | % | |||
| Connecticut |
0.6 | % | 0.3 | % | 0.0 | % | |||
| Total |
100.0 | % | 100.0 | % | 100.0 | % | |||
38
Principal Products and Services. The following table shows the percentage of revenues attributable to our principal products, services and other items during the periods presented:
| Year Ended December 31, | |||||||||
| 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | |||||||
| Pre-need sales: |
|||||||||
| Burial lots |
7.4 | % | 7.5 | % | 7.3 | % | |||
| Mausoleum crypts |
9.4 | % | 8.1 | % | 6.1 | % | |||
| Markers |
6.1 | % | 5.1 | % | 7.0 | % | |||
| Grave marker bases |
2.0 | % | 1.6 | % | 2.7 | % | |||
| Burial vaults |
4.8 | % | 6.3 | % | 5.6 | % | |||
| Lawn crypts |
0.5 | % | 0.2 | % | 0.9 | % | |||
| Caskets |
7.0 | % | 3.9 | % | 4.3 | % | |||
| Initial openings and closings (1) |
5.3 | % | 7.1 | % | 5.9 | % | |||
| Other (2) |
2.5 | % | 3.1 | % | 2.8 | % | |||
| Total pre-need sales |
45.0 | % | 42.9 | % | 42.7 | % | |||
| Interest from pre-need installment contracts |
3.8 | % | 3.6 | % | 3.2 | % | |||
| Investment income from trusts: |
|||||||||
| Perpetual care trusts |
7.7 | % | 8.3 | % | 8.8 | % | |||
| Merchandise trusts |
6.4 | % | 5.2 | % | 5.4 | % | |||
| Total investment income from trusts |
14.1 | % | 13.5 | % | 14.2 | % | |||
| At-need sales: |
|||||||||
| Openings and closings (3) |
12.3 | % | 12.9 | % | 11.9 | % | |||
| Markers |
7.2 | % | 8.1 | % | 7.9 | % | |||
| Burial lots |
2.9 | % | 3.3 | % | 3.0 | % | |||
| Mausoleum crypts |
1.8 | % | 1.6 | % | 1.5 | % | |||
| Grave marker bases |
2.4 | % | 2.5 | % | 2.4 | % | |||
| Foundations and inscriptions (4) |
1.5 | % | 1.5 | % | 1.2 | % | |||
| Burial vaults |
1.3 | % | 1.3 | % | 1.4 | % | |||
| Other (5) |
1.3 | % | 1.5 | % | 1.4 | % | |||
| Total at-need sales |
30.7 | % | 32.7 | % | 30.8 | % | |||
| Funeral home revenues |
2.8 | % | 5.3 | % | 7.4 | % | |||
| Other revenues (6) |
3.6 | % | 2.0 | % | 1.7 | % | |||
| Total revenues |
100.0 | % | 100.0 | % | 100.0 | % | |||
| (1) | Installation of the burial vault into the ground. |
| (2) | Includes revenues from niches, mausoleum lights, cremations, pet cemeteries, installation of burial vaults and markers sold to our customers by third parties and pre-need sales made in connection with the relocation of other cemetery interment rights. Also includes document processing fees on pre-need contracts and fees from sales of travel care protection, which covers shipping costs of a body if death occurs more than 100 miles from the place of residence. |
| (3) | Installation of the burial vault into the ground and the placement of the casket into the vault. |
| (4) | Installation of the marker on the ground and its inscription. |
| (5) | Includes revenues from lawn crypts, decorative lights installed on mausoleum crypts, installations of burial vaults and markers sold to our customers by third parties and cremation fees. Also includes document-processing fees on at-need contracts. |
| (6) | Includes sales of manufactured burial vaults to third parties, sales of cemetery and undeveloped land, commissions from sales of pre-need funeral policies and death benefit policies provided through a third-party insurance provider and other miscellaneous revenue. |
39
Pre-need Sales. Pre-need products and services are typically sold on an installment basis with terms ranging from 12 months to 84 months, with an average of 34 months. Our pre-need contracts are subject to cooling-off periods, generally between three and thirty days, required by state law during which the customer may elect to cancel the contract and receive a full refund of amounts paid. Subject to applicable state law, if customers cancel after the cooling-off period, we are generally permitted to retain the amounts already paid on contracts, including any amounts that were required to be deposited into trust. Historically, our customers have cancelled contracts representing approximately 10% of our pre-need sales (based on contract dollar amounts) after the cooling-off period. If the products and services purchased under a pre-need contract are needed for interment before payment has been made in full, generally the balance due becomes immediately due and must be paid in cash.
Approximately 42% of our pre-need sales contracts do not bear interest. Historically, we did not charge interest on pre-need sales contracts having a term of 12 months or less, and during 2005, we did not charge interest on contracts with a term of 24 months or less. In those cases, interest is imputed at varying market rates, currently 9.75%. The interest rates on our interest-bearing pre-need contracts range from 8% to 12%, with a weighted average interest rate of 9.2%. We offer prepayment incentives to customers whose pre-need contracts are longer than 36 months and bear interest. If those customers pay their contracts in full in less than 12 months, we rebate the interest that we collected from them. Even though this rebate policy reduces the amount of interest income we receive on our accounts receivable, the net effect is an increase in our immediate cash flow. Interest income from pre-need sales, including imputed interest, accounted for 3.2% of our 2007 revenues.
Trusting. We are generally required by state law to place a portion of the sales price of cemetery interment rights, whether at-need or pre-need, into a perpetual care trust to maintain the cemetery property in perpetuity. The amount that we are required to deposit into a perpetual care trust varies from state to state but is generally 10% to 20% of the sales price of the interment right. As payments are received from the customer, we deposit a pro rata amount of the payment into a perpetual care trust. For example, if we receive a payment of 20% of the sales price from the customer, we would deposit into the perpetual care trust 20% of the total amount required to be placed into trust for that sale.
Under the state laws that require the creation of the perpetual care trusts, we are not permitted to withdraw the trust principal, and our creditors and customers have no right to make claim to the funds deposited into these trusts. Amounts held in these perpetual care trusts are invested by third-party investment managers as discussed in more detail below. As a result, we do not possess legal title to the trust principal in these perpetual care trusts; however,