* The recovery in 4Q2018 shows that CTRP has already survived the new law and the new competitor in 2018. * We believe EPS will grow 12% in 2019. * However, we believe the market has already over-reacted to the news last November that CTRP became the largest online travel agency. * We set a target price of USD23.80, which is 32% below the market price.
Other than CEO Elon Musk’s tweets, there is not a whole lot that has been announced about the Model Y other than that it will be unveiled at the company’s L.A. Design Studio on March 14. Here is a brief list of what we know so far about the Model Y:
Musk also had stated during the 4Q earnings call that the Model Y will begin production at the Shanghai Gigafactory 3 which is projected to be completed at the end of 2019. The company has not confirmed that commercial production of the Y will begin in the U.S. simultaneously.
There are no changes or additions in Musk’s tweets to previously announced commercialization target dates for the Model Y.
Tesla’s new product launches historically have been mired in delays. Assuming management does not repeat its assembly line prototyping mistakes prior to the Model 3 launch there should not be an issue currently with meeting its production target timeline of 1H20. However, we also believe any such concerns would be legitimate given Tesla’s history.
A Tesla Model Y Teaser Shot
Source: Road & Track
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* The recovery in 4Q2018 shows that CTRP has already survived the new law and the new competitor in 2018. * We believe EPS will grow 12% in 2019. * However, we believe the market has already over-reacted to the news last November that CTRP became the largest online travel agency. * We set a target price of USD23.80, which is 32% below the market price.
Other than CEO Elon Musk’s tweets, there is not a whole lot that has been announced about the Model Y other than that it will be unveiled at the company’s L.A. Design Studio on March 14. Here is a brief list of what we know so far about the Model Y:
Musk also had stated during the 4Q earnings call that the Model Y will begin production at the Shanghai Gigafactory 3 which is projected to be completed at the end of 2019. The company has not confirmed that commercial production of the Y will begin in the U.S. simultaneously.
There are no changes or additions in Musk’s tweets to previously announced commercialization target dates for the Model Y.
Tesla’s new product launches historically have been mired in delays. Assuming management does not repeat its assembly line prototyping mistakes prior to the Model 3 launch there should not be an issue currently with meeting its production target timeline of 1H20. However, we also believe any such concerns would be legitimate given Tesla’s history.
The publication of Lyft’s IPO prospectus is a clear positive for Rakuten Inc (4755 JP) . As a pure investment, Rakuten’s return on its Lyft investments could be 273-366% or ¥101-136 per share based on the $20-25bn valuation range reported by the press. There has been a lot of focus on the investment gains Rakuten should accrue but the real upside is a timely boost to liquidity plus accounting cover as mobile investment accelerates. Whether one believes Rakuten can succeed in mobile or not, it has the capital and paper profits to support a splashy introduction and spending is already accelerating.
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* The recovery in 4Q2018 shows that CTRP has already survived the new law and the new competitor in 2018. * We believe EPS will grow 12% in 2019. * However, we believe the market has already over-reacted to the news last November that CTRP became the largest online travel agency. * We set a target price of USD23.80, which is 32% below the market price.
Other than CEO Elon Musk’s tweets, there is not a whole lot that has been announced about the Model Y other than that it will be unveiled at the company’s L.A. Design Studio on March 14. Here is a brief list of what we know so far about the Model Y:
Musk also had stated during the 4Q earnings call that the Model Y will begin production at the Shanghai Gigafactory 3 which is projected to be completed at the end of 2019. The company has not confirmed that commercial production of the Y will begin in the U.S. simultaneously.
There are no changes or additions in Musk’s tweets to previously announced commercialization target dates for the Model Y.
Tesla’s new product launches historically have been mired in delays. Assuming management does not repeat its assembly line prototyping mistakes prior to the Model 3 launch there should not be an issue currently with meeting its production target timeline of 1H20. However, we also believe any such concerns would be legitimate given Tesla’s history.
The publication of Lyft’s IPO prospectus is a clear positive for Rakuten Inc (4755 JP) . As a pure investment, Rakuten’s return on its Lyft investments could be 273-366% or ¥101-136 per share based on the $20-25bn valuation range reported by the press. There has been a lot of focus on the investment gains Rakuten should accrue but the real upside is a timely boost to liquidity plus accounting cover as mobile investment accelerates. Whether one believes Rakuten can succeed in mobile or not, it has the capital and paper profits to support a splashy introduction and spending is already accelerating.
The five-fold rise in HSBC Holdings (5 HK)’s latest quarterly credit costs compared with the first quarter of the year should not surprise our readers. It was always the case that the bank’s provision expenses were too low, not only in the first quarter of the year, but even through the third quarter. This is where following of lower headline bad loan figures wholly misleads. What really matters now is where credit costs will move in coming quarters and years. We offer long-perspective on this suggesting sizeable costs in 2019, where HSBC is now indicating “normalisation of credit costs going forward.” We note further observations from the bank’s granular disclosures that point toward worsening credit metrics, further supporting the notion of ‘normalisation’ or what we can simply call far higher credit costs. In any case, we do not believe most are expecting a wholesale rise in provision costs at HSBC, from current levels.
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We maintain BUY rating for WICE with a new target price of Bt5.20 (previous target price: 7.50), based on 29xPE’19E, its one year average trading range or 20% discount to Thai transportation sector.
The story:
Cross broader business plays the key growth driver in 2019
We revised down earnings in 2019-21E due to lower-than-expected margins
Risks:
Stronger Baht vs major foreign currencies such as US dollar causes lower income in Baht terms as the main reporting currency is Baht
Higher than expected in fluctuation in freight rates
Intensity of freight forwarding businesses in both domestic and overseas
This article is a round up of the key takeaways from our recent meeting with Sony’s IR team. Our main focus was on the PlayStation and subsequent hardware and software developments, the company’s mobile phones business unit, the pictures unit as well as the semiconductor business.
In the gaming segment, Sony doesn’t see Stadia as a threat since Sony mainly caters to the core gaming segment. Sony does not expect cloud gaming to offer the same quality that consoles offer to core gamers anytime soon. For the time being, Stadia will most likely appeal to casual gamers.
In the pictures segment, Sony is developing a Spider-Verse sequel. A definite release date is yet to be confirmed, however, looking at the first movie’s success, we can expect a similar result for the sequel upon release.
The company also plans to hold onto its mobile communications segment even though it is expected to make losses in FY03/19 as well. For Sony, this segment is crucial in developing 5G technologies.
In the semiconductors segment, Sony expects a demand hike from the number of cameras used per phone. This is in spite of the mobile phone market itself slowing down. Sony expects to increase the ASPs of these sensors going forward as well.
We selectively visited a dozen companies in March and were most impressed with three of them (two of which we happily own):
SISB, Thailand’s only listed education stock, whose market cap has increased more than 30% since its IPO. The future potential growth they are currently working on in Cambodia and China will show up here and spruce the company’s already strong growth. Working in a favorable environment (Thailand’s affluent class is growing) also helps.
MINT, the country’s hotel chain giant and 20th largest chain in the world, sees great growth potential in Europe, where things are slowly turning around after they made two big acquisitions (NH Hotels and Tivoli). Synergies are also materializing with co-marketing and re-branding efforts.
After You, arguably the dessert chain with the highest margin in Thailand. No longer a newbie IPO stock, these guys boast collaboration with global giant Starbucks and branching out into new channels such as After You Durian.
Postal Savings Bank Of China (1658 HK) is outgrowing its peers on the top-line given exuberant pace of credit growth (especially in consumer lending such as credit cards but also in corporate and in agriculture). Expansion in Interest Income on earning assets is well in excess of an increase in Interest Expenses on interest-bearing Liabilities. This is not always the case in China today. Fee income is also growing by double-digits too. The bank has a huge deposit base and Liquidity is ample. In addition, “Jaws” stand out as being highly positive at 20pts given aforementioned top-line growth coupled with OPEX restraint.
However, capital remains tight and asset quality has deteriorated markedly. Despite the top-line growth and cost-control, an increasing amount of pre-impairment Income is being consumed by loan loss provisions and other asset writedowns. Substandard loans have exploded while loss loans have climbed forcefully. The bank shapes as if it is striving to grow itself out an asset quality bind. Given Balance Sheet risks, the bank has adjusted its provisioning accordingly.
The relatively meagre capital position (for example Equity/Assets or Basel 111 Leverage Ratio) while improving is surely the reason why Postal Savings cannot pay a higher dividend in comparison with say Agricultural Bank Of China (1288 HK) , Bank Of China (601988 CH), and China Construction Bank (601939 CH) which all command yields in excess of 5% and rate as income stocks. The Dividend Yield here though is not unattractive at 3.9%.
The PH Score of 7.7 encompasses valuation as well as generally positive metric progression. Combined with an underbought technical position and an additional valuation filter, the bank stands out with the aforementioned strategic peers in the top decile of global bank opportunity. Valuations are not stretched: shares trade at a P/Book of 0.74x, a Franchise Valuation of 4%, and an Earnings Yield of 15.5%.
Despite the aforementioned deep concerns and caveats, we believe that Postal Savings Bank is a valuable, liquid, deposit-rich franchise with a capacity to grow.
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This article is a round up of the key takeaways from our recent meeting with Sony’s IR team. Our main focus was on the PlayStation and subsequent hardware and software developments, the company’s mobile phones business unit, the pictures unit as well as the semiconductor business.
In the gaming segment, Sony doesn’t see Stadia as a threat since Sony mainly caters to the core gaming segment. Sony does not expect cloud gaming to offer the same quality that consoles offer to core gamers anytime soon. For the time being, Stadia will most likely appeal to casual gamers.
In the pictures segment, Sony is developing a Spider-Verse sequel. A definite release date is yet to be confirmed, however, looking at the first movie’s success, we can expect a similar result for the sequel upon release.
The company also plans to hold onto its mobile communications segment even though it is expected to make losses in FY03/19 as well. For Sony, this segment is crucial in developing 5G technologies.
In the semiconductors segment, Sony expects a demand hike from the number of cameras used per phone. This is in spite of the mobile phone market itself slowing down. Sony expects to increase the ASPs of these sensors going forward as well.
We selectively visited a dozen companies in March and were most impressed with three of them (two of which we happily own):
SISB, Thailand’s only listed education stock, whose market cap has increased more than 30% since its IPO. The future potential growth they are currently working on in Cambodia and China will show up here and spruce the company’s already strong growth. Working in a favorable environment (Thailand’s affluent class is growing) also helps.
MINT, the country’s hotel chain giant and 20th largest chain in the world, sees great growth potential in Europe, where things are slowly turning around after they made two big acquisitions (NH Hotels and Tivoli). Synergies are also materializing with co-marketing and re-branding efforts.
After You, arguably the dessert chain with the highest margin in Thailand. No longer a newbie IPO stock, these guys boast collaboration with global giant Starbucks and branching out into new channels such as After You Durian.
Postal Savings Bank Of China (1658 HK) is outgrowing its peers on the top-line given exuberant pace of credit growth (especially in consumer lending such as credit cards but also in corporate and in agriculture). Expansion in Interest Income on earning assets is well in excess of an increase in Interest Expenses on interest-bearing Liabilities. This is not always the case in China today. Fee income is also growing by double-digits too. The bank has a huge deposit base and Liquidity is ample. In addition, “Jaws” stand out as being highly positive at 20pts given aforementioned top-line growth coupled with OPEX restraint.
However, capital remains tight and asset quality has deteriorated markedly. Despite the top-line growth and cost-control, an increasing amount of pre-impairment Income is being consumed by loan loss provisions and other asset writedowns. Substandard loans have exploded while loss loans have climbed forcefully. The bank shapes as if it is striving to grow itself out an asset quality bind. Given Balance Sheet risks, the bank has adjusted its provisioning accordingly.
The relatively meagre capital position (for example Equity/Assets or Basel 111 Leverage Ratio) while improving is surely the reason why Postal Savings cannot pay a higher dividend in comparison with say Agricultural Bank Of China (1288 HK) , Bank Of China (601988 CH), and China Construction Bank (601939 CH) which all command yields in excess of 5% and rate as income stocks. The Dividend Yield here though is not unattractive at 3.9%.
The PH Score of 7.7 encompasses valuation as well as generally positive metric progression. Combined with an underbought technical position and an additional valuation filter, the bank stands out with the aforementioned strategic peers in the top decile of global bank opportunity. Valuations are not stretched: shares trade at a P/Book of 0.74x, a Franchise Valuation of 4%, and an Earnings Yield of 15.5%.
Despite the aforementioned deep concerns and caveats, we believe that Postal Savings Bank is a valuable, liquid, deposit-rich franchise with a capacity to grow.
In terms of fundamental momentum and trends (our core focus) Bank Of China (601988 CH) reported a mixed set of numbers at FY18.
While systemic asset quality issues weigh heavily on results, the bank has prudently improved its liquidity metrics, enhanced its provisioning, while cost-control remains exemplary in the face of stresses from loan quality and some systemic funding cost pressure. Underlying “jaws” are highly positive at 558bps. The improvement in Efficiency is a plus signal amidst the asset quality smoke.
All in all, it’s a stable rather than a gung-ho picture. Pre-tax Profit has barely budged since 2014.
But you are being paid for the risk which ultimately lies with the PRC. The Dividend Yield stands at 5.7%. This makes shares attractive as they are at the other Chinese core strategic lenders. P/Book and Franchise Valuation lie at 0.6x and 7% while the earnings yield has reached 19%. A PH Score of 7.6 reflects valuation to a great extent as well as reasonable metric progression. This looks like a coupon-clipping opportunity.
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Late last year, in the final run-up to the vote to determine whether Alpine (6816 JP) investors would subject themselves to a bad share exchange ratio or would choose to oblige Alps (6770 JP) to have another run at it in a different format, Alps announced a shareholder return policy which included buying back ¥40 billion of shares.
It is to be noted that this meant that the combined entity was going to be left with less cash than the total deemed necessary by the two companies just a very short while before. Why? Because Alps – with the strong governance it has – obviously had the right amount – and Alpine also had the right amount (it needed substantial equity-funded cash as “working capital” because otherwise it would run a serious danger of business disruption and deterioration. So despite this severe business risk, the two companies effectively announced they would disburse 90% of Alpine’s cash on hand to shareholders POST-MERGER through the special dividend offered to sweeten the pot to get the merger through, and the ¥40 billion buyback.
The merger, of course, went through, and the ¥28.4 billion* buyback is proceeding apace.
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We selectively visited a dozen companies in March and were most impressed with three of them (two of which we happily own):
SISB, Thailand’s only listed education stock, whose market cap has increased more than 30% since its IPO. The future potential growth they are currently working on in Cambodia and China will show up here and spruce the company’s already strong growth. Working in a favorable environment (Thailand’s affluent class is growing) also helps.
MINT, the country’s hotel chain giant and 20th largest chain in the world, sees great growth potential in Europe, where things are slowly turning around after they made two big acquisitions (NH Hotels and Tivoli). Synergies are also materializing with co-marketing and re-branding efforts.
After You, arguably the dessert chain with the highest margin in Thailand. No longer a newbie IPO stock, these guys boast collaboration with global giant Starbucks and branching out into new channels such as After You Durian.
Postal Savings Bank Of China (1658 HK) is outgrowing its peers on the top-line given exuberant pace of credit growth (especially in consumer lending such as credit cards but also in corporate and in agriculture). Expansion in Interest Income on earning assets is well in excess of an increase in Interest Expenses on interest-bearing Liabilities. This is not always the case in China today. Fee income is also growing by double-digits too. The bank has a huge deposit base and Liquidity is ample. In addition, “Jaws” stand out as being highly positive at 20pts given aforementioned top-line growth coupled with OPEX restraint.
However, capital remains tight and asset quality has deteriorated markedly. Despite the top-line growth and cost-control, an increasing amount of pre-impairment Income is being consumed by loan loss provisions and other asset writedowns. Substandard loans have exploded while loss loans have climbed forcefully. The bank shapes as if it is striving to grow itself out an asset quality bind. Given Balance Sheet risks, the bank has adjusted its provisioning accordingly.
The relatively meagre capital position (for example Equity/Assets or Basel 111 Leverage Ratio) while improving is surely the reason why Postal Savings cannot pay a higher dividend in comparison with say Agricultural Bank Of China (1288 HK) , Bank Of China (601988 CH), and China Construction Bank (601939 CH) which all command yields in excess of 5% and rate as income stocks. The Dividend Yield here though is not unattractive at 3.9%.
The PH Score of 7.7 encompasses valuation as well as generally positive metric progression. Combined with an underbought technical position and an additional valuation filter, the bank stands out with the aforementioned strategic peers in the top decile of global bank opportunity. Valuations are not stretched: shares trade at a P/Book of 0.74x, a Franchise Valuation of 4%, and an Earnings Yield of 15.5%.
Despite the aforementioned deep concerns and caveats, we believe that Postal Savings Bank is a valuable, liquid, deposit-rich franchise with a capacity to grow.
In terms of fundamental momentum and trends (our core focus) Bank Of China (601988 CH) reported a mixed set of numbers at FY18.
While systemic asset quality issues weigh heavily on results, the bank has prudently improved its liquidity metrics, enhanced its provisioning, while cost-control remains exemplary in the face of stresses from loan quality and some systemic funding cost pressure. Underlying “jaws” are highly positive at 558bps. The improvement in Efficiency is a plus signal amidst the asset quality smoke.
All in all, it’s a stable rather than a gung-ho picture. Pre-tax Profit has barely budged since 2014.
But you are being paid for the risk which ultimately lies with the PRC. The Dividend Yield stands at 5.7%. This makes shares attractive as they are at the other Chinese core strategic lenders. P/Book and Franchise Valuation lie at 0.6x and 7% while the earnings yield has reached 19%. A PH Score of 7.6 reflects valuation to a great extent as well as reasonable metric progression. This looks like a coupon-clipping opportunity.
The 4Q18 numbers released by the Malaysia wireless operators, showed stable trends vs 3Q. Market service revenue growth of -1.1% YoY was stable, with Maxis (MAXIS MK) the only operator able to slightly increase its market share (again). While 2H18 marked a small break in the Malaysian wireless sector recovery, guidance for 2019 looks broadly encouraging.
Axiata (AXIATA MK) expects a “promising 2019” with revenue and profit growth momentum (across the board),
Maxis guides for a slight improvement of revenues, albeit with EBITDA declining due to new business opportunities, and
DIGI (DIGI MK) which is a bit more cautious, expects flat revenues.
Data usage is already very high in Malaysia, but we expect growth to continue (at a slower pace) supported by youthful demographics (younger people use more video on mobile). The Malaysian operators have done a reasonable job at monetizing data growth so far.
Chris Hoare turned more positive on Malaysian telcos in early 2019 as affordability has improved and there is a new profitable growth opportunity in fibre wholesale (with Telekom Malaysia (T MK) being forced to offer at low prices). Operating trends have also improved and we expect this to continue. In January, we upgraded Axiata to Buy and both Maxis and Digi to Neutral. None of them are “cheap” with Maxis (MAXIS MK) and DIGI (DIGI MK) on 11-13x EV:EBITDA, and Axiata on a more reasonable 6.5x.
We recently visited Toyota at its Toyota city headquarters and spent some time discussing this very topic. We believe this move is being made with an eye towards China in particular and to an extent the US. We would also highlight the continuing development of Toyota’s relationship with Suzuki. As the automakers move slowly towards what is likely to be an eventual union, the sharing of hybrid technology with Suzuki could have a significant impact on the medium-term prospects of both automakers.
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Postal Savings Bank Of China (1658 HK) is outgrowing its peers on the top-line given exuberant pace of credit growth (especially in consumer lending such as credit cards but also in corporate and in agriculture). Expansion in Interest Income on earning assets is well in excess of an increase in Interest Expenses on interest-bearing Liabilities. This is not always the case in China today. Fee income is also growing by double-digits too. The bank has a huge deposit base and Liquidity is ample. In addition, “Jaws” stand out as being highly positive at 20pts given aforementioned top-line growth coupled with OPEX restraint.
However, capital remains tight and asset quality has deteriorated markedly. Despite the top-line growth and cost-control, an increasing amount of pre-impairment Income is being consumed by loan loss provisions and other asset writedowns. Substandard loans have exploded while loss loans have climbed forcefully. The bank shapes as if it is striving to grow itself out an asset quality bind. Given Balance Sheet risks, the bank has adjusted its provisioning accordingly.
The relatively meagre capital position (for example Equity/Assets or Basel 111 Leverage Ratio) while improving is surely the reason why Postal Savings cannot pay a higher dividend in comparison with say Agricultural Bank Of China (1288 HK) , Bank Of China (601988 CH), and China Construction Bank (601939 CH) which all command yields in excess of 5% and rate as income stocks. The Dividend Yield here though is not unattractive at 3.9%.
The PH Score of 7.7 encompasses valuation as well as generally positive metric progression. Combined with an underbought technical position and an additional valuation filter, the bank stands out with the aforementioned strategic peers in the top decile of global bank opportunity. Valuations are not stretched: shares trade at a P/Book of 0.74x, a Franchise Valuation of 4%, and an Earnings Yield of 15.5%.
Despite the aforementioned deep concerns and caveats, we believe that Postal Savings Bank is a valuable, liquid, deposit-rich franchise with a capacity to grow.
In terms of fundamental momentum and trends (our core focus) Bank Of China (601988 CH) reported a mixed set of numbers at FY18.
While systemic asset quality issues weigh heavily on results, the bank has prudently improved its liquidity metrics, enhanced its provisioning, while cost-control remains exemplary in the face of stresses from loan quality and some systemic funding cost pressure. Underlying “jaws” are highly positive at 558bps. The improvement in Efficiency is a plus signal amidst the asset quality smoke.
All in all, it’s a stable rather than a gung-ho picture. Pre-tax Profit has barely budged since 2014.
But you are being paid for the risk which ultimately lies with the PRC. The Dividend Yield stands at 5.7%. This makes shares attractive as they are at the other Chinese core strategic lenders. P/Book and Franchise Valuation lie at 0.6x and 7% while the earnings yield has reached 19%. A PH Score of 7.6 reflects valuation to a great extent as well as reasonable metric progression. This looks like a coupon-clipping opportunity.
The 4Q18 numbers released by the Malaysia wireless operators, showed stable trends vs 3Q. Market service revenue growth of -1.1% YoY was stable, with Maxis (MAXIS MK) the only operator able to slightly increase its market share (again). While 2H18 marked a small break in the Malaysian wireless sector recovery, guidance for 2019 looks broadly encouraging.
Axiata (AXIATA MK) expects a “promising 2019” with revenue and profit growth momentum (across the board),
Maxis guides for a slight improvement of revenues, albeit with EBITDA declining due to new business opportunities, and
DIGI (DIGI MK) which is a bit more cautious, expects flat revenues.
Data usage is already very high in Malaysia, but we expect growth to continue (at a slower pace) supported by youthful demographics (younger people use more video on mobile). The Malaysian operators have done a reasonable job at monetizing data growth so far.
Chris Hoare turned more positive on Malaysian telcos in early 2019 as affordability has improved and there is a new profitable growth opportunity in fibre wholesale (with Telekom Malaysia (T MK) being forced to offer at low prices). Operating trends have also improved and we expect this to continue. In January, we upgraded Axiata to Buy and both Maxis and Digi to Neutral. None of them are “cheap” with Maxis (MAXIS MK) and DIGI (DIGI MK) on 11-13x EV:EBITDA, and Axiata on a more reasonable 6.5x.
We recently visited Toyota at its Toyota city headquarters and spent some time discussing this very topic. We believe this move is being made with an eye towards China in particular and to an extent the US. We would also highlight the continuing development of Toyota’s relationship with Suzuki. As the automakers move slowly towards what is likely to be an eventual union, the sharing of hybrid technology with Suzuki could have a significant impact on the medium-term prospects of both automakers.
This is a monthly version of our HK Connect Weekly note, in which I highlight Hong Kong-listed companies leading the southbound flow weekly. Over the past month, we have seen the flow turned from outflow in February to inflow in March. Chinese investors were also buying Consumer Staples and Consumer Discretionary stocks.
Our March Coverage of Hong Kong Connect southbound flow
Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.
In terms of fundamental momentum and trends (our core focus) Bank Of China (601988 CH) reported a mixed set of numbers at FY18.
While systemic asset quality issues weigh heavily on results, the bank has prudently improved its liquidity metrics, enhanced its provisioning, while cost-control remains exemplary in the face of stresses from loan quality and some systemic funding cost pressure. Underlying “jaws” are highly positive at 558bps. The improvement in Efficiency is a plus signal amidst the asset quality smoke.
All in all, it’s a stable rather than a gung-ho picture. Pre-tax Profit has barely budged since 2014.
But you are being paid for the risk which ultimately lies with the PRC. The Dividend Yield stands at 5.7%. This makes shares attractive as they are at the other Chinese core strategic lenders. P/Book and Franchise Valuation lie at 0.6x and 7% while the earnings yield has reached 19%. A PH Score of 7.6 reflects valuation to a great extent as well as reasonable metric progression. This looks like a coupon-clipping opportunity.
The 4Q18 numbers released by the Malaysia wireless operators, showed stable trends vs 3Q. Market service revenue growth of -1.1% YoY was stable, with Maxis (MAXIS MK) the only operator able to slightly increase its market share (again). While 2H18 marked a small break in the Malaysian wireless sector recovery, guidance for 2019 looks broadly encouraging.
Axiata (AXIATA MK) expects a “promising 2019” with revenue and profit growth momentum (across the board),
Maxis guides for a slight improvement of revenues, albeit with EBITDA declining due to new business opportunities, and
DIGI (DIGI MK) which is a bit more cautious, expects flat revenues.
Data usage is already very high in Malaysia, but we expect growth to continue (at a slower pace) supported by youthful demographics (younger people use more video on mobile). The Malaysian operators have done a reasonable job at monetizing data growth so far.
Chris Hoare turned more positive on Malaysian telcos in early 2019 as affordability has improved and there is a new profitable growth opportunity in fibre wholesale (with Telekom Malaysia (T MK) being forced to offer at low prices). Operating trends have also improved and we expect this to continue. In January, we upgraded Axiata to Buy and both Maxis and Digi to Neutral. None of them are “cheap” with Maxis (MAXIS MK) and DIGI (DIGI MK) on 11-13x EV:EBITDA, and Axiata on a more reasonable 6.5x.
We recently visited Toyota at its Toyota city headquarters and spent some time discussing this very topic. We believe this move is being made with an eye towards China in particular and to an extent the US. We would also highlight the continuing development of Toyota’s relationship with Suzuki. As the automakers move slowly towards what is likely to be an eventual union, the sharing of hybrid technology with Suzuki could have a significant impact on the medium-term prospects of both automakers.
This is a monthly version of our HK Connect Weekly note, in which I highlight Hong Kong-listed companies leading the southbound flow weekly. Over the past month, we have seen the flow turned from outflow in February to inflow in March. Chinese investors were also buying Consumer Staples and Consumer Discretionary stocks.
Our March Coverage of Hong Kong Connect southbound flow
Since my last insight on RHT Health Trust (RHT SP) on 29th Jan 2019 – RHT Health Trust – Cash on Sale , investors who bought into RHT Health Trust at S$0.029 per unit would have netted a return on investment of 40.7% if they sell out today, including the cash distribution that they have received in 1st March.
Since last insight in January, RHT reported major changes to its Board of Directors and Management. The strong background of the new BOD and CEO in investment banking and REIT management will be valuable to RHT as it progresses to transform itself and acquire new business/assets to inject into the Trust.
Key investment thesis remains unchanged. RHT Health Trust is an event-driven play and the catalyst will be the announcement of an RTO deal to inject new assets/business into the Trust. This will be the key driver to further upside in RHT.
Proposed investment strategy at this stage is to hold on to the investment in RHT and look for opportunities to add if RHT trades lower. Target entry price is S$0.016 per unit, which translates to a NAV discount of 27.3%.
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Chris Hoare met the Thai telcos recently but did not come away particularly enthused. His view is that the market probably remains tough this year. The good news is that the low priced, limited speed with unlimited usage, offers have mostly been withdrawn. It will take 2-3 quarters for this to work through, as these were 12 month plans, but it does suggest improved data monetization as the year progresses. A lack of data monetization was the key reason behind the revenue slowdown in 2H18. However, with data usage now so high (around 10GB/month), and content services unlikely to lead to revenue growth in the foreseeable future, overall revenue recovery is likely to be modest.
In our Discover SZ/SH Connect series, we aim to help our investors understand the flow of northbound trades via the Shanghai Connect and Shenzhen Connect, as analyzed by our proprietary data engine. We will discuss the stocks that experienced the most inflow and outflow by offshore investors in the past seven days.
We split the stocks eligible for the northbound trade into three groups: those with a market capitalization of above USD 5 billion, and those with a market capitalization between USD 1 billion and USD 5 billion.
We note that offshore investors were buying all GICS sectors, and had a strong preference for Industrials, Consumer Staples, Consumer Discretionary, and Financials names. We estimate that total inflow into the A-share market via northbound trade amounted to USD 8.4 bn in February.
Late last year, in the final run-up to the vote to determine whether Alpine (6816 JP) investors would subject themselves to a bad share exchange ratio or would choose to oblige Alps (6770 JP) to have another run at it in a different format, Alps announced a shareholder return policy which included buying back ¥40 billion of shares.
It is to be noted that this meant that the combined entity was going to be left with less cash than the total deemed necessary by the two companies just a very short while before. Why? Because Alps – with the strong governance it has – obviously had the right amount – and Alpine also had the right amount (it needed substantial equity-funded cash as “working capital” because otherwise it would run a serious danger of business disruption and deterioration. So despite this severe business risk, the two companies effectively announced they would disburse 90% of Alpine’s cash on hand to shareholders POST-MERGER through the special dividend offered to sweeten the pot to get the merger through, and the ¥40 billion buyback.
The merger, of course, went through, and the ¥28.4 billion* buyback is proceeding apace.
Five interesting trends/developments that could impact Thai equities in the recent period:
Legalization of medicinal marijuana. Thailand legalized medicinal use of marijuana at end of February and has already received immense interest from potential growers. At some point, pharma and healthcare companies could be beneficiaries of this trend.
Rumbles in the airline industry. Asia Aviation (AAV TB) , parent company of Thai Air Asia, acquires a stake in competitor Nok Air. This is one of the few signs of industry consolidation in this sector.
MOU signed between TMB and Thanachart. The deal may take longer than initially expected, but the two sides have agreed on some basics such as 70% equity financing and deal size of roughly Bt130-140bn.
Read-through from US Election 2020. Some of the Democrat policies advocated by candidates in 2020 could turn out to be positive for Asian equities.
BGrimm acquires Glow SPP1 for a bargain price of Bt3.3bn, or 55% of the expected price, opening the way for the GPSC-Glow merger, potentially the largest deal of 2019.
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