This share class monitor provides a snapshot of the premium/discounts for various share classifications around the region, and comprises four sets of data:
Idemitsu Kosan (5019 JP) decline is nearing exhaustion support and sets up a tactical trade higher.
MACD breach of floor support now turns this key pivot level into a cap resistance on a recovery cycle. It also calls for a new and lower trading range.
Macro support breaks must be mended to turn the cycle from bearish back to neutral and will require a series of positive rally cycles for basing to unfold.
Tactical buy supports are outlined along with our tactical rally target, macro pivot resistance and the stop level.
We visited Renesas Electronics (6723 JP) this week to discuss progress on inventory reduction and its likely ramp of utilisation rates/wafer throughput, as well as to gather further details on the IDT acquisition and its long -term strategy. On the whole, we continue to like the long-term picture, consider the stock to be undervalued and believe investors with long time horizons should be looking at the stock on the long side. However, our discussions suggested to us that while production cuts to reduce inventory should be completed this month or at worst in 1Q2019, a ramp in utilisation rates could take longer than is implied by consensus.
Contrary to the perception that the rising adoption of socially responsible investment practices has caused Big Tobacco to be shunned by portfolio managers, our shareholding analysis shows that institutional holding in most of these ‘sin’ stocks has increased in the last 4 and 8 quarters.
Nevertheless, Big Tobacco suffered a pounding in 2018. Investors had bought into tobacco premising reduced risk products (Eg: e-cigarettes, Heat Not Burn products) would reduce regulatory risk and reverse decades of sales decline. As it turned out, regulators frowned at the popularity of vaping amongst teens in the US, calling out companies for baiting youngsters into long-term smoking habits. Regulators also told off companies for marketing e-cigarettes and HNBs as healthier options, as tobacco still kills.
Ethical portfolios with negative screens (for example, ones that will not invest in tobacco stocks) have underperformed in the long-term past. There is a growing tribe of funds committed to responsible investing with positive ESG screens. For such funds, we present in this insight a framework for analyzing the sector from an ESG perspective. A deep dive into ITC Ltd (ITC IN), the only cigarette major to turn in a positive performance this year, vindicates, in our view, its efforts to materially de-risk its asset and revenue profile, coupled with very high levels of commitment towards community development.
GMO Internet is currently trading at JPY1,485 per share which is just 7.6% above its 12-month low of JPY1,380 per share. The Group’s share price reached an all-time high of JPY3,020 in June 2018, however, it has declined by more than 50% since then following the company’s poor performance in its cryptocurrency and mining related segment led by stagnant crypto prices coupled with negative news on issues concerning advertising fraud in its Online Advertising & Media segment. This was further exacerbated by news that there will be delays in shipments of two bitcoin mining rig lines with refunds already issued in November. However, we believe, the downside is limited as the weaknesses of its crypto related business will weigh little on the consolidated earnings of the business. GMO’s business is structured in a way that its two main segments, namely, the Internet Infrastructure and Online Advertising and Media businesses are not prone to much volatility with recurring revenues. Therefore, we believe the negativity surrounding the company is exhausted and we expect the company to continue its strong growth trajectory.
We see increasing evidence of a failed December risk on phase as core sectors break below supports and early 2018 lows in a lead fashion.
Our underperform/bear call for banks, small caps, tech and transports to lead a bigger market spiral is taking shape. Small caps, banks and transports are now breaking early 2018 lows, signaling a broader S&P break below 2,600 may in fact be unfolding now rather than in January/Q1.
Fed speak will dominate a break/bounce next week but a break down is in the cards, regardless in 2019.
Breadth remains bearish.
USD/JPY teetering on a pattern breakout. Gold is not trading well given it has decoupled from traditional correlations.
Big net outflows recorded in key sectors/markets last week.
To us the shares are have now fully discounted the current spate of bad news. The company has a very strong balance sheet and owns 10% in itself. The shares are on 0.9x book, they yield 3.7% and trade on a 3/20 EV/ebitda multiple of 3.8x, assuming ebitda next year of Y16.5bn. Unless one is exceedingly bearish on the outlook for the global economy, then these shares are starting to look attractive here. They have fallen 65% year to date, yet longer term management has a clear strategy with regards to improving profitability.
Marketing of sports brands has become increasingly retail-led in the last decade and a focus on retailing has enabled Goldwin (8111 JP) to make serious gains while the two biggest domestic brands, Asics Corp (7936 JP) and Mizuno Corp (8022 JP), have been distracted by overseas expansion.
Goldwin took a close look at its beleaguered business 15 years ago and decided retail could be its salvation.
At current rates it will catch up with Mizuno’s domestic sales in a few years.
Overall, we are bullish about Goldwin but also the wider sports category because sports and sports fashion is in many ways one of the few consumer categories to be largely immune to a demographically challenged market like Japan – all age segments are buying into sports apparel, including the over 60s.
IKEA Japan is following its parent company’s international strategy of opening smaller stores and expanding e-commerce. The first small store in Japan is now confirmed and will open in a high profile location in Harajuku.
With the correct design and positioning, it should help IKEA Japan back onto a higher growth path, and give Nitori Holdings (9843 JP) some competition at last – if only a little.
If ever there was a stub business that is poised to capitalize on global trends of factory automation, automated logistics handling and electric vehicle prevalence, it is that of Toyota Industries (6201 JP). In August, I took an in-depth look at the major businesses of Toyota Industries and concluded that the market was not giving the company credit for the global leadership it has established in the forklifts and automobile A/C compressor businesses, nor for the progress it has made in the logistics equipment business. While the market’s oversight appeared to have corrected in September and October as the discount to NAV contracted from 34% to 25%, the trend has since reversed and the discount is back at trough levels of 35%. In August, I implied that this would be a good trading opportunity. Today, I explicitly recommend going long the stub.
In this insight I will cover:
A market-neutral trade setup
A review of the core unlisted businesses
Alternative data used to gauge performance in the core business
Risks of the trade
A recap of ALL my stub trade ideas on Smartkarma, including track record of performance
The company forecasts an operating profit of Y55bn this year, the consensus is for Y57bn which is not unreasonable as management want to hold profits back. Next year assuming they make about Y64bn, the shares are on about 19x. With long term profits growth expected, and a good shareholder return policy this is a great domestic long term BUY. BUY into recent weakness. Foreigners own 24% of this name.
Coverage of Softbank Corp (9434 JP)‘s IPO on Smartkarma has offered a mix of viewpoints with some bullish and some bearish opinions. Our own take has been relatively subdued, leaning to the bearish side but only significantly so in the event that Docomo follows through with its announced price cuts and Rakuten’s entry as a full-fledged MNO is particularly aggressive.
By and large we consider the issue to be overvalued but felt that significant downside risk only existed if the dividend were to be cut, which we consider a distinct possibility but by no means a sure thing. This long -term view has not changed, however, we now consider some modest downside to be likely in the short term.
Dena Co Ltd (2432 JP) used to be the GO-GO internet stock for both retail and institutional investors in Japan during the previous bull run before 2008 and trading at 40-50x PER. The multiples have since then collapsed to 10-20x PER although the business prospect remains solid if not better. Benefiting from the increasing regulation in China, DeNA signed an agreement with Tencent Holdings (700 HK) to distribute Arena of Valor in Japan which will boost revenue and improve margin. At 14x PER and 1.2x PBR, DeNA looks attractive.
Softbank Group (9984 JP) is set to raise JPY2.65 trillion ($23.5 billion) through the Softbank Corp (9434 JP) IPO, Japan’s biggest-ever IPO. However, SoftBank Corp’s IPO which is set for 19 December is oversubscribed by less than double, according to press reports. This level of oversubscription is well below blockbuster Japanese stock debuts such as Mercari Inc (4385 JP) and Recruit Holdings (6098 JP).
Based on client discussion on SoftBank Corp’s intrinsic value, we have put together a DCF-based valuation along with scenario analysis. Our conclusion remains the same that SoftBank Corp is overvalued at the proposed IPO price of JPY1,500 per share.
The price has been set. The book building is done. Like watching a sleek race car aligned on the starting grid, the world eagerly awaits the start of trading for Softbank Corp (9434 JP) on Wednesday, 19 December.
We are also eager to see the stock go live. It’s not only nostalgia for the stock code “9434” to be brought back into the race, but it will be helpful to be able to compare the stock and to gain better insights into the domestic Japanese telecom industry.
That said, the past few weeks have been full of drama, and some of the drama has longer-term implications. In this insight, we take a more detailed look at some of the challenges facing SoftBank Corp. and some of the concerns that may give investors pause, or at least some things to keep in mind, over the months ahead.
AND SO IT GOES – After our eight-day 4.5% ‘Thanksgiving rally’, the market reverted to recent type and promptly fell 6.5% to Tuesday’s low, which is now likely to be surpassed on the downside this Monday. Although the market has yet to fall 20% from the January 23rd peak, the odds of Japan joining the growing list of global ‘bear’ markets are lengthening and, in US$-futures-terms, we are already there. Certainly, there is now clear ‘daylight’ between the 50-day and the 200-day moving average. However, a much wider spread is required before a clear ‘bottom’ is reached.
Source: Japan Analytics
BoJ STEPS UP – The Bank of Japan’ market-support programme bought ETFs on six of the last ten trading days and should be active again on Monday. As the Bank is now constrained in its ability to buy JGBs by a lack of supply, the equity markets (via the ETF mechanism required to circumvent restrictions on direct equity investment) appear to offer more scope for quantitative easing, although the longer-term consequences of such a ‘nationalisation’ are far from positive.
Source: Japan Analytics
Source: Japan Analytics
1,000 NEW LOWS – The current down cycle has already produced two days of 1000-day new 52-week lows. A ‘proper’ climactic ‘low’ requires over 1,500 on a single day or over 40% of listed stocks – an event that has occurred on only ten of the last 3,426 trading days. As can be seen above, such an event is, however, only the end of the beginning of a market recovery. For now, the question is – are we replaying 2008 or 2016?
Source: Japan Analytics
McCLELLAN SUMMATION – Our preferred long-term advance-decline ratio, the McClellan Summation will reach a new three-year low this week, but should reach ‘oversold’ territory of below -4,000 by the end of January.
Source: Japan Analytics
MARKET-IMPLIED GROWTH FORECAST – The Market Composite PER is now below 13x. Assuming a ‘normal’ earnings multiple of 16.7x, Mr Market is suggesting that Japanese corporate profits are due to fall by 22% on average to the level last reached in the first quarter of 2017, further implying declines of greater than 50% for some key ‘global’ sectors such as Autos, Machinery, Chemicals, Electrical Equipment and Technology Hardware, which together comprise one-third of aggregate Net Income.
OUTLOOK & RECOMMENDATIONS
We continue to recommend an underweight position in Japan in global portfolios.
The rate of the current equity market decline is well in advance of the underlying trends in the economy and corporate profits and appears to be anticipating an all-out trade war. As our title suggests and as ‘pure-pop-icon’ Nick Lowe sings – ‘But where it’s going no one knows’.
In contrast to global trade trends, the domestic Japanese economy remains overheated, the rate of inflation continues to rise, and Japan is close to full employment. Under such conditions, the Bank of Japan would be expected to taper its monetary easing policy. However, global trends have prompted a delay in any such move until well into next year. In the near term, we continue to favour less-overbought domestically-orientated companies and look to accumulate better quality companies into any weakness in the coming month. For a list of recommendations, please see our recent Insight – Japan: The Long and the Short of It – Recommended Portfolios.
There are seven stocks which were promoted/reassigned from TSE2, MOTHERS, and JASDAQ in November 2018 leading to the same seven stocks being included in TOPIX at the end of December.
A couple are decently largecap. Most are smaller.
A good question to ask when looking at these stocks might be… What Really Happens Around TOPIX Inclusions?
Having traded them for much of the last 20yrs, I had my hypotheses, and had done studies over the years for my own purposes, but I had not done a study recently. To check my personal hypotheses I tested 340+ TOPIX inclusions over the past five years.
There are patterns to the history of trading these events which are worth a look. Some of the patterns are reasonably interesting.
Lawson (2651 JP) Fresh Pick is the convenience store operator’s new e-commerce solution for food launched earlier this year, and replacing various other less successful experiments.
Unlike competing services, Lawson’s service is limited to just 600 SKUs (stock keeping units), all fresh foods, and Lawson offers no home delivery, only click-and-collect.
In the nine months since launch, the service has expanded from 200 to 1,200 stores, currently concentrated in west Tokyo and Kanagawa.
It is a model that will expand rapidly across the rest of the country because Lawson has to invest so little to make this happen.
Specialty steel maker Nisshin Steel (5413 JP) is slated to merge with parent company Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal (5401 JP) as of January 1, 2019. For that, Nisshin Steel will be delisted on December 26th (i.e. the last day of trading is the 25th) and that means the Nikkei Inc was obliged to choose a replacement to take Nisshin Steel’s place in the Nikkei 225 and other indices.
The only one which matters is the Nikkei 225 (the other two have tiny tracking), and this is not a huge index trade as both Nisshin Steel and DIC are deemed 500 yen par value stocks.
This is an event one could “miss.”
And it will happen on Christmas Day, after a long weekend for Japan traders.
THE LONG AND THE SHORT OF IT – Readers of our earlier Insights will be familiar with our scoring and ranking methodologies that cover corporate results and forecasts as well as our relative price and relative volume series that identify stocks as ‘Overbought’, ‘Oversold’ and ‘Overtraded’. We have also introduced our residual income-based valuation model which we have now extended to all quarterly and annual periods for all currently listed companies. Following some requests, we have incorporated much of the above as well as more traditional factors into a scoring model that ranks all companies by relative attractiveness. This insight presents the top and bottom 100 companies as portfolio recommendations.
IMPLIED SECTOR & PEER GROUP RELATIVE WEIGHTS – The implied sector deviations incorporating all ‘long’ and ‘short’ recommendations at equal 1% weights are as below. The largest implied ‘Overweights’ are in Information Technology, Retail, Technology Hardware, Media and Non-Bank Finance, and the largest ‘Underweights’ are in Healthcare, Autos,Food, Beverages & Tobacco, Other Consumer Products, and Transportation & Logistics. The top five Peer Group implied relative weights are IT System Services, Machine Tools, Retail – Food & Drink, Retail Drugstores and PCs & Computer Peripherals and the bottom five are Pharmaceuticals, Motor Vehicles, Personal Products, Medical & Dental Equipment, and Railways.
Source: Japan Analytics
LONG & SHORT RECOMMENDATIONS – In the DETAIL section below, recommendations are grouped into fifty ‘longs’ and fifty ‘shorts’, with additional fifty-strong ‘second divisions’ for each. In the tables below, we rank companies in descending order of attractiveness/unattractiveness. The tables presented cover a universe of the largest 771 Japanese companies – those having a current market capitalisation (excluding Treasury Stock) more than ¥100b. For clarity, we show only a selection of factors. All data is as of the close on Friday 14th December.
It has been a huge Q4 for Japan capital markets and banking, and the result is some fat fees for global investment bankers on the Takeda/Shire deal, and a Softbank Corp IPO which I’d be totally OK not owning. A result of this activity is the fun in index land.
Amer Sports Oyj (AMEAS FH)announced (ANTA’s is here) an Offer at €40/share (a 39% premium to the undisturbed price of 10 September 2018), and announced that the Board of Directors of Amer Sports has decided to unanimously recommend that Amer Sports’ shareholders accept the Tender Offer. Several major shareholders holding 7.91% have irrevocably undertaken to tender, and Maa-ja vesitekniikan tuki r.y., who hold ~4.29%, have expressed that they view the Tender Offer positively. ANTA indirectly holds 1,679,936 shares (1.4%) as well.
ANTA and consortium appear to have the funding. As suspected and discussed in the original doc, FountainVest is a fair bit smaller than 50%. The equity stakes are, indirectly, 57.95% ANTA, 15.77% FountainVest, 5.63% Tencent Holdings (700 HK), and 20.65% Anamered Investments (Chip Wilson’s vehicle). There is a Shareholders’ Agreement which allows FountainVest the right to effect a Trade Sale if a “Qualified IPO does not take place within 5 years”, which seems reasonable. This effectively means that the company will be put up for sale in 5yrs.
It should be 11.5 weeks from Monday to Tender Offer completion, with 81-83 days between trade settlement and payment for Tender shares. That is ~27.1% annualized as of Friday’s close. This spread should drop at least by half after the Tender Launch scheduled for 20 December. Anti-trust and other authorities’ approval will be required. If ANTA gets over 90% of the shares, they intend to commence mandatory redemption (squeezeout) proceedings.
It should be noted that this deal offers significant leverage to ANTA and even more to the minority investors. ANTA is effectively collateralizing some LBO debt with its own earnings. As ANTA will not consolidate, the only way to see the numbers will be to look through the affiliate income. The saving grace here for everyone may be that it is remote from ANTA, which means transfer pricing will be carefully watched.
NHK reported JDI was in talks to sell about a 33% stake to a Chinese consortium for $440m (probably ¥50bn) which would value the company at about 3.5x (at the time) its current market cap. INCJ is also, apparently, considering support. These moves would go a long way toward restoring the company’s beaten-up balance sheet and the cost cuts should allow the company to survive – although Apple’s struggles still cast a shadow on a return to a strong level of profitability. JDI’s share price shot up 34.6% on the news on Friday.
JDI’s massive share price drop since its listing has been due to its weakened balance sheet and a slow shift to OLED, which this reported funding will go some way to addressing. Mio Kato, CFA‘s view is that JDI has some very promising businesses and the company is undervalued.
JDI still has an unhealthy over-dependence on Apple but they are doing everything they can to dilute the influence, increasing automotive display sales at double-digit rates and maintaining and growing their top market share in that segment, as well as producing more VR and notebook LTPS screens.
There still remains excess capacity in the industry due to Chinese government subsidies for display panel manufacturers and an over-ambitious build-out of both LTPS and OLED capacity. This is not going to improve drastically anytime soon but some of the planned OLED capacity expansions are being pushed out and much of the LTPS capacity increases have already been completed.
After Pioneer revealed in September it had sold its Tohoku Pioneer subsidiary to Denso Corp (6902 JP) for ¥10.9bn, it announced an MOU with Barings and went into debt to them. That seemed like “the end of the line” for the company. Pioneer needed a sponsor, but it was going to stay listed. Last week,Pioneer announced a “Partnership” with Baring Private Equity Asia which is a revitalization plan of ¥102bn. The deal offers minority shareholders an exit. The announcement does not mention investors are effectively being asked to approve their own squeezeout at 25% below the last price.
In the deal as presented, shareholders are being asked to approve an exit price 75% below 52-week highs which came AFTER the capital reduction in summer 2017, and after the sale of assets earlier this year, sell their shares at roughly one-third of existing book value per share, and sell its 3D LiDAR business and technology for… zero.
There are caveats. ALL of Pioneer’s net equity is intangibles. It has payables higher than receivables as of the end of September, and ¥25bn in net debt (increased by the ¥25bn lent by Baring). The company has roughly 2.5x EBITDA in inventory, and in a company which is losing money by being in business, inventory as marked is not as good as cash. The company has close to ~¥30bn in underfunded pension liabilities.
Travis does not expect a public activist outcry. Activists who wanted to buy into this have already done so. Any who do going forward have no vote because the record date for the vote was 7 December.
On December 3rd, the boards of both Hindustan Unilever (HUVR IN) (“HUL”) and GlaxoSmithKkine (“GSKCH”) approved a merger (subject to regulatory and shareholder approval) – at an exchange ratio of 4.39 HUL shares for every 1 GSKCH share – in a £3.1 bn deal. Combining with GSKCH should see HUL leapfrog both Britannia Industries (BRIT IN)and Nestle India (NEST IN)in food and refreshment revenue, and put it roughly on level pegging with ITC Ltd (ITC IN).
Approvals should be a foregone conclusion. With neither Unilever or GSK required to abstain, the 75% shareholder approval threshold is all but a lock. GSKCH’s shareholders get the benefit of HUL’s vast distribution network, while HUL gets a better understanding of the pharma channel.
Regulatory approval should not be an issue. 90% of cases handled by India’s anti-trust body CCI have been approved without the requirement for any modification. There is minimal overlap here – this is HUL’s big splash to build a sustainable and profitable food and refreshment business in India. Greater opposition would be expected if either BRIT, NEST or ITC made a tilt for GSKCH.
The transaction should be completed in one year, subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals. It’s a long-dated, but low-risk deal. Expect the tight spread to remain tight – this deal may close faster than the “expected” one-year timeframe.
Red Hat has set a meeting date of January 16, 2019 for shareholders to vote on the merger agreement withIntl Business Machines (IBM US), and related matters. Red Hat also set a record date of December 11th, 2018 for shareholders entitled to vote on the deal.
The fact the meeting date has been set means the SEC chose not to review the merger proxy (a less common occurrence than a review) and notified the companies of this decision within the expected 10 calendar days.
While the Company issued the press release, a new proxy has not yet been filed. John DeMasi expects we will see a definitive merger proxy filed within the next few days. Since the HSR U.S. antitrust 30 day waiting period will not expire until December 21st, he doesn’t expect an update on HSR in the definitive proxy, and it still appears the EC Competition filing has not been made according to the EC website.
John believes the deal is still on track for a Q2/Q3 2019 close and believes the risk/reward looks attractive here.
Reportedly, preliminary discussions are underway between NineEntertainment Co Holdings (NEC AU) and MRN’s second-largest shareholder, John Singleton. This development is not entirely unsurprising; it appears formal discussions were deferred until the Nine/Fairfax Media (FXJ AU) merger was formally completed (which occurred on 7 December). Nine acquired Fairfax’s 54.5% stake in MRN in the merger, discussed in my insight Nine & Fairfax – Integrated Advertising.
Also reported in the press, Nine has offered $2/share (a 9.3% premium to the closing price of A$1.83 on December 4th), with Singleton (a willing seller) believed to be holding out for $2.15/share. In a further twist, Alan Jones, with 1.27% of MRN, is understood to have certain conditions/clauses attached to that stake, which may make an offer tabled by Nine potentially untenable.
MRN was trading between A$1.20 and A$1.60 during the first half of the year. Following the announcement of the Nine-Fairfax merger in July, the share price reached a high of A$2.18. While the expected offer price of A$2.00 is 8.3% lower than this lifetime high, it is still 26% higher than the stock’s undisturbed price of A$1.59 before the Nine-Fairfax merger deal was announced.
Nine is interested in mopping up shares in MRN it does not already own. John Singleton is a seller, at the right price. Nine’s CEO Hugh Marks is keen to move quickly, not just taking full control of MRN, but also divesting assets that do not focus on digital subscriptions, mass audiences andnational advertisers. It’s now a question of how much Nine is willing to pay, and the added benefits therein to Nine from a privatisation compared to its current majority and consolidating stake.
While Inc and Healthcare are not cross-linked by any shareholding, Healthcare is ostensibly Celltrion’s internal sales arm. Their fundamentals and prices should be (& are) highly correlated.
Sanghyun initiated a pair trade (short Celltrion / long Healthcare) on Oct 22. The ongoing FSS investigation is hammering both, Healthcare more so as it is more directly exposed. But given what happened to Samsung Biologics Co., (207940 KS), it is very unlikely that this will be a serious risk.
Sigma Healthcare had seen its share price fall 70% in 18 months after its relationship with MyChemist/Chemist Warehouse went sour in 2017, then their existing contract was not renewed for post-June 2019. This appears to be because Sigma did not want to continue trading under overly-generous (to MC/CW) terms and capital usage.
In September, API started buying shares in Sigma Healthcare on the market when they were down by half from the July 2017 news, buying just under 5% before approaching Sigma with an Indicative Proposal to Merge in a Scheme. Sigma responded saying it was willing to engage with API, but API did not respond in the subsequent months it appears. Thursday API bought half of Allan Gray’s stake to lift its own stake to 13.95%, then it publicly announced the same Indicative Proposal.
So now we wait. There is a business review in progress. Full year results for Sigma are due in March. ACCC clearance may take until mid-year.
The deal is at a nice premium – 46.8% to the one-month average, and 69% to the day before. It was about 10% better than where API started buying.
But it may not be good enough. The deal offers some cash, but also offers expensive scrip. API appears to need this deal as much as some would say Sigma does.
Sigma is in the process of doing a zero-based full business review with Accenture and indications are that everyone thinks the company is worth a lot more than where it was trading last week.
This deal looks like it has a big premium but it may not be enough.
Huatai Securities Co Ltd (A) (601688 CH)(and Huatai H) announced that the CSRC had given the company approval to list up to (but not more than) 82,515,000 GDRs. The English language LSE announcement of the “Intention to Float” can be found here and here. Each GDR represents 10 A shares, that is up to RMB13.7bn at the (then) last traded price of the A shares prior to the announcement. If all the shares were issued that would be about 10% of the share capital of Huatai (pre-issuance). This GDR launches the London side of the London-Shanghai Connect. A prospectus is expected in the new year.
Assuming the GDRs trade similarly to the Hs, or even 1% of their maximum issuance quantity, and assuming they have a similar discount to the As as do the Hs, the GDRs will not likely trade more volume than the H Shares.
It is not clear WHY the GDRs would, over time, maintain a tighter discount to the A Shares than the H Shares would …. Except for the fungibility. Which may be the only reason to hold the GDRs at a 20% discount when you can get the H-shares at a 30+% discount. But the system may not be ready to handle GDR creation by mainland domestic investors trying to export capital, even at a discount.
The whole deal comes across as somewhat iffy. It is not clear why the deal needs to be done other than to fill a political need to get the ball rolling. But one wonders why the London-Shanghai Connect ball actually needs to be rolled.
Naspers’ recent underperformance against Tencent has resulted in the discount to NAV widening to near-on 12 months lows. While Naspers remains a function of what happens to Tencent, it offers potentially interesting long-term prospects.
This pseudo-venture capital company is taking steps to narrow the valuation gap via the reduction in its Tencent stake, the sale of successful investments (Flipkart and tbogroup), the listing of profitable entities (Multichoice), the investment in specific areas (classifieds, online retail, payments businesses and food delivery), working to reduce its exposure to the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, and perhaps pursue a dual listing outside of SA, such as Hong Kong. To me, Naspers’ risk profile appears attractive here.
New Street Research‘s Alastair Jones views the most recent Naspers results as broadly positive with continued progress in profitability from its e-commerce assets. He also believes that, given moves to unbundle the pay-TV assets in 2019, there is scope for the NAV discount to narrow. The current low/negative valuation for the unlisted assets ignores their significant value.
Curtis Lehnert recommends a Toyota Industries’ set-up at current levels which are in excess of -2 Standard Deviations below the long-term average, while Toyota Industries is trading at a 35% discount to his NAV – Toyota Industries’ stake in Toyota Motor accounts for 60%).
The group boasts the #1 global market share in forklifts with an estimated 20% market share. Toyota Industries’ closest competitor in the materials handling business is KION Group AG (KGX GR); however, Curtis estimates the market is implying 0.83x for these ops, 28% lower than Kion’s 1.15x.
Newton’s Three Laws of Motion And How They Pertain to Index Inclusions
Travis Lundy noted that Newton’s Third Law, commonly understood that for every action there is always an equal and opposed reaction, applies in some measure to index inclusions.
For every index upweight, there is an equal and opposite downweight.
Travis published his H/A Spread Monitor Project offering a brief look at recent changes in H-Share and A-Share spreads, Southbound flow and impact, and where the spreads are trading within their own historical ranges. My share class monitor provides a snapshot of the premium/discounts for 215 share classifications around the region. Ke Yan, CFA, FRM issued his Discover HK Connect series, to help understand the flow of southbound trades via the Hong Kong Connect.
The 1P (005385 KS)/ 2P (005387 KS) dividend yield difference of 0.53% is close to a year high. Of interest is the recently announced hydrogen cell investment, which may be considered a signal that the HMG-government relation has vastly improved. This potentially suggests that any HMG restructuring may get accelerated, which would be positive for 1P. (link to Sanghyun’s insight: Hyundai Motor Share Class: Time for 1P to Catch Up)
OTHER M&A UPDATES
Trade Me (TME NZ)and Apax Partners have entered into a scheme implementation agreement. Apax Funds have increased their offer price to $6.45/share (from $6.40) since the indicative proposal, following the completion of their due diligence. The Board has unanimously backed the offer. A booklet containing information relating to the scheme is expected to be mailed to Trade Me shareholders in March 2019. The Board expects that Trade Me shareholders will have the opportunity to vote on the scheme at a meeting in April 2019. If all the conditions are satisfied, the scheme is expected to be implemented in the second quarter of 2019. Hellman & Friedman was not expected to materially counter and promptly pulled out of the race.
Cityneon Holdings (CITN SP). West Knighton now has 98.6% of shares out and will move to compulsory acquire shares it does not own. The closing date has been extended until the 26 December.
Sinotrans Shipping (368 HK). As expected from the onset, shareholders approved the privatisation. Turnout was low – around 47.6% of shareholders entitled to vote, did so. Friday was the last day of trading. Cheques are expected to be dispatched on or before the 22 Jan 2019.
Stanmore Coal (SMR AU)‘s has released the Target Statement. The board continues to recommend shareholders reject the $0.95/share unsolicited Golden Investments. The IFA has a fair value range of $1.48-$1.90/share. Shares closed at A$1.04 on Friday.
CCASS
My ongoing series flags large moves (~10%) in CCASS holdings over the past week or so, moves which are often outside normal market transactions. These may be indicative of share pledges. Or potential takeovers. Or simply help understand volume swings.
Often these moves can easily be explained – the placement of new shares, rights issue, movements subsequent to a takeover, amongst others. For those mentioned below, I could not find an obvious reason for the CCASS move.
Aequitas Research puts out a weekly update on the deals that have been covered by Smartkarma Insight Providers recently, along with updates for upcoming IPOs.
IPO listings this week have mostly been within our expectation. Mobvista (1860 HK), Natural Food International H (1837 HK), and Fosun Tourism (1992 HK) have all struggled to hold on to their IPO price on the first day of trading. Unfortunately, WuXi AppTec Co (2359 HK) has also struggled on this first day despite our expectation that the company should be trading at a relatively smaller 19% A-H premium which would imply about 11% upside based on Ke Yan, CFA, FRM‘s sensitivity analysis and Wuxi Apptec’s A share Friday close price.
In the US, Tencent Music Entertainment (TME US) performed well within our expectation. The company’s share price opened about 9% above IPO price. As Sumeet Singh has mentioned in his insight, Tencent Music IPO – Firework – Trading Strategies, this is unlikely going to be a bumper IPO and short-term investors could take profit at high single-digit to low double-digit returns on debut. Indeed, after a decent debut, TME has collapsed below its IPO price, probably due to investors taking profit as the broad market traded poorly on Friday.
Next week, all eyes will be on Softbank Corp (9434 JP)‘s debut and Mio Kato, CFA summarised in his note some of the reasons why Softbank Corp could perform poorly in the near term. Bookbuild results have been mixed. Bloomberg report suggested that Softbank’s international bookbuild was 2-3x oversubscribed while retail offering was at almost 2x. However, Nikkei Asian Review’s article reported that it has been a struggle to sell the IPO shares to retail investors. In any case, we will put out a note next week on our thoughts on bookbuild, updated valuation of peers, and how we think the IPO will likely trade after the recent series of events.
Our overall accuracy rate is 72% for IPOs and 64% for Placements
(Performance measurement criteria is explained at the end of the note)
New IPO filings this week
Shanghai Henlius Biotech (Hong Kong, ~US$500m)
Ingrid Millet (Hong Kong, re-filed)
Below is a snippet of our IPO tool showing upcoming events for the next week. The IPO tool is designed to provide readers with timely information on all IPO related events (Book open/closing, listing, initiation, lock-up expiry, etc) for all the deals that we have worked on. You can access the tool here or through the tools menu.
SMC’s year-on-year profit comparisons have turned negative. In the three months to September (Q2 of FY Mar-19), gross profit was down 3.7% year-on-year, operating profit was down 8.8% and net profit was down 9.6%. Operating profit was down 15.1% from Q1. Sales were up only 0.4% year-on-year in Q2, compared with 29.0% growth a year earlier, and down 7.5% from Q1. Management responded by cutting full-year guidance, implicitly changing anticipated 2H operating profit growth from +3.0% to -9.3% year-on-year.
This has all been discounted. The share price dropped 43% from its 52-week and all-time high of ¥55,830 on January 18 to a 52-week low of ¥31,580 on October 28, then rebounded to ¥40,000 in early December. Last Friday, December 14, it closed at ¥34,840.
What happens next? The share price trend suggests that because year-on-year profit comparisons have finally turned negative, it’s time to start anticipating recovery. But the fundamentals indicate that profit comparisons are likely to remain very difficult and most probably negative for at least three more quarters. Management reports that semiconductor-related demand is down in all markets and that auto-related demand is down in the U.S. Auto sales are also declining in China. The length and depth of the downturn and the timing and strength of recovery are both unclear. Any positive news on the trade front should support the share price, but while trade friction aggravates the cyclical downturns in the semiconductor and auto industries, it is not their cause.
At ¥34,840, the shares are selling at 17.0x our EPS estimate for FY Mar-19 and 17.7x our estimate for FY Mar-20. These multiples compare with a 5-year historical range of 13.8x – 28.5x. Our projected EV/EBITDA multiples for the same two years are 8.7x and 8.1x, which compare with a 5-year historical range of 7.0x – 15.1x. This should help put a floor under the share price. Interestingly, Japan Analytics’ chart analysis indicates that SMC has never been seriously overbought (see chart below).
A leading supplier of pneumatic and other automated control equipment for the electronics, auto, machine tool and other industries, SMC is highly geared to investment in semiconductor production capacity and factory automation.
We all know that Japan has tried to give the impression that they are improving corporate governance. However, when you start to dig into the numbers you see that it is basically just window dressing. We looked at the ages of the Independent Directors and they are not young…. Most should be gardening somewhere in Shizuoka.
New industry data this week, plus take-aways from our latest discussions with company managements, all confirm that the likely trend in the industrial segment of the global real estate industry is for rental rates to rise.
The growth in e-commerce is continuing to accelerate globally. In some key market, this is “triggering a land grab for distribution space that experts say is accelerating”.
Therefore, the increasing scarcity value of well situated industrial real estate in high demand markets is likely to continue to push up rental rates to higher and higher levels.
Given our expectation that fundamentals driving the growing demand for Last Mile Industrial real estate are likely to persist, we continue to expect this segment to outperform the broader Real Estate sector for the foreseeable future.
We see increasing evidence of a failed December risk on phase as core sectors break below supports and early 2018 lows in a lead fashion.
Our underperform/bear call for banks, small caps, tech and transports to lead a bigger market spiral is taking shape. Small caps, banks and transports are now breaking early 2018 lows, signaling a broader S&P break below 2,600 may in fact be unfolding now rather than in January/Q1.
Fed speak will dominate a break/bounce next week but a break down is in the cards, regardless in 2019.
Breadth remains bearish.
USD/JPY teetering on a pattern breakout. Gold is not trading well given it has decoupled from traditional correlations.
Big net outflows recorded in key sectors/markets last week.
To us the shares are have now fully discounted the current spate of bad news. The company has a very strong balance sheet and owns 10% in itself. The shares are on 0.9x book, they yield 3.7% and trade on a 3/20 EV/ebitda multiple of 3.8x, assuming ebitda next year of Y16.5bn. Unless one is exceedingly bearish on the outlook for the global economy, then these shares are starting to look attractive here. They have fallen 65% year to date, yet longer term management has a clear strategy with regards to improving profitability.
Marketing of sports brands has become increasingly retail-led in the last decade and a focus on retailing has enabled Goldwin (8111 JP) to make serious gains while the two biggest domestic brands, Asics Corp (7936 JP) and Mizuno Corp (8022 JP), have been distracted by overseas expansion.
Goldwin took a close look at its beleaguered business 15 years ago and decided retail could be its salvation.
At current rates it will catch up with Mizuno’s domestic sales in a few years.
Overall, we are bullish about Goldwin but also the wider sports category because sports and sports fashion is in many ways one of the few consumer categories to be largely immune to a demographically challenged market like Japan – all age segments are buying into sports apparel, including the over 60s.
IKEA Japan is following its parent company’s international strategy of opening smaller stores and expanding e-commerce. The first small store in Japan is now confirmed and will open in a high profile location in Harajuku.
With the correct design and positioning, it should help IKEA Japan back onto a higher growth path, and give Nitori Holdings (9843 JP) some competition at last – if only a little.
This share class monitor provides a snapshot of the premium/discounts for various share classifications around the region, and comprises four sets of data:
Idemitsu Kosan (5019 JP) decline is nearing exhaustion support and sets up a tactical trade higher.
MACD breach of floor support now turns this key pivot level into a cap resistance on a recovery cycle. It also calls for a new and lower trading range.
Macro support breaks must be mended to turn the cycle from bearish back to neutral and will require a series of positive rally cycles for basing to unfold.
Tactical buy supports are outlined along with our tactical rally target, macro pivot resistance and the stop level.
We visited Renesas Electronics (6723 JP) this week to discuss progress on inventory reduction and its likely ramp of utilisation rates/wafer throughput, as well as to gather further details on the IDT acquisition and its long -term strategy. On the whole, we continue to like the long-term picture, consider the stock to be undervalued and believe investors with long time horizons should be looking at the stock on the long side. However, our discussions suggested to us that while production cuts to reduce inventory should be completed this month or at worst in 1Q2019, a ramp in utilisation rates could take longer than is implied by consensus.
Contrary to the perception that the rising adoption of socially responsible investment practices has caused Big Tobacco to be shunned by portfolio managers, our shareholding analysis shows that institutional holding in most of these ‘sin’ stocks has increased in the last 4 and 8 quarters.
Nevertheless, Big Tobacco suffered a pounding in 2018. Investors had bought into tobacco premising reduced risk products (Eg: e-cigarettes, Heat Not Burn products) would reduce regulatory risk and reverse decades of sales decline. As it turned out, regulators frowned at the popularity of vaping amongst teens in the US, calling out companies for baiting youngsters into long-term smoking habits. Regulators also told off companies for marketing e-cigarettes and HNBs as healthier options, as tobacco still kills.
Ethical portfolios with negative screens (for example, ones that will not invest in tobacco stocks) have underperformed in the long-term past. There is a growing tribe of funds committed to responsible investing with positive ESG screens. For such funds, we present in this insight a framework for analyzing the sector from an ESG perspective. A deep dive into ITC Ltd (ITC IN), the only cigarette major to turn in a positive performance this year, vindicates, in our view, its efforts to materially de-risk its asset and revenue profile, coupled with very high levels of commitment towards community development.
GMO Internet is currently trading at JPY1,485 per share which is just 7.6% above its 12-month low of JPY1,380 per share. The Group’s share price reached an all-time high of JPY3,020 in June 2018, however, it has declined by more than 50% since then following the company’s poor performance in its cryptocurrency and mining related segment led by stagnant crypto prices coupled with negative news on issues concerning advertising fraud in its Online Advertising & Media segment. This was further exacerbated by news that there will be delays in shipments of two bitcoin mining rig lines with refunds already issued in November. However, we believe, the downside is limited as the weaknesses of its crypto related business will weigh little on the consolidated earnings of the business. GMO’s business is structured in a way that its two main segments, namely, the Internet Infrastructure and Online Advertising and Media businesses are not prone to much volatility with recurring revenues. Therefore, we believe the negativity surrounding the company is exhausted and we expect the company to continue its strong growth trajectory.
If ever there was a stub business that is poised to capitalize on global trends of factory automation, automated logistics handling and electric vehicle prevalence, it is that of Toyota Industries (6201 JP). In August, I took an in-depth look at the major businesses of Toyota Industries and concluded that the market was not giving the company credit for the global leadership it has established in the forklifts and automobile A/C compressor businesses, nor for the progress it has made in the logistics equipment business. While the market’s oversight appeared to have corrected in September and October as the discount to NAV contracted from 34% to 25%, the trend has since reversed and the discount is back at trough levels of 35%. In August, I implied that this would be a good trading opportunity. Today, I explicitly recommend going long the stub.
In this insight I will cover:
A market-neutral trade setup
A review of the core unlisted businesses
Alternative data used to gauge performance in the core business
Risks of the trade
A recap of ALL my stub trade ideas on Smartkarma, including track record of performance
The company forecasts an operating profit of Y55bn this year, the consensus is for Y57bn which is not unreasonable as management want to hold profits back. Next year assuming they make about Y64bn, the shares are on about 19x. With long term profits growth expected, and a good shareholder return policy this is a great domestic long term BUY. BUY into recent weakness. Foreigners own 24% of this name.
Coverage of Softbank Corp (9434 JP)‘s IPO on Smartkarma has offered a mix of viewpoints with some bullish and some bearish opinions. Our own take has been relatively subdued, leaning to the bearish side but only significantly so in the event that Docomo follows through with its announced price cuts and Rakuten’s entry as a full-fledged MNO is particularly aggressive.
By and large we consider the issue to be overvalued but felt that significant downside risk only existed if the dividend were to be cut, which we consider a distinct possibility but by no means a sure thing. This long -term view has not changed, however, we now consider some modest downside to be likely in the short term.
Dena Co Ltd (2432 JP) used to be the GO-GO internet stock for both retail and institutional investors in Japan during the previous bull run before 2008 and trading at 40-50x PER. The multiples have since then collapsed to 10-20x PER although the business prospect remains solid if not better. Benefiting from the increasing regulation in China, DeNA signed an agreement with Tencent Holdings (700 HK) to distribute Arena of Valor in Japan which will boost revenue and improve margin. At 14x PER and 1.2x PBR, DeNA looks attractive.
Softbank Group (9984 JP) is set to raise JPY2.65 trillion ($23.5 billion) through the Softbank Corp (9434 JP) IPO, Japan’s biggest-ever IPO. However, SoftBank Corp’s IPO which is set for 19 December is oversubscribed by less than double, according to press reports. This level of oversubscription is well below blockbuster Japanese stock debuts such as Mercari Inc (4385 JP) and Recruit Holdings (6098 JP).
Based on client discussion on SoftBank Corp’s intrinsic value, we have put together a DCF-based valuation along with scenario analysis. Our conclusion remains the same that SoftBank Corp is overvalued at the proposed IPO price of JPY1,500 per share.
The price has been set. The book building is done. Like watching a sleek race car aligned on the starting grid, the world eagerly awaits the start of trading for Softbank Corp (9434 JP) on Wednesday, 19 December.
We are also eager to see the stock go live. It’s not only nostalgia for the stock code “9434” to be brought back into the race, but it will be helpful to be able to compare the stock and to gain better insights into the domestic Japanese telecom industry.
That said, the past few weeks have been full of drama, and some of the drama has longer-term implications. In this insight, we take a more detailed look at some of the challenges facing SoftBank Corp. and some of the concerns that may give investors pause, or at least some things to keep in mind, over the months ahead.
AND SO IT GOES – After our eight-day 4.5% ‘Thanksgiving rally’, the market reverted to recent type and promptly fell 6.5% to Tuesday’s low, which is now likely to be surpassed on the downside this Monday. Although the market has yet to fall 20% from the January 23rd peak, the odds of Japan joining the growing list of global ‘bear’ markets are lengthening and, in US$-futures-terms, we are already there. Certainly, there is now clear ‘daylight’ between the 50-day and the 200-day moving average. However, a much wider spread is required before a clear ‘bottom’ is reached.
Source: Japan Analytics
BoJ STEPS UP – The Bank of Japan’ market-support programme bought ETFs on six of the last ten trading days and should be active again on Monday. As the Bank is now constrained in its ability to buy JGBs by a lack of supply, the equity markets (via the ETF mechanism required to circumvent restrictions on direct equity investment) appear to offer more scope for quantitative easing, although the longer-term consequences of such a ‘nationalisation’ are far from positive.
Source: Japan Analytics
Source: Japan Analytics
1,000 NEW LOWS – The current down cycle has already produced two days of 1000-day new 52-week lows. A ‘proper’ climactic ‘low’ requires over 1,500 on a single day or over 40% of listed stocks – an event that has occurred on only ten of the last 3,426 trading days. As can be seen above, such an event is, however, only the end of the beginning of a market recovery. For now, the question is – are we replaying 2008 or 2016?
Source: Japan Analytics
McCLELLAN SUMMATION – Our preferred long-term advance-decline ratio, the McClellan Summation will reach a new three-year low this week, but should reach ‘oversold’ territory of below -4,000 by the end of January.
Source: Japan Analytics
MARKET-IMPLIED GROWTH FORECAST – The Market Composite PER is now below 13x. Assuming a ‘normal’ earnings multiple of 16.7x, Mr Market is suggesting that Japanese corporate profits are due to fall by 22% on average to the level last reached in the first quarter of 2017, further implying declines of greater than 50% for some key ‘global’ sectors such as Autos, Machinery, Chemicals, Electrical Equipment and Technology Hardware, which together comprise one-third of aggregate Net Income.
OUTLOOK & RECOMMENDATIONS
We continue to recommend an underweight position in Japan in global portfolios.
The rate of the current equity market decline is well in advance of the underlying trends in the economy and corporate profits and appears to be anticipating an all-out trade war. As our title suggests and as ‘pure-pop-icon’ Nick Lowe sings – ‘But where it’s going no one knows’.
In contrast to global trade trends, the domestic Japanese economy remains overheated, the rate of inflation continues to rise, and Japan is close to full employment. Under such conditions, the Bank of Japan would be expected to taper its monetary easing policy. However, global trends have prompted a delay in any such move until well into next year. In the near term, we continue to favour less-overbought domestically-orientated companies and look to accumulate better quality companies into any weakness in the coming month. For a list of recommendations, please see our recent Insight – Japan: The Long and the Short of It – Recommended Portfolios.
There are seven stocks which were promoted/reassigned from TSE2, MOTHERS, and JASDAQ in November 2018 leading to the same seven stocks being included in TOPIX at the end of December.
A couple are decently largecap. Most are smaller.
A good question to ask when looking at these stocks might be… What Really Happens Around TOPIX Inclusions?
Having traded them for much of the last 20yrs, I had my hypotheses, and had done studies over the years for my own purposes, but I had not done a study recently. To check my personal hypotheses I tested 340+ TOPIX inclusions over the past five years.
There are patterns to the history of trading these events which are worth a look. Some of the patterns are reasonably interesting.
Lawson (2651 JP) Fresh Pick is the convenience store operator’s new e-commerce solution for food launched earlier this year, and replacing various other less successful experiments.
Unlike competing services, Lawson’s service is limited to just 600 SKUs (stock keeping units), all fresh foods, and Lawson offers no home delivery, only click-and-collect.
In the nine months since launch, the service has expanded from 200 to 1,200 stores, currently concentrated in west Tokyo and Kanagawa.
It is a model that will expand rapidly across the rest of the country because Lawson has to invest so little to make this happen.