Category

Thailand

Brief Thailand: IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans
  2. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand

1. IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans

SISB has been one of the best investments in our portfolio, rising 26% since we jumped in shortly after the IPO. Founder Kelvin Koh reiterated the strengths in his prospectus (English-Chinese language, affordability, own brand) and backs it up with:

  • positive stats and trends. 7.8% CAGR in international students, growth in high net worth Thais (11.4% CAGR) and expat population (6.9% CAGR) all of which are supportive of the business.
  • expansion plans both abroad and domestic. A Bt70m investment in the Thonburi site as well as talks to potentially set up new campuses in China and/or CLMV region.
  • Financials. An almost sixfold jump in earnings from Bt18m in 2017 to Bt103.5m in 2018 primarily due to its high operating leverage and now debt-free status after the IPO.
  • favorable operating environment. High availability of Caucasian teachers in Thailand and growing Chinese expat community due to China’s increasing environment.

2. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand

  • Volatility set to rise as Thailand, Indonesia and India all Face ElectionsRussia: Michael Calvey, a US citizen and one of Russia’s most prominent foreign investors, has been detained.
  • Indonesia: Incumbent President and his challenger from the military are trying to outdo each other in spending largesse targeting rural poor ahead of the May election.
  • South Africa: Recent inflation readings have been the lowest in a long time on lower fuel expenses. Expected to stay low.

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Brief Thailand: IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans
  2. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand
  3. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019

1. IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans

SISB has been one of the best investments in our portfolio, rising 26% since we jumped in shortly after the IPO. Founder Kelvin Koh reiterated the strengths in his prospectus (English-Chinese language, affordability, own brand) and backs it up with:

  • positive stats and trends. 7.8% CAGR in international students, growth in high net worth Thais (11.4% CAGR) and expat population (6.9% CAGR) all of which are supportive of the business.
  • expansion plans both abroad and domestic. A Bt70m investment in the Thonburi site as well as talks to potentially set up new campuses in China and/or CLMV region.
  • Financials. An almost sixfold jump in earnings from Bt18m in 2017 to Bt103.5m in 2018 primarily due to its high operating leverage and now debt-free status after the IPO.
  • favorable operating environment. High availability of Caucasian teachers in Thailand and growing Chinese expat community due to China’s increasing environment.

2. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand

  • Volatility set to rise as Thailand, Indonesia and India all Face ElectionsRussia: Michael Calvey, a US citizen and one of Russia’s most prominent foreign investors, has been detained.
  • Indonesia: Incumbent President and his challenger from the military are trying to outdo each other in spending largesse targeting rural poor ahead of the May election.
  • South Africa: Recent inflation readings have been the lowest in a long time on lower fuel expenses. Expected to stay low.

3. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019

Synex%20update%205

SYNEX’s 4Q18 net profit was at Bt190m (+16%YoY, +18QoQ), in-line with our expectation

  • Record-high level of sales at Bt10.38bn is the major contributor to impressive 4Q18 performance. Meanwhile , gross margin drops below 4% in the first time due to changing product mix towards more on device segment
  • SYNEX post 2018 net profit of Bt721m (+15%YoY) driven by 18% increase in revenue
  • We maintain our positive view toward FY19-20E earnings outlook driven by (1) number of flagship smartphone model launches and new brands for low budget users, Neffos, and, (2) higher sales contribution from high-margins product such as gaming desktops and post-sales services.

We maintain our BUY rating with a new target price of Bt16.80 (previous target price at Bt15.0) derived from 17xPE’2019E, which is the average of the World information and technology sector

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief Thailand: IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans
  2. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand
  3. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019
  4. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

1. IPO Stalker: SISB’s Growth Plans

SISB has been one of the best investments in our portfolio, rising 26% since we jumped in shortly after the IPO. Founder Kelvin Koh reiterated the strengths in his prospectus (English-Chinese language, affordability, own brand) and backs it up with:

  • positive stats and trends. 7.8% CAGR in international students, growth in high net worth Thais (11.4% CAGR) and expat population (6.9% CAGR) all of which are supportive of the business.
  • expansion plans both abroad and domestic. A Bt70m investment in the Thonburi site as well as talks to potentially set up new campuses in China and/or CLMV region.
  • Financials. An almost sixfold jump in earnings from Bt18m in 2017 to Bt103.5m in 2018 primarily due to its high operating leverage and now debt-free status after the IPO.
  • favorable operating environment. High availability of Caucasian teachers in Thailand and growing Chinese expat community due to China’s increasing environment.

2. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand

  • Volatility set to rise as Thailand, Indonesia and India all Face ElectionsRussia: Michael Calvey, a US citizen and one of Russia’s most prominent foreign investors, has been detained.
  • Indonesia: Incumbent President and his challenger from the military are trying to outdo each other in spending largesse targeting rural poor ahead of the May election.
  • South Africa: Recent inflation readings have been the lowest in a long time on lower fuel expenses. Expected to stay low.

3. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019

Synex%20update%205

SYNEX’s 4Q18 net profit was at Bt190m (+16%YoY, +18QoQ), in-line with our expectation

  • Record-high level of sales at Bt10.38bn is the major contributor to impressive 4Q18 performance. Meanwhile , gross margin drops below 4% in the first time due to changing product mix towards more on device segment
  • SYNEX post 2018 net profit of Bt721m (+15%YoY) driven by 18% increase in revenue
  • We maintain our positive view toward FY19-20E earnings outlook driven by (1) number of flagship smartphone model launches and new brands for low budget users, Neffos, and, (2) higher sales contribution from high-margins product such as gaming desktops and post-sales services.

We maintain our BUY rating with a new target price of Bt16.80 (previous target price at Bt15.0) derived from 17xPE’2019E, which is the average of the World information and technology sector

4. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

Capture

Frasers Property (Thailand) Pcl (FPT TB) has announced a conditional voluntary tender offer for Golden Land Prop Dvlp (GOLD TB) at Bt8.50/share, ~2.4% premium to last close.

Frasers Property Ltd (FPL SP) owns 40.95% in FPT and also 39.92% in GOLD. FPT’s director Panote Sirivadhanabhakdi (the son of Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi), via his majority-controlled vehicle Univentures Public (UV TB), holds 39.28% in GOLD. Panote is also the vice-chairman of GOLD.

Presumably, both FPL and Univentures will tender into the Offer giving FPT a minimum holding of 80.2%. There were no specific minimum acceptance conditions attached to the tender offer mentioned in the announcement.

Should FPP secure 90% of GOLD in the tender offer, it may proceed with its delisting. A voluntary delisting is still achievable with ~80% in the bag, but that is conditional on <10% of shareholders not voting against.

Preconditions to the commencement of the tender offer include the approval from disinterested shareholders in FPP, approval from “relevant contractual parties of GOLD and GOLD’s subsidiaries” and the approval from the Office of Trade Competition Commission.

The fact the Sirivadhanabhakdi family already holds, directly/indirectly ~80% in GOLD, such regulatory approvals should be forthcoming.

This appears a done deal. The only apparent risk is the expected shareholder vote of Univentures wherein Panote will likely need to abstain.

Currently trading at a gross/annualized spread of 1.8%/4.3% assuming early August payment. Very tight, suggesting investors are more likely angling for the back-end.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief Thailand: Climate Action – School Strikes Hit a Spot, Carbon Emitters Face Heat. Investors Take Note and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. Climate Action – School Strikes Hit a Spot, Carbon Emitters Face Heat. Investors Take Note
  2. Small Cap Diary: Rajthanee Hospital, CAZ
  3. Elections, Coups and Constitutions: Thailand’s Reckoning
  4. Thai Election 2019: Defeat in Parliament, Victory in Senate
  5. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC

1. Climate Action – School Strikes Hit a Spot, Carbon Emitters Face Heat. Investors Take Note

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On Friday, March 15th, an estimated 1.6 million students in over 120 countries (source: Time magazine) walked out of classrooms and took to streets demanding radical climate action. Climate change activism rarely grabbed headlines or wider public attention as it is doing now. Rising climate activism will continue to train the spotlight on industries/businesses associated with carbon-emission making it increasingly difficult for them to expand capacities or secure funding. Large institutional investors – sovereign funds, pension funds, insurance companies – have begun to incorporate climate risk into investment policy and are limiting exposure to sectors that directly contribute to carbon emissions – primarily coal, crude oil producers and power plants based on them. Expect sector devaluation; active investors may well look beyond juicy near term earnings and dividend yield.

Even as scientists and meteorological organisations keep warning of dire consequences unless concrete action is taken to limit carbon emissions to stall climate change, political establishment/regulators in most countries are in denial while others are doing little more than lip service.  If so, should corporates care? even though businesses are the ones that play a direct role in escalating carbon emissions. With rising consumer awareness and activism, several industries associated with carbon emissions are already facing operational and funding challenges; we believe, it pays for all businesses to be above par on ‘climate action’ – it would be in their own self-interest, not just general good. And do Investors bother? Under the aegis of Climate Action 100+, an investor initiative with 320 signatories having more than USD33 trillion in assets collectively under management, they have been engaging companies on improving governance, curbing emissions and strengthening climate-related financial disclosures. It has listed out Oil & Gas, Mining, Utilities and Auto manufacturers as target sectors. Investors have already been making an impact – by vote or exit. It sure makes logical sense to effect positive change and minimise climate risk when you have a long term investment horizon.

In the detailed note below we

  • discuss how rising consumer/investor activism and/or political/regulatory changes are posing challenges to key sectors –Coal, Oil & Gas, Automobiles/Aviation, Consumer goods –  that are associated with carbon emissions. 
  • analyse how rising climate activism is negatively impacting growth prospects and valuation of companies in these sectors.
  • highlight the opportunities for businesses to capitalise on changing consumer preferences for products that minimise carbon footprint and differentiate themselves by being on the right side of climate action.
  • present a quick primer on climate change and lay down the key facts and data on climate change as presented by World Meteorological Organisation, NASA and IPCC. 

However, the report does NOT discuss potential risks to businesses from the aftermath of Climate change. Unlike our recently released report Fast Fashion in Asia: Trendy Clothing’s Toxic Trails – Investors Beware that looked into sector’s environmental violations and attempted to estimate potential earnings/growth/valuation downside as leading textile players adopt sustainable practices, we believe the impact of unpredictable climate change poses a threat that is not easy to identify or quantify.  

2. Small Cap Diary: Rajthanee Hospital, CAZ

We visited two small-cap companies from totally different industries today. These are the key highlights.

  • Rajthanee Hospital, a small hospital chain based in Ayuthya, achieved 15.7% revenue growth CAGR since 2016 on the back of its proximity to industrial estates.
  • CAZ has seen its backlog double to Bt2.5bn largely due to its good relations with major clients (PTT) and partners (Samsung and other Korean chaebol), which dole out projects in the oil & gas sector to it.
  • Internally, CAZ follows a sophisticated cost control method sporting bar codes and GPS to track materials and dedicated cost-control staff.

3. Elections, Coups and Constitutions: Thailand’s Reckoning

Thailand went to the polls for the first time in six years last Sunday. The Election Commission will release results for 94% of the vote this Friday, with full and confirmed results released on 9 May. An elected government will be restored but the game has been rigged by the amended 2017 Constitution which allows the military to appoint the 250-strong Senate.

We asked our long-time Thai political correspondent, Professor Thitinan Pongsudhirak of Chulalongkorn University, to have a look at Thailand’s political history and to give us his views on the likely outcome. Dr. Thitinan forecasts the return of Prayut Chan-Ocha as prime minister but at the head of a very weak government in what looks likely to be a Pheu Thai coalition in the lower house. Thai politics looks set to become fractious, and interesting, once again.

4. Thai Election 2019: Defeat in Parliament, Victory in Senate

Tana

With over 90% of the votes counted, the Thaksinite party Peau Thai currently leads with a razor-thin margin of 10 seats, which will be easily overwhelmed by at least 200+ senators who will certainly support the Army faction that appointed them.

  • This ensures policy continuity. The Thaksinite lead is simply too small to justify a mass protest and political uncertainty feared by foreign investors. The stock market reacted counter-intuitively by falling, and this seems like a good opportunity to buy from our vantage point.
  • The strong showing of newbie party Future Forward, now Thailand’s third largest, should benefit TSC (Thai Steel Cable) on the sentiment level. Thanatorn’s uncle Suriya is part of the pro-Army party, though joining the government bloc may be tricky given Future Forward’s campaign stance.

  • The Democrats performed poorly, losing much of their seats in both Bangkok and Southern Thailand (their home base), to Future Forward and Pracharat respectively. However, they may still end up in the government if Future Forward doesn’t pounce on the opportunity.
  • Bhumjaithai was the only swing vote party that did well in this election, emerging as number 4. At the moment, they are the most likely party for the pro-Army government, given their friendly and flexible stance prior to the elections. The Party Leader’s family controls STEC.

5. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC

Lake%20charles

Energy Transfer LP (ET US) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN) have signed a Project Framework Agreement to further develop a large-scale LNG export facility in Lake Charles, Louisiana and move toward a potential final investment decision (FID). They have started actively engaging with LNG Engineering, Procurement and Contracting (EPC) companies with a plan to issue an Invitation to Tender (ITT) in the weeks ahead. We look at the potential contract size and winners and also the other US LNG projects that could be negatively impacted. More detail on the LNG project queue for this year in: A Huge Wave of New LNG Projects Coming in the Next 18 Months: Positive for The E&C Companies.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief Thailand: RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand
  2. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019
  3. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

1. RRG Global Macro Weekly – Election Volatility Expected in India, Indonesia and Thailand

  • Volatility set to rise as Thailand, Indonesia and India all Face ElectionsRussia: Michael Calvey, a US citizen and one of Russia’s most prominent foreign investors, has been detained.
  • Indonesia: Incumbent President and his challenger from the military are trying to outdo each other in spending largesse targeting rural poor ahead of the May election.
  • South Africa: Recent inflation readings have been the lowest in a long time on lower fuel expenses. Expected to stay low.

2. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019

Synex%20update%205

SYNEX’s 4Q18 net profit was at Bt190m (+16%YoY, +18QoQ), in-line with our expectation

  • Record-high level of sales at Bt10.38bn is the major contributor to impressive 4Q18 performance. Meanwhile , gross margin drops below 4% in the first time due to changing product mix towards more on device segment
  • SYNEX post 2018 net profit of Bt721m (+15%YoY) driven by 18% increase in revenue
  • We maintain our positive view toward FY19-20E earnings outlook driven by (1) number of flagship smartphone model launches and new brands for low budget users, Neffos, and, (2) higher sales contribution from high-margins product such as gaming desktops and post-sales services.

We maintain our BUY rating with a new target price of Bt16.80 (previous target price at Bt15.0) derived from 17xPE’2019E, which is the average of the World information and technology sector

3. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

Capture

Frasers Property (Thailand) Pcl (FPT TB) has announced a conditional voluntary tender offer for Golden Land Prop Dvlp (GOLD TB) at Bt8.50/share, ~2.4% premium to last close.

Frasers Property Ltd (FPL SP) owns 40.95% in FPT and also 39.92% in GOLD. FPT’s director Panote Sirivadhanabhakdi (the son of Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi), via his majority-controlled vehicle Univentures Public (UV TB), holds 39.28% in GOLD. Panote is also the vice-chairman of GOLD.

Presumably, both FPL and Univentures will tender into the Offer giving FPT a minimum holding of 80.2%. There were no specific minimum acceptance conditions attached to the tender offer mentioned in the announcement.

Should FPP secure 90% of GOLD in the tender offer, it may proceed with its delisting. A voluntary delisting is still achievable with ~80% in the bag, but that is conditional on <10% of shareholders not voting against.

Preconditions to the commencement of the tender offer include the approval from disinterested shareholders in FPP, approval from “relevant contractual parties of GOLD and GOLD’s subsidiaries” and the approval from the Office of Trade Competition Commission.

The fact the Sirivadhanabhakdi family already holds, directly/indirectly ~80% in GOLD, such regulatory approvals should be forthcoming.

This appears a done deal. The only apparent risk is the expected shareholder vote of Univentures wherein Panote will likely need to abstain.

Currently trading at a gross/annualized spread of 1.8%/4.3% assuming early August payment. Very tight, suggesting investors are more likely angling for the back-end.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief Thailand: Small Cap Diary: Rajthanee Hospital, CAZ and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. Small Cap Diary: Rajthanee Hospital, CAZ
  2. Elections, Coups and Constitutions: Thailand’s Reckoning
  3. Thai Election 2019: Defeat in Parliament, Victory in Senate
  4. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC
  5. Prayuth Accomplishes a Clear-Cut Victory, Assuring Stability (If Not Rapid Growth)

1. Small Cap Diary: Rajthanee Hospital, CAZ

We visited two small-cap companies from totally different industries today. These are the key highlights.

  • Rajthanee Hospital, a small hospital chain based in Ayuthya, achieved 15.7% revenue growth CAGR since 2016 on the back of its proximity to industrial estates.
  • CAZ has seen its backlog double to Bt2.5bn largely due to its good relations with major clients (PTT) and partners (Samsung and other Korean chaebol), which dole out projects in the oil & gas sector to it.
  • Internally, CAZ follows a sophisticated cost control method sporting bar codes and GPS to track materials and dedicated cost-control staff.

2. Elections, Coups and Constitutions: Thailand’s Reckoning

Thailand went to the polls for the first time in six years last Sunday. The Election Commission will release results for 94% of the vote this Friday, with full and confirmed results released on 9 May. An elected government will be restored but the game has been rigged by the amended 2017 Constitution which allows the military to appoint the 250-strong Senate.

We asked our long-time Thai political correspondent, Professor Thitinan Pongsudhirak of Chulalongkorn University, to have a look at Thailand’s political history and to give us his views on the likely outcome. Dr. Thitinan forecasts the return of Prayut Chan-Ocha as prime minister but at the head of a very weak government in what looks likely to be a Pheu Thai coalition in the lower house. Thai politics looks set to become fractious, and interesting, once again.

3. Thai Election 2019: Defeat in Parliament, Victory in Senate

Tana

With over 90% of the votes counted, the Thaksinite party Peau Thai currently leads with a razor-thin margin of 10 seats, which will be easily overwhelmed by at least 200+ senators who will certainly support the Army faction that appointed them.

  • This ensures policy continuity. The Thaksinite lead is simply too small to justify a mass protest and political uncertainty feared by foreign investors. The stock market reacted counter-intuitively by falling, and this seems like a good opportunity to buy from our vantage point.
  • The strong showing of newbie party Future Forward, now Thailand’s third largest, should benefit TSC (Thai Steel Cable) on the sentiment level. Thanatorn’s uncle Suriya is part of the pro-Army party, though joining the government bloc may be tricky given Future Forward’s campaign stance.

  • The Democrats performed poorly, losing much of their seats in both Bangkok and Southern Thailand (their home base), to Future Forward and Pracharat respectively. However, they may still end up in the government if Future Forward doesn’t pounce on the opportunity.
  • Bhumjaithai was the only swing vote party that did well in this election, emerging as number 4. At the moment, they are the most likely party for the pro-Army government, given their friendly and flexible stance prior to the elections. The Party Leader’s family controls STEC.

4. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC

Lake%20charles

Energy Transfer LP (ET US) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN) have signed a Project Framework Agreement to further develop a large-scale LNG export facility in Lake Charles, Louisiana and move toward a potential final investment decision (FID). They have started actively engaging with LNG Engineering, Procurement and Contracting (EPC) companies with a plan to issue an Invitation to Tender (ITT) in the weeks ahead. We look at the potential contract size and winners and also the other US LNG projects that could be negatively impacted. More detail on the LNG project queue for this year in: A Huge Wave of New LNG Projects Coming in the Next 18 Months: Positive for The E&C Companies.

5. Prayuth Accomplishes a Clear-Cut Victory, Assuring Stability (If Not Rapid Growth)

After 18 years, the Thai (military) establishment has finally tamed Thaksin Shinawatra in the 2019 election, the first one since 2001 in which a party linked to Thaksin has not won a plurality.  Since the military coup of 1932, Thailand’s most stable and powerful institution has been the military — preserving order and continuity. In the 20th century, no single party ever had sufficient parliamentary support to govern Thailand on its own; so, even when the military was not directly governing, it was able to decisively influence weak coalitions of civilian parties. That changed in 2001, and parties linked to Thaksin have dominated all elections held since 2001 — but those governments have been brought down by 3 military coups since 2006. 

Albeit aided by a slew of rule-changes aimed at handicapping Pheu Thai and benefitting his own Palang Pracharat party, Prime Minister (and retired General) Prayuth Chan-ocha has now pulled off a peaceful electoral coup. In a sensational upset, Prayuth’s political vehicle (Palang Pracharat) won the nationwide popular vote count — albeit by declaring 6% of the votes cast invalid. Given that the composition of the House is based on proportional representation, Palang Pracharat is likely to be a very close second to Pheu Thai in the number of seats held in the House. (Pheu Thai won 137 of the 350 constituencies, to 97 for Palang Pracharat). Although the Future Forward party led by businessman Thanathorn will be the third-largest party in the House (and will likely align with Pheu Thai), the next two parties (Bumjaithai and Democrat) are likely to support Prayuth. With the support of all 250 Senators, the Prayuth-led coalition will have an overwhelming majority in a joint Senate-House sitting — which is where the Prime Minister is chosen. 

Prayuth will thus go down in Thailand’s history as a military-turned-civilian leader in the pantheon of Phibun (who was PM for 14 years, and the creator of modern Thailand), Sarit (his dynamic successor in the late-1950s) and Prem Tinsulanond (the iconic leader of Thailand in 1980-88 who created the modern Thai economic miracle). While Prayuth’s stewardship of the economy has been uninspiring over the past 5 years, the last two of them were slightly better, with a quickening of real GDP growth to a 4% annual handle. While we expect a period of political instability over the next 6 weeks as the election results are announced and fought over, the ultimate outcome will be a stable government led by Prayuth that will likely complete a decade in office. While growth will be less dynamic than it would be under a Thaksinite government, stability will allow Thai corporates to plan for the medium term (including growing their regional presence, as they have done in the past decade). While we remain cautious about the near-term, we are now moderately positive on Thailand on a 3-6 month view. 

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief Thailand: SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019 and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019
  2. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

1. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019

Synex%20update%205

SYNEX’s 4Q18 net profit was at Bt190m (+16%YoY, +18QoQ), in-line with our expectation

  • Record-high level of sales at Bt10.38bn is the major contributor to impressive 4Q18 performance. Meanwhile , gross margin drops below 4% in the first time due to changing product mix towards more on device segment
  • SYNEX post 2018 net profit of Bt721m (+15%YoY) driven by 18% increase in revenue
  • We maintain our positive view toward FY19-20E earnings outlook driven by (1) number of flagship smartphone model launches and new brands for low budget users, Neffos, and, (2) higher sales contribution from high-margins product such as gaming desktops and post-sales services.

We maintain our BUY rating with a new target price of Bt16.80 (previous target price at Bt15.0) derived from 17xPE’2019E, which is the average of the World information and technology sector

2. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

Capture

Frasers Property (Thailand) Pcl (FPT TB) has announced a conditional voluntary tender offer for Golden Land Prop Dvlp (GOLD TB) at Bt8.50/share, ~2.4% premium to last close.

Frasers Property Ltd (FPL SP) owns 40.95% in FPT and also 39.92% in GOLD. FPT’s director Panote Sirivadhanabhakdi (the son of Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi), via his majority-controlled vehicle Univentures Public (UV TB), holds 39.28% in GOLD. Panote is also the vice-chairman of GOLD.

Presumably, both FPL and Univentures will tender into the Offer giving FPT a minimum holding of 80.2%. There were no specific minimum acceptance conditions attached to the tender offer mentioned in the announcement.

Should FPP secure 90% of GOLD in the tender offer, it may proceed with its delisting. A voluntary delisting is still achievable with ~80% in the bag, but that is conditional on <10% of shareholders not voting against.

Preconditions to the commencement of the tender offer include the approval from disinterested shareholders in FPP, approval from “relevant contractual parties of GOLD and GOLD’s subsidiaries” and the approval from the Office of Trade Competition Commission.

The fact the Sirivadhanabhakdi family already holds, directly/indirectly ~80% in GOLD, such regulatory approvals should be forthcoming.

This appears a done deal. The only apparent risk is the expected shareholder vote of Univentures wherein Panote will likely need to abstain.

Currently trading at a gross/annualized spread of 1.8%/4.3% assuming early August payment. Very tight, suggesting investors are more likely angling for the back-end.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief Thailand: SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019 and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019
  2. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests
  3. The Week that Was in ASEAN@Smartkarma – Indonesian Property, XL Axiata, and Singapore’s Economy

1. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019

Synex%20update%205

SYNEX’s 4Q18 net profit was at Bt190m (+16%YoY, +18QoQ), in-line with our expectation

  • Record-high level of sales at Bt10.38bn is the major contributor to impressive 4Q18 performance. Meanwhile , gross margin drops below 4% in the first time due to changing product mix towards more on device segment
  • SYNEX post 2018 net profit of Bt721m (+15%YoY) driven by 18% increase in revenue
  • We maintain our positive view toward FY19-20E earnings outlook driven by (1) number of flagship smartphone model launches and new brands for low budget users, Neffos, and, (2) higher sales contribution from high-margins product such as gaming desktops and post-sales services.

We maintain our BUY rating with a new target price of Bt16.80 (previous target price at Bt15.0) derived from 17xPE’2019E, which is the average of the World information and technology sector

2. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

Capture

Frasers Property (Thailand) Pcl (FPT TB) has announced a conditional voluntary tender offer for Golden Land Prop Dvlp (GOLD TB) at Bt8.50/share, ~2.4% premium to last close.

Frasers Property Ltd (FPL SP) owns 40.95% in FPT and also 39.92% in GOLD. FPT’s director Panote Sirivadhanabhakdi (the son of Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi), via his majority-controlled vehicle Univentures Public (UV TB), holds 39.28% in GOLD. Panote is also the vice-chairman of GOLD.

Presumably, both FPL and Univentures will tender into the Offer giving FPT a minimum holding of 80.2%. There were no specific minimum acceptance conditions attached to the tender offer mentioned in the announcement.

Should FPP secure 90% of GOLD in the tender offer, it may proceed with its delisting. A voluntary delisting is still achievable with ~80% in the bag, but that is conditional on <10% of shareholders not voting against.

Preconditions to the commencement of the tender offer include the approval from disinterested shareholders in FPP, approval from “relevant contractual parties of GOLD and GOLD’s subsidiaries” and the approval from the Office of Trade Competition Commission.

The fact the Sirivadhanabhakdi family already holds, directly/indirectly ~80% in GOLD, such regulatory approvals should be forthcoming.

This appears a done deal. The only apparent risk is the expected shareholder vote of Univentures wherein Panote will likely need to abstain.

Currently trading at a gross/annualized spread of 1.8%/4.3% assuming early August payment. Very tight, suggesting investors are more likely angling for the back-end.

3. The Week that Was in ASEAN@Smartkarma – Indonesian Property, XL Axiata, and Singapore’s Economy

Screenshot%202019 02 25%20at%203.13.51%20pm

This week’s offering of Insights across ASEAN@Smartkarma is filled with another eclectic mix of differentiated, substantive and actionable insights from across South East Asia and includes macro, top-down and thematic pieces, as well as actionable equity bottom-up pieces. Please find a brief summary below, with a fuller write up in the detailed section.

Highlights this week include the first individual company report in a Smartkarma Originals series on Indonesian Property from CrossASEAN Insight Provider Jessica Irene on Ciputra Development (CTRA IJ) and the potential for a strong data-driven turnaround over the coming few quarters for Xl Axiata (EXCL IJ) in an Insight from our friends at New Street Research. On the Macro front CrossASEAN economist Prasenjit K. Basu presents some insightful thoughts on the Singapore Economy.

Macro Insights

In Mildly Expansionary, but Socially Magnanimous While Staying Focused on Long-Term Competitiveness, CrossASEAN Economist Prasenjit K. Basu zooms in on the Singapore economy and despite expectations of slower growth this year, sees ample room for fiscal stimulus should the global economy weaken further.

In US Dollar Demand – Fading Appetite, Dr. Jim Walker discusses the less than voracious appetite for the US Dollar.

In Prabowo Errs Again; Widodo Lead Intact; Riady’s Mei-Egg-Karta; BI Holds; Repsol’s Find; Debate Text, Kevin O’Rourke provides his value-added commentary on political and economic developments in Indonesia over the past week. 

In Philippines: Institutional Reforms that Promote Macro Stability, Phipillines economist Jun Trinidad zeros in on institutional reforms which he sees are providing a stable platform for growth. 

Equity Bottom-Up Insights

In the first insight on a company in a Smartkarma Originals series, Indonesia Property – In Search of the End of the Rainbow – Part 1 – Ciputra Development (CTRA IJ), CrossASEAN Insight Provider Jessica Irene takes a detailed look at this leading developer and finds significant upside to the stock. 

In XL Axiata Results Show a Strong Turnaround Underway in Indonesia, our friends at New Street Research revisit Xl Axiata (EXCL IJ) post its most recent results and see the potential for a strong data-driven turnaround over the coming few quarters. 

In Singtel’s Weak 3Q18 Results but Dividend Looks Sustainable and Long Term Upside from Associates, New Street Research circle back to Singtel (ST SP) post results and remains constructive on the stock. 

In M1 Offer Unconditional as Axiata Tenders, Events Specialist Travis Lundy revisits the ongoing M1 Ltd (M1 SP) deal which seems to have reached a conclusion following Axiata Group (AXIATA MK) ‘s acceptance. 

In Best World (BEST SP): Not the Best Financials to Disprove The Business Times Allegations, Arun George takes a look at the company following an article in the local press casting dispersions on its China sales. 

In Delta Thailand’s Tender Offer: Updated Timetable, David Blennerhassett circles back to the ongoing tender offer for Delta Electronics Thai (DELTA TB)

In Sing Holdings – Surge in Full-Year Earnings with a Surprise Hike in Dividend. 67% Upside. BUY., Royston Foo comments on the company following a strong set of results. 

In MAJOR: Impressive 4Q18 Earnings, our friends at Country Group comment on Major Cineplex Group (MAJOR TB) following stellar numbers. MAJOR’s 4Q18 net profit was Bt259m (+247%YoY, +26%QoQ). 

Sector and Thematic Insights

In this week’s REIT Discover: The Three R’s Driving Starhill Global REIT (SGREIT SP), Anni Kum zeros in on Starhill Global Reit (SGREIT SP) and finds an interesting story. 

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

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Brief Thailand: SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019 and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019
  2. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests
  3. The Week that Was in ASEAN@Smartkarma – Indonesian Property, XL Axiata, and Singapore’s Economy
  4. Asia’s External Balances Signal Safety for Investors

1. SYNEX: New Smartphone Launches Help Drive Earnings Momentum in 2019

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SYNEX’s 4Q18 net profit was at Bt190m (+16%YoY, +18QoQ), in-line with our expectation

  • Record-high level of sales at Bt10.38bn is the major contributor to impressive 4Q18 performance. Meanwhile , gross margin drops below 4% in the first time due to changing product mix towards more on device segment
  • SYNEX post 2018 net profit of Bt721m (+15%YoY) driven by 18% increase in revenue
  • We maintain our positive view toward FY19-20E earnings outlook driven by (1) number of flagship smartphone model launches and new brands for low budget users, Neffos, and, (2) higher sales contribution from high-margins product such as gaming desktops and post-sales services.

We maintain our BUY rating with a new target price of Bt16.80 (previous target price at Bt15.0) derived from 17xPE’2019E, which is the average of the World information and technology sector

2. Golden Land: Less An Offer, More A Consolidation Of Interests

Capture

Frasers Property (Thailand) Pcl (FPT TB) has announced a conditional voluntary tender offer for Golden Land Prop Dvlp (GOLD TB) at Bt8.50/share, ~2.4% premium to last close.

Frasers Property Ltd (FPL SP) owns 40.95% in FPT and also 39.92% in GOLD. FPT’s director Panote Sirivadhanabhakdi (the son of Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi), via his majority-controlled vehicle Univentures Public (UV TB), holds 39.28% in GOLD. Panote is also the vice-chairman of GOLD.

Presumably, both FPL and Univentures will tender into the Offer giving FPT a minimum holding of 80.2%. There were no specific minimum acceptance conditions attached to the tender offer mentioned in the announcement.

Should FPP secure 90% of GOLD in the tender offer, it may proceed with its delisting. A voluntary delisting is still achievable with ~80% in the bag, but that is conditional on <10% of shareholders not voting against.

Preconditions to the commencement of the tender offer include the approval from disinterested shareholders in FPP, approval from “relevant contractual parties of GOLD and GOLD’s subsidiaries” and the approval from the Office of Trade Competition Commission.

The fact the Sirivadhanabhakdi family already holds, directly/indirectly ~80% in GOLD, such regulatory approvals should be forthcoming.

This appears a done deal. The only apparent risk is the expected shareholder vote of Univentures wherein Panote will likely need to abstain.

Currently trading at a gross/annualized spread of 1.8%/4.3% assuming early August payment. Very tight, suggesting investors are more likely angling for the back-end.

3. The Week that Was in ASEAN@Smartkarma – Indonesian Property, XL Axiata, and Singapore’s Economy

Screenshot%202019 02 25%20at%203.13.51%20pm

This week’s offering of Insights across ASEAN@Smartkarma is filled with another eclectic mix of differentiated, substantive and actionable insights from across South East Asia and includes macro, top-down and thematic pieces, as well as actionable equity bottom-up pieces. Please find a brief summary below, with a fuller write up in the detailed section.

Highlights this week include the first individual company report in a Smartkarma Originals series on Indonesian Property from CrossASEAN Insight Provider Jessica Irene on Ciputra Development (CTRA IJ) and the potential for a strong data-driven turnaround over the coming few quarters for Xl Axiata (EXCL IJ) in an Insight from our friends at New Street Research. On the Macro front CrossASEAN economist Prasenjit K. Basu presents some insightful thoughts on the Singapore Economy.

Macro Insights

In Mildly Expansionary, but Socially Magnanimous While Staying Focused on Long-Term Competitiveness, CrossASEAN Economist Prasenjit K. Basu zooms in on the Singapore economy and despite expectations of slower growth this year, sees ample room for fiscal stimulus should the global economy weaken further.

In US Dollar Demand – Fading Appetite, Dr. Jim Walker discusses the less than voracious appetite for the US Dollar.

In Prabowo Errs Again; Widodo Lead Intact; Riady’s Mei-Egg-Karta; BI Holds; Repsol’s Find; Debate Text, Kevin O’Rourke provides his value-added commentary on political and economic developments in Indonesia over the past week. 

In Philippines: Institutional Reforms that Promote Macro Stability, Phipillines economist Jun Trinidad zeros in on institutional reforms which he sees are providing a stable platform for growth. 

Equity Bottom-Up Insights

In the first insight on a company in a Smartkarma Originals series, Indonesia Property – In Search of the End of the Rainbow – Part 1 – Ciputra Development (CTRA IJ), CrossASEAN Insight Provider Jessica Irene takes a detailed look at this leading developer and finds significant upside to the stock. 

In XL Axiata Results Show a Strong Turnaround Underway in Indonesia, our friends at New Street Research revisit Xl Axiata (EXCL IJ) post its most recent results and see the potential for a strong data-driven turnaround over the coming few quarters. 

In Singtel’s Weak 3Q18 Results but Dividend Looks Sustainable and Long Term Upside from Associates, New Street Research circle back to Singtel (ST SP) post results and remains constructive on the stock. 

In M1 Offer Unconditional as Axiata Tenders, Events Specialist Travis Lundy revisits the ongoing M1 Ltd (M1 SP) deal which seems to have reached a conclusion following Axiata Group (AXIATA MK) ‘s acceptance. 

In Best World (BEST SP): Not the Best Financials to Disprove The Business Times Allegations, Arun George takes a look at the company following an article in the local press casting dispersions on its China sales. 

In Delta Thailand’s Tender Offer: Updated Timetable, David Blennerhassett circles back to the ongoing tender offer for Delta Electronics Thai (DELTA TB)

In Sing Holdings – Surge in Full-Year Earnings with a Surprise Hike in Dividend. 67% Upside. BUY., Royston Foo comments on the company following a strong set of results. 

In MAJOR: Impressive 4Q18 Earnings, our friends at Country Group comment on Major Cineplex Group (MAJOR TB) following stellar numbers. MAJOR’s 4Q18 net profit was Bt259m (+247%YoY, +26%QoQ). 

Sector and Thematic Insights

In this week’s REIT Discover: The Three R’s Driving Starhill Global REIT (SGREIT SP), Anni Kum zeros in on Starhill Global Reit (SGREIT SP) and finds an interesting story. 

4. Asia’s External Balances Signal Safety for Investors

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Asian currencies are, in general, well supported by economic fundamentals in the form of external surpluses and interest rate differentials. Indeed, most Asian currencies display an appreciating bias, contrary to perceptions in 2018 when all of them lost ground to the US dollar. Over the last year the underlying external strength has been reflected in Asian currency appreciation against the US dollar.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief Thailand: Elections, Coups and Constitutions: Thailand’s Reckoning and more

By | Thailand

In this briefing:

  1. Elections, Coups and Constitutions: Thailand’s Reckoning
  2. Thai Election 2019: Defeat in Parliament, Victory in Senate
  3. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC
  4. Prayuth Accomplishes a Clear-Cut Victory, Assuring Stability (If Not Rapid Growth)
  5. The Week that Was in ASEAN@Smartkarma – Thailand’s Election, Philippine Banks, and Data Junkies

1. Elections, Coups and Constitutions: Thailand’s Reckoning

Thailand went to the polls for the first time in six years last Sunday. The Election Commission will release results for 94% of the vote this Friday, with full and confirmed results released on 9 May. An elected government will be restored but the game has been rigged by the amended 2017 Constitution which allows the military to appoint the 250-strong Senate.

We asked our long-time Thai political correspondent, Professor Thitinan Pongsudhirak of Chulalongkorn University, to have a look at Thailand’s political history and to give us his views on the likely outcome. Dr. Thitinan forecasts the return of Prayut Chan-Ocha as prime minister but at the head of a very weak government in what looks likely to be a Pheu Thai coalition in the lower house. Thai politics looks set to become fractious, and interesting, once again.

2. Thai Election 2019: Defeat in Parliament, Victory in Senate

Tana

With over 90% of the votes counted, the Thaksinite party Peau Thai currently leads with a razor-thin margin of 10 seats, which will be easily overwhelmed by at least 200+ senators who will certainly support the Army faction that appointed them.

  • This ensures policy continuity. The Thaksinite lead is simply too small to justify a mass protest and political uncertainty feared by foreign investors. The stock market reacted counter-intuitively by falling, and this seems like a good opportunity to buy from our vantage point.
  • The strong showing of newbie party Future Forward, now Thailand’s third largest, should benefit TSC (Thai Steel Cable) on the sentiment level. Thanatorn’s uncle Suriya is part of the pro-Army party, though joining the government bloc may be tricky given Future Forward’s campaign stance.

  • The Democrats performed poorly, losing much of their seats in both Bangkok and Southern Thailand (their home base), to Future Forward and Pracharat respectively. However, they may still end up in the government if Future Forward doesn’t pounce on the opportunity.
  • Bhumjaithai was the only swing vote party that did well in this election, emerging as number 4. At the moment, they are the most likely party for the pro-Army government, given their friendly and flexible stance prior to the elections. The Party Leader’s family controls STEC.

3. US Lake Charles LNG Liquefaction Plant Tendering for Contractors: Positive for TechnipFMC

Lake%20charles

Energy Transfer LP (ET US) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN) have signed a Project Framework Agreement to further develop a large-scale LNG export facility in Lake Charles, Louisiana and move toward a potential final investment decision (FID). They have started actively engaging with LNG Engineering, Procurement and Contracting (EPC) companies with a plan to issue an Invitation to Tender (ITT) in the weeks ahead. We look at the potential contract size and winners and also the other US LNG projects that could be negatively impacted. More detail on the LNG project queue for this year in: A Huge Wave of New LNG Projects Coming in the Next 18 Months: Positive for The E&C Companies.

4. Prayuth Accomplishes a Clear-Cut Victory, Assuring Stability (If Not Rapid Growth)

After 18 years, the Thai (military) establishment has finally tamed Thaksin Shinawatra in the 2019 election, the first one since 2001 in which a party linked to Thaksin has not won a plurality.  Since the military coup of 1932, Thailand’s most stable and powerful institution has been the military — preserving order and continuity. In the 20th century, no single party ever had sufficient parliamentary support to govern Thailand on its own; so, even when the military was not directly governing, it was able to decisively influence weak coalitions of civilian parties. That changed in 2001, and parties linked to Thaksin have dominated all elections held since 2001 — but those governments have been brought down by 3 military coups since 2006. 

Albeit aided by a slew of rule-changes aimed at handicapping Pheu Thai and benefitting his own Palang Pracharat party, Prime Minister (and retired General) Prayuth Chan-ocha has now pulled off a peaceful electoral coup. In a sensational upset, Prayuth’s political vehicle (Palang Pracharat) won the nationwide popular vote count — albeit by declaring 6% of the votes cast invalid. Given that the composition of the House is based on proportional representation, Palang Pracharat is likely to be a very close second to Pheu Thai in the number of seats held in the House. (Pheu Thai won 137 of the 350 constituencies, to 97 for Palang Pracharat). Although the Future Forward party led by businessman Thanathorn will be the third-largest party in the House (and will likely align with Pheu Thai), the next two parties (Bumjaithai and Democrat) are likely to support Prayuth. With the support of all 250 Senators, the Prayuth-led coalition will have an overwhelming majority in a joint Senate-House sitting — which is where the Prime Minister is chosen. 

Prayuth will thus go down in Thailand’s history as a military-turned-civilian leader in the pantheon of Phibun (who was PM for 14 years, and the creator of modern Thailand), Sarit (his dynamic successor in the late-1950s) and Prem Tinsulanond (the iconic leader of Thailand in 1980-88 who created the modern Thai economic miracle). While Prayuth’s stewardship of the economy has been uninspiring over the past 5 years, the last two of them were slightly better, with a quickening of real GDP growth to a 4% annual handle. While we expect a period of political instability over the next 6 weeks as the election results are announced and fought over, the ultimate outcome will be a stable government led by Prayuth that will likely complete a decade in office. While growth will be less dynamic than it would be under a Thaksinite government, stability will allow Thai corporates to plan for the medium term (including growing their regional presence, as they have done in the past decade). While we remain cautious about the near-term, we are now moderately positive on Thailand on a 3-6 month view. 

5. The Week that Was in ASEAN@Smartkarma – Thailand’s Election, Philippine Banks, and Data Junkies

This week’s offering of Insights across ASEAN@Smartkarma is filled with another eclectic mix of differentiated, substantive and actionable insights from across South East Asia and includes macro, top-down and thematic pieces, as well as actionable equity bottom-up pieces. Please find a brief summary below, with a fuller write up in the detailed section.

This week’s highlights include value-added comment from CrossASEAN insight provider Prasenjit K. Basu and Dr Jim Walker on the potential impact of Thailand’s elections, an in-depth look at Summarecon Agung (SMRA IJ) fromJessica Irene in part 5 of a Smartkarma Originalsseries on Indonesian property, as well as insights from Daniel Tabbush onPhilippine National Bank (PNB PM) and Tisco Financial Group (TISCO TB), as well as an update onXl Axiata (EXCL IJ)from Angus Mackintosh following a meeting with management. 

Macro Insights

In Thailand: Elections Are Not Irrelevant; This One Too Pits Faster Growth Vs. Military “Stability”, Cross ASEAN Insight provider Prasenjit K. Basu discusses the implications of the result of Thailand’s election, which will likely see the incumbent Prime Minister retain his position, this times as a democratically elected leader (result covered in the discussion stream). 

In Widodo Lead Intact / VP Debate Lacks Impact / Trade Slows / Permitting Impediment / PPP Chair ArrestKevin O’Rourke looks at the most important political and economic developments over the past week and provides his value-added comment. 

In Thailand’s Election – Growth Story Plays Wait and See, Dr. Jim Walker discusses the recent monetary moves by the Bank of Thailand and what the result of the election might mean for growth. 

In Philippines: El Niño’s Comeback – How Bad? , Jun Trinidad looks at the potential impact from the predicted comeback of El Nino in the economy. 

In Asian Credit Monitor: The Pad Thai Election, Warut Promboon looks at the potential impact of the results from the Thai election and the implications for credit in that country. 

Equity Bottom-up Insights

In Part 5 of a Smartkarma Originals seriesIndonesia Property – In Search of the End of the Rainbow – Part 5 –  Summarecon Agung (SMRA IJ), CrossASEAN Insight Provider Jessica Irenelooks in detail at this leading township developer. The company has over 40 years of track record and a combined development area of over 2,700ha. The company benefits from its exposure to the popular Serpong district, but an over-expansion, coupled with tightening property regulations caused its balance sheet to suffer in the following years. Earnings have declined by -19% Cagr over the past five years as a consequence of lower margins and burgeoning debt levels. The company has plans to divest its retail mall division, which can serve as a positive catalyst in the near term. Improving sentiment and better interest rate environment, as well as positive regulatory tailwinds, should be a driver to SMRA’s share price this year. We see a 44% upside to our target price of IDR1,408 per share.

In XL Axiata (EXCL IJ) – The Crown Prince of Data, CrossASEAN Insight Provider Angus Mackintosh circles back to Indonesia’s most direct play on the rising consumption of mobile data, as pricing in that market starts to look more favourable. 

In Golden Agri: El Nino Back on the Front Burner; Bullish Catalyst for GAR, commodities specialist Charles Spencer zeros on the potential positive impact from an impending El Nino.

In Philippine National Bank – The Beginning of Recognition, Daniel Tabbush circles back to this leading but unappreciated Philippines lender, where he sees greater appreciation from investors starting to transpire. 

In Tisco – A Bright Bank in a Dim Rate World, Daniel Tabbush revisit one of his top financial picks in Thailand. 

In SUTL: Puteri Harbor Construction Started Last Week, Membership Sales to Follow, Cash = 84% of MktCap. CrossASEAN Insight Provider Nicolas Van Broekhoven circles back to this small-cap marina play and finds it to be one of the cheapest stocks listed on the SGX. 

In Delta Electronics (DELTA TB): Thoughts on the IFA’s Valuation RangeDelta Electronics Thai (DELTA TB), Arun George circles back to this ongoing tender offer, which he recommends minorities should accept. 

In After You Looks Beyond Thailand For Opportunities, our Thai Guru Athaporn Arayasantiparb, CFA writes on After You Pcl (AU TB) and Amata Corp Public (AMATA TB) following recent meetings with management. The meetings with the two companies whose industries could not have been more different. 

Sector and Thematic Insights

In Thai Telecoms: Slowdown in Mobile Business Continues., our comrades and collaborators at New Street Research circle back to the Thai Telco sector post 4Q18 results. 

In Snippets #21: Bremen, TMB Rights Issue, Thai guru Athaporn Arayasantiparb, CFA highlights five developments/news flows/trends and their potential impact on Thai equities over the past week or so. 

In Phillippine Gaming Tug of War Disguises Vibrant Sector Potential for 2019-2020, gaming specialist Howard J Klein zeros in on the Philippines gaming sector, which currently flies under investor’s radar but has a lot of future potentials, and more especially Bloomberry Resorts (BLOOM PM)

In Singapore Real Deals (Issue 5): The Largest Condominium in Singapore, Anni Kum presents a fortnightly property digest that takes you through the peculiarities of Singapore’s real estate market. In this issue, she looks at the launch of Treasure at Tampines in District 18, the largest condominium in Singapore to-date. (Official launch last weekend). 

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.