Equity Bottom-Up

Brief Equities Bottom-Up: Angang Steel: PMI Recovery to Support Shares: Close Short and more

In this briefing:

  1. Angang Steel: PMI Recovery to Support Shares: Close Short
  2. Optex (6914 JP): Factory Automation Slowdown in the Price
  3. Sumco: Well Positioned to Expand Capacity Faster than Its Competitors if Demand Picks Up
  4. Nexon to Increase Focus on Mobile Gaming Amidst Talks of Possible Sale of the Company
  5. Shaky Situations at DEMCO and Pranda

1. Angang Steel: PMI Recovery to Support Shares: Close Short

Pmi3

INVESTMENT VIEW:
The recovery in China’s March PMI index to 50.8 shows an unexpected expansion in economic activity.  Historically, there is a strong correlation between the PMI and Chinese steel prices as well as Angang’s share price. 

We close our short on Angang Steel Co Ltd (H) (347 HK) shares. 

2. Optex (6914 JP): Factory Automation Slowdown in the Price

Screen%20shot%202019 03 30%20at%2011.58.02

According to management, weak demand for factory automation sensors had a significant negative impact on sales and profits in 1Q of FY Dec-19. Also, in our estimation, it is likely to cause 1H results to fall short of guidance. But this should be in the share price, which has dropped by nearly 50% from its 52-week high. 

In the year to December 2018, operating profit was up only 2.1% on a 7.0% increase in sales, largely due to an increase in machine vision marketing expenses. In January and February 2019, factory automation orders and sales dropped abruptly as customers sought to reduce excess inventories. In March, some new orders were received for delivery in May, indicating that the situation may stabilize in 2H. Demand for security and automatic door sensors continues to grow at low single-digit rates.

For FY Dec-19 as a whole, management is guiding for a 6.2% increase in operating profit on a 7.2% increase in sales. Our forecast is for flat operating profit on a 2% increase in sales. Sales and profit growth should pick up over the following two years, in our estimation, but remain in single digits.

At ¥1,765 (Friday, March 29, closing price), Optex is selling at 18x our EPS estimate for FY Dec-19 and 17x our estimate for FY Dec-20. Over the past 5 years, the P/E has ranged from 13x to 36x. On a trailing 12-month basis, Japan Analytics calculates 5% upside to a no-growth valuation, which is in line with our forecast for this fiscal year. This suggests: buy either for the bounce or for the long term. 

3. Sumco: Well Positioned to Expand Capacity Faster than Its Competitors if Demand Picks Up

Capture%201

  • The semiconductor silicon wafer market saw continued growth in demand for all wafer diameters supported by applications for servers, data centers, automobiles and IoT applications.
  • While the demand for semiconductors, data centers and other IoT applications are declining, Sumco expects firm demand from power semiconductors, sensors and automotive uses. The management expects the demand from the 5G market also to aid in top-line growth.
  • Sumco has posted an extraordinary loss following the early termination of a long-term polysilicon purchasing agreement. The long-term contract with Osaka Titanium is expected to end in March 2019. We expect this move to help Sumco switch to cheaper polysilicon which in turn should help reduce costs. That being said, some of the long-term contracts for polysilicon are still continuing, and there is still significant inventory built-up so this impact could take four to five years to be fully realised.
  • Having visited the company recently, Sumco still has more potential brownfield capacity available, which we believe can be used in the event the demand picks up enabling the company to add new capacity faster than its competitors and enjoy the benefits from growing demand and increasing prices.

4. Nexon to Increase Focus on Mobile Gaming Amidst Talks of Possible Sale of the Company

Nexon1

  • The global gaming market is transitioning towards mobile gaming, which currently captures around 50% of market share. This has resulted in Korean gaming company Nexon slowly shifting its focus towards mobile games.
  • Over the year’s Nexon’s mobile gaming segment has grown faster than the PC online segment. When looking at the five-year revenue CAGR between the two business segments, the PC online segment has grown at a CAGR of 9.4% over FY2013-18 while the mobile games segment has grown at a double digit CAGR of 14.1% over the same period.
  • For the mobile gaming segment, in the future, Nexon’s primary focus includes developing mobile games based on IPs of older PC games.
  • The company has a steady line up of mobile games planned for FY2019, with ten titles set to release in the first half.
  • On our estimates, Nexon seems over-valued, currently trading at a FY1 EV/OP of 9.6x compared to its five-year historical median of 7.7x.

5. Shaky Situations at DEMCO and Pranda

We visited two companies with very different trajectories. 

  • Renewable power specialist DEMCO is struggling, despite doing really well in the past, while jeweler Pranda, once struggling, is on the recovery path.
  • DEMCO reported gross profit and revenue decline of 8% and 7% respectively. Their earnings more than doubled, but that’s solely due to dividends from Wind Energy, an investment that cost them Bt800m and is embroiled in scandal.
  • Pranda’s operating cash flows surged from Bt12m to Bt230m, as they restructured their store network.
  • We’d still be caution on PDJ, as management doesn’t feel the restructuring is over. More stores could be closed down in the future.

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.