Equity Bottom-Up

Brief Equities Bottom-Up: BBTN: Indonesia Has Special Mention Problems Too and more

In this briefing:

  1. BBTN: Indonesia Has Special Mention Problems Too
  2. Westpac Banking: Looking Fragile
  3. Celltrion Healthcare: Well, We Were Warned
  4. EPG: Revising Down Earnings by 10-12% While Long-Term Outlook Still Intact
  5. TWPC: Sign of Recovery from 4Q18 Earnings

1. BBTN: Indonesia Has Special Mention Problems Too

Bank Tabungan Negara Persero (BBTN IJ) appears to have a nasty combination of high Special Mention Loans (SMLs) and elevated “past due but unimpaired Loans”.

The implication is that provisioning levels are insufficient in an environment of eroding asset quality.

But the bank continues to grow credit by around 20% YoY.

The bank is hugely exposed to the retail real estate market (91% of Loans).

In fact, the Indonesian Banking Sector is rife with high SMLs and in some cases elevated “past due but unimpaired Loans”.

SMLs are traditionally associated with Chinese under-reporting of underlying bad loans, and hence the production of a somewhat flattering Asset Quality picture.

Maybe, the health and valuation of the Indonesian Banking Sector needs to be reassessed with implications for IDR.

2. Westpac Banking: Looking Fragile

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Westpac Banking (WBC AU) is facing a class action suit regarding alleged irresponsible lending in home loans since 2011. This is the first class action against a major Australian bank since the publication of the royal commission’s final report.

The ramifications of the royal commission report remain a source of debate with elections coming up. But, in general, banks will not be allowed to conduct operations in a “business-as-usual way”. There will be consequences for credit provision.

Westpac’s Balance Sheet looks decidedly fragile as it stands. The bank is entering a slowdown from a position of weakness.

Exposures to Australia’s slowing economy (not unrelated of course to China), the dovish turn at the Central Bank, and in particular its bubbly housing market make us hyper cautious. The highly volatile Aussie dollar tumbled from levels above $0.7200 to below $0.7100 following reports that China banned coal imports from the country at a major port.

Despite the sinking share prices of Australia’s main banks, valuations may still be too high given the varied headwinds.

3. Celltrion Healthcare: Well, We Were Warned

Celltrion Healthcare (091990 KS) reported preliminary 2018 results that were dramatically short of expectations as the company cut shipments to reduce distributors’ inventories. Management had announced plans to shift to a direct sales model to get better control over pricing decisions, but the magnitude of Q4’s shortfall (94% decline in revenue) raises questions about the role of “channel stuffing” in boosting prior periods’ results. In addition, we expect some spillover effect on Celltrion Inc (068270 KS)‘s Q4’s results. This Insight discusses the results in brief and contrasts Celltrion Healthcare’s results with those of Samsung Bioepis. 

We continue to avoid these stocks.

4. EPG: Revising Down Earnings by 10-12% While Long-Term Outlook Still Intact

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We revise down EPG’s net profit forecast by 10-12% in 2019-21E. However, we still maintain our positive outlook toward its FY20-21E earnings driven by growth in every business units: 1) sales and margins recovery for EPP segment (22% of revenue in FY9M19) from changing its product mix toward more on food packaging; 2) consistent revenue growth for automotive and thermal insulators (50% and 28% sales contribution). The new target price at Bt9.90 derived from its 2-years average trading range of 23xPE’19E.

  • A slash down in earnings to factor in lower-than-expected sales growth in Aeroflex and EPP. Meanwhile, raising up SG&A to sales ratio to reflects operation enhancement program in Australia.
  • Turn bearish view toward on TJM which contributed 12% in total revenue in 9MFY19 (April-December 2018), due to difficulty in running businesses given high labor cost in Australia and production scale that still far behind the rival.
  • EPP’s gross margin was already bottomed out and expect to normalize on the back of low material price sourced in 4Q18, and, higher contribution from high margin products on food segment.

5. TWPC: Sign of Recovery from 4Q18 Earnings

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TWPC 4Q18 recurring profit was Bt86m (+135%YoY, +975%QoQ). The easing in cassava supply help supporting TWPC both selling volume and profitability.

  • The strong revenue at Bt2.1bn (+12%YoY, +25%QoQ) and GPM at 17.2% (+0.7ppts YoY, +3.2ppts QoQ) should reflect the easing cassava supply and mark its earnings bottom out.
  • TWPC FY2018 recurring profit was Bt197m (-48% YoY), largely eroded by starch industry downturn.
  • TWPC announced a dividend payment of Bt0.32 (XD on 07-May-19), which is equivalent to 4.0% dividend yield.

We maintain our BUY rating with 2019E target price of Bt10.0, derived from 16.5x PE. We believe 2019 will be turnaround year for TWPC as the starch business down-cycle should have already ended. We like TWPC for its scalability with its strong brands in large markets both starch and food (Vermicelli and noodles).

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