Equity Bottom-Up

Brief Equities Bottom-Up: Jiangxi Bank: “No Sooner Has One Pushed a Gourd Under Water than Another Pops Up” and more

In this briefing:

  1. Jiangxi Bank: “No Sooner Has One Pushed a Gourd Under Water than Another Pops Up”
  2. British Land (BLND:LN): Retail in Reverse
  3. MTG Co Ltd; Problems Stretch Far Beyond the New Chinese E-Commerce Legislation
  4. WICE: Expansion Phase Still Go On
  5. Sony Corp: Key Takeaways from Our Recent Meeting with IR Team

1. Jiangxi Bank: “No Sooner Has One Pushed a Gourd Under Water than Another Pops Up”

Jiangxi Bank Co Ltd (1916 HK) initially attracted our attention with a subpar PH Score (a quantamental value-quality gauge). The bank only scored positively on Capital Adequacy and Efficiency trends. The latter is almost certainly not a true picture.

Further analysis reveals a bank ratcheting up the credit spigot exuberantly on the back of poor asset quality fundamentals (booming substandard loans and SML expansion) with ensuing elevated asset writedowns weighing on a reducing bottom-line despite gains from securities and a lower tax provision.

Valuations do not fully reflect a somewhat challenging picture. Shares trade at Book Value vs a regional median of 0.8x, at a Franchise Valuation of 13% vs a regional median of 9%, and at an Earnings Yield of 8.4% vs a regional median of 10%. Based on FY18 data, this is a bank that should trade at a discount rather than at a premium to peers.

2. British Land (BLND:LN): Retail in Reverse

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A ‘perfect storm’ is enveloping UK retailers. Brexit uncertainty is reducing footfall and sales and the structural shift to e-commerce continues unabated. But if things are tough for retailers they are equally bad for UK property companies with a significant proportion of retail in their portfolios. Declining rents and rising yields are not positive for valuations. Landlords also have to deal with an increasing incidence of tenant insolvencies. 

British Land: what does it do ?

British Land is the third largest property company in the FTSE100 with a market capitalisation of £5.6bn and property portfolio of £12.8bn split almost equally between Retail and Central London offices. 

Why is it in the Short portfolio ?

Trading pressure in the retail sector is translating into rent reductions for landlords, or worse, vacant space. Yields are rising due to decreased investment demand. Property consultancies anticipate a double digit decline in retail capital values over the next two years. The consensus expectation is for British Land’s EPRA NAV to decline 8% over the next two years.    

3. MTG Co Ltd; Problems Stretch Far Beyond the New Chinese E-Commerce Legislation

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  • MTG revised their original targets for FY2019 and issued revised targets which were significantly below the original targets
  • The share price has already been on the decline even prior to the notice of revised targets
  • Declining inbound sales of its flagship brand ReFa is the main culprit for guidance reversion
  • The impact of Chinese e-commerce legislation was significant due to limited exposure to pure inbound sales
  • Parallel buyers, those who buy products to resell them in China: dominates MTG’s inbound sales
  • MTG’s price difference in Japan duty-free purchases vs official sales channels in China
  • The Troubles of MTG, Causing Panic Among Consensus
  • Insider ownership and lack of free float keeping the share price above its fair value
  • Price to book approaching 1.0x; limits the immediate downside risk

4. WICE: Expansion Phase Still Go On

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We maintain BUY rating for WICE with a new target price of Bt5.20 (previous target price: 7.50), based on 29xPE’19E, its one year average trading range or 20% discount to Thai transportation sector.

The story:

  • Cross broader business plays the key growth driver in 2019
  • We revised down earnings in 2019-21E due to lower-than-expected margins

Risks:

  • Stronger Baht vs major foreign currencies such as US dollar causes lower income in Baht terms as the main reporting currency is Baht
  • Higher than expected in fluctuation in freight rates
  • Intensity of freight forwarding businesses in both domestic and overseas

5. Sony Corp: Key Takeaways from Our Recent Meeting with IR Team

This article is a round up of the key takeaways from our recent meeting with Sony’s IR team. Our main focus was on the PlayStation and subsequent hardware and software developments, the company’s mobile phones business unit, the pictures unit as well as the semiconductor business.

  • In the gaming segment, Sony doesn’t see Stadia as a threat since Sony mainly caters to the core gaming segment. Sony does not expect cloud gaming to offer the same quality that consoles offer to core gamers anytime soon. For the time being, Stadia will most likely appeal to casual gamers.
  • In the pictures segment, Sony is developing a Spider-Verse sequel. A definite release date is yet to be confirmed, however, looking at the first movie’s success, we can expect a similar result for the sequel upon release.
  • The company also plans to hold onto its mobile communications segment even though it is expected to make losses in FY03/19 as well. For Sony, this segment is crucial in developing 5G technologies.
  • In the semiconductors segment, Sony expects a demand hike from the number of cameras used per phone. This is in spite of the mobile phone market itself slowing down. Sony expects to increase the ASPs of these sensors going forward as well.

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