Equity Bottom-Up

Brief Equities Bottom-Up: Security Bank: Something Makes Me Feel Insecure and more

In this briefing:

  1. Security Bank: Something Makes Me Feel Insecure
  2. Thai Telecoms: Slowdown in Mobile Business Continues.
  3. China Tower. How Far Will It Rally?
  4. Philippine National Bank – The Beginning of Recognition
  5. After You Looks Beyond Thailand For Opportunities

1. Security Bank: Something Makes Me Feel Insecure

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Security Bank (SECB PM) trades at a premium to Asian banks on a P/Book, franchise valuation, earnings yield, and total return ratio basis.

The PH Score™ of 5.3 is neither good nor bad. (Asia median is 5.7).

In terms of fundamental traction, efficiency has eroded and interconnected profitability has narrowed. “Jaws” are negative. Funding cost growth is sharply in excess of interest income growth. On the other hand, liquidity and capital adequacy are moving in the right direction or are stable.

Asset quality seems to have dramatically improved. Headline non-performing loans are now very low due to adoption of PFRS9. These are calculated now as loans aligned to a default criteria. The bank seems to have reclassified part of “stage 3” impaired loans back into “stage 2”. “Stage 2” is comprised of assets which have experienced a SICR (significant increase in credit risk) since initial recognition, such as substandard, past-dues, and SMLs, and are not classified as NPLs. “Stage 2” represents almost 4% of the loan book versus a headline impaired or problem loan ratio of just 0.64%. In addition, unimpaired past-due loans (73% of headline NPLs) climbed 57% YoY. Charge-offs soared 47% YoY. Perhaps the asset quality is not as pristine as the NPL ratio intimates.

When we look back from 2004, we see an explosive increase in loans (+10x since 2004) coinciding with lower profitability over this period. This is not a good sign. As the bank shifts to consumer lending for growth, up 10x since 2012, we wonder whether a similar pattern will emerge.

In short, the bank resides in the bottom decile of our global VFM (Valuation, Fundamentals, Momentum) rankings.

2. Thai Telecoms: Slowdown in Mobile Business Continues.

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The Thai mobile market reported another weak quarter in 4Q18, with trends deteriorating at all three operators. The weakness was partly due to the cheap unlimited fixed speed offers which were popular in 2018 but which have now been removed from the market. Growth should recover by 2H19.  With Total Access Communication (DTAC TB) having acquired spectrum in 2018, it will no longer cede market share without a struggle. That suggests competitive risks are high in Thailand, with all three operators aiming to boost market share. We remain cautious on the sector and are also worried that the government seems keen to push on with 5G spectrum auctions despite a lack of use cases.

3. China Tower. How Far Will It Rally?

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China Tower (788 HK) has rallied strongly in recent months and the question raised repeatedly in recent client meetings was “how much further is China Tower likely to rally?”. Chris Hoare sees China Tower’s position as unusual as the price moves are not driven by earnings upgrades or changed 5G expectations. Rather is is a sustained move post the IPO when the information in the market was incomplete and expectations were much lower. We were negative at the time of the IPO but changed our views as more information became available.  We remain positive on the scope for revaluation in China Tower given its rapid revenue growth and low valuations vs EM peers. While the recent results were somewhat disappointing, we see good upside as the market factors is lower capex and higher returns.

4. Philippine National Bank – The Beginning of Recognition

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It has taken some time, but finally Philippine National Bank (PNB PM) is being recognized by the market.  To us though, this is only the beginning. The story with PNB has for a long time been about a turnaround, moving from a sleepy state-owned bank focused on large corporate loans and with a high level of bad loans, to a more invigorated bank with far better credit quality and a new focus on the consumer.  The recent milestone of paying a special dividend was a clear sign of how the bank improved since the Asian Financial Crisis (AFC).  The market is now awakening to what a new CEO can do with PNB and one who comes from HSBC Philippines. Still PNB’s market capitalization is only 9% of assets compared with 14-20% for the largest three peer banks. There appears a lot more to come. 

5. After You Looks Beyond Thailand For Opportunities

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We met up with management of two companies whose industries couldn’t have been more different. This is the quick run-down on what they are up to recently:

  • After You posted 14% earnings growth on the back of 20% revenue growth. While this remains healthy, it realizes that domestic market opportunities will become more limited and has started to look abroad with HK as its first market.
  • Locally, the desserts leader is still planning a slew of new products and some in exclusive partnerships with various airlines such as Air Asia and Thai Smile.
  • In an effort to reduce storefront expenses, they will start selling certain products outside stores and even online, now 3% of total sales.
  • Amata’s earnings crashed 28% in 2018 on the back of 2% revenue decline, as Vietnam retroactively forbid certain land sales and even fines the company for past transactions that abided with the law back then!

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