Equity Bottom-Up

Daily Equity Bottom-Up: MCX: The Pieces of the Puzzle Have Fallen in Place, BUY for 32% Upside and more

In this briefing:

  1. MCX: The Pieces of the Puzzle Have Fallen in Place, BUY for 32% Upside
  2. Snippets #17: PTTEP’s Winner Curse, Huawei’s Crisis
  3. SMC (6273 JP): Profits Start to Decline
  4. Weichai Power(2338.HK): Fuel Cell Not the Answer (Yet), More Boldness Needed on All-Electric
  5. REPCO Home – 2QFY19 – Focus on LAP to Maintain the NIMs and Spread

1. MCX: The Pieces of the Puzzle Have Fallen in Place, BUY for 32% Upside

Mkt%20share

  • Multi Commodity Exch India (MCX IN) is the leading commodity futures exchange in India with ~90% market share. It enjoys ~100% market share in each of the top 7 products traded on its exchange.
  • Average Daily Turnover (ADT) is up 24% YoY over YTD-Nov-18 after 4 years of stagnation on the back of increase in volatility of key commodity prices.
  • We see 50-60% increase in ADT over FY18-21 on the back of Mutual Funds entering commodity futures trading creating enough liquidity for large industries like refineries shifting to MCX for hedging, bank distribution of commodity trading products and monetization of commodity options trading.
  • MCX’s volumes are unlikely to be impacted by new entrants like NSE and BSE since none of the new entrants can offer any meaningful improvement over MCX’s offering in terms of lower cost, higher speed or tax friendliness. This makes MCX a ripe acquisition candidate going by global experience.
  • We expect 16% Revenue Cagr, 20% EPS Cagr over FY18-21. Our target price for MCX at 28x Dec-20 EPS is Rs 950- implying 32% upside.

2. Snippets #17: PTTEP’s Winner Curse, Huawei’s Crisis

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December turned out to be more eventful than expected. Guess not everyone is waiting peacefully at home for Santa to hop by. Here’s a quick run-down on stories that have impact (at least indirectly) on Thai equities.

  • Winning bids, losing confidence. PTTEP crushes Chevron in a mighty bid to secure the Bongkot and Erawan fields, but investors responded by driving their shares down 6%. Energy guru Manoon Siriwan pushes back on the bears saying that while costs are high, getting Erawan field on a greenfield basis should more than outweigh the negatives.
  • Huawei and trade wars. Trump’s trade wars take a strange turn following the arrests of Huawei CFO and Canadian citizens in China. As commerce and politics gets mixed up, talks abound about Apple moving production to Vietnam or…Thailand?
  • ERC puts the final nail to Glow’s coffin. This is lamest ruling ever! ERC rejects GPSC’s appeal saying that other industrial estates are already monopolies, and they don’t wanna turn MapTaPhut into another one. Their reasoning defies logic and forced us to capitulate on our Glow position.
  • End of the LTF era. As the tax exemptions from LTFs are phased out, critics point that equities-based programs favor the rich over the poor, while the Puay Ungpakorn Institute points out that insurance companies could benefit from this unfortunate event.
  • CP Group Routs the Mighty BTS in its bid for the high speed railway project, though their victory still predicates on the terms of government subsidy. Though this CP Group entity isn’t listed and many consortium members are foreign, two listed Thai consortium members include BEM and ITD, the country’s biggest construction company.

3. SMC (6273 JP): Profits Start to Decline

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SMC’s year-on-year profit comparisons have turned negative. In the three months to September (Q2 of FY Mar-19), gross profit was down 3.7% year-on-year, operating profit was down 8.8% and net profit was down 9.6%. Operating profit was down 15.1% from Q1. Sales were up only 0.4% year-on-year in Q2, compared with 29.0% growth a year earlier, and down 7.5% from Q1. Management responded by cutting full-year guidance, implicitly changing anticipated 2H operating profit growth from +3.0% to -9.3% year-on-year.

This has all been discounted. The share price dropped 43% from its 52-week and all-time high of ¥55,830 on January 18 to a 52-week low of ¥31,580 on October 28, then rebounded to ¥40,000 in early December. Last Friday, December 14, it closed at ¥34,840. 

What happens next? The share price trend suggests that because year-on-year profit comparisons have finally turned negative, it’s time to start anticipating recovery. But the  fundamentals indicate that profit comparisons are likely to remain very difficult and most probably negative for at least three more quarters. Management reports that semiconductor-related demand is down in all markets and that auto-related demand is down in the U.S. Auto sales are also declining in China. The length and depth of the downturn and the timing and strength of recovery are both unclear. Any positive news on the trade front should support the share price, but while trade friction aggravates the cyclical downturns in the semiconductor and auto industries, it is not their cause.

At ¥34,840, the shares are selling at 17.0x our EPS estimate for FY Mar-19 and 17.7x our estimate for FY Mar-20. These multiples compare with a 5-year historical range of 13.8x – 28.5x. Our projected EV/EBITDA multiples for the same two years are 8.7x and 8.1x, which compare with a 5-year historical range of 7.0x – 15.1x. This should help put a floor under the share price. Interestingly, Japan Analytics’ chart analysis indicates that SMC has never been seriously overbought (see chart below).

A leading supplier of pneumatic and other automated control equipment for the electronics, auto, machine tool and other industries, SMC is highly geared to investment in semiconductor production capacity and factory automation. 

4. Weichai Power(2338.HK): Fuel Cell Not the Answer (Yet), More Boldness Needed on All-Electric

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Weichai Power, China’s largest independent Diesel engine producer, has been looking for a new core business to survive in long term downward trend of its current core business (Diesel engine for commercial vehicle and construction machines) since 2012 when it acquired 25% stake of KION Group AG (KGX GR). By now Weichai owns KION (materials handling equipment), Dematics (integrated automated supply chain technology, directly own ed by KION),  Power Solutions International (PSIX US) (cleantech engine). It also has stakes in Ballard Power Systems (BLDP CN) (PEM fuel cell products), Ceres Power Holdings (CWR LN) (fuel cell technology and engineering). Lately, Weichai entered into an agreement with Westport Fuel System (WPRT.US) to develop and commercialise HPDI 2.0.

It seems Weichai decides to put its chip on fuel cell and low-emission engines. However, our analysis shows all the above investment would not be enough to secure Weichai’s market outlook in the next 5-10 years. 

This note focus on an evaluation of Weichai’s technology choices on a 5-10 year time horizon. We will discuss the company’s 12-months view in another note.   

5. REPCO Home – 2QFY19 – Focus on LAP to Maintain the NIMs and Spread

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Repco Home Finance (REPCO IN) 2QFY19 results were in line with our estimates. The outstanding loan book portfolio reflected 11% YoY growth (v/s our expectation of 12%) at Rs 103,820 mn. The Net Interest Income (NII) was Rs 1,154 mn (v/s our estimates of Rs 1,230 mn), reflecting a YoY decline of 5%. The PAT was Rs 670 (v/s our estimates of Rs 618 mn), reflecting a YoY decline of 4%.

The management stated that the sand mining issue in Tamil Nadu (TN) (58.4% of outstanding loan book as of 1HFY19) lasted longer than expected. This has led to lower construction activity and demand for housing loans in Tamil Nadu. The company has guided for an improvement in 2HFY19 with the target of 15-16% loan growth.  They are focusing more on the other markets like Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka to grow the loan book.

We have revised our NII estimates by -5.3%/-5.2%/ -1.5%, PPOP by -7.3%/-7.2%/-5.1% and PAT by -3.5%/ -3.5%/-1.9% for FY19E/FY20E/FY21E respectively.  We have revised our P/ABV multiple from 2.3x to 1.9x. Applying it to the adjusted book value for September-20E of Rs 306 per share, we arrive at the fair value of Rs 570 (earlier Rs 630)  for the next 12 months.

Particulars 

FY18
FY19E
FY20E

FY21E

Adjusted book value (ABV) Rs

195
225
271
334

P/ABV (x)

1.7
1.5
1.2
1.0

RoE

18.5%
16.9%
16.6%
17.0%

RoA

2.4%
2.3%
2.2%
2.4%
Source: Trivikram Consultants research as of 12th December 2018