Japan

Brief Japan: Kosaido (7868 JP) Reaches Value You Can Sell and more

In this briefing:

  1. Kosaido (7868 JP) Reaches Value You Can Sell
  2. Hitachi Bumps Yungtay Bid to NT$65. Take It.
  3. Consumer Electronics Chains Set for Major Boost This Year – But It Will Be Temporary
  4. Lasertec (6920 JP): Pricing in Long-Term Growth
  5. Gold May Rise on Lower Real Ylds; Canada Leads Fall in Real Ylds; Aust Inflation Expectations Slump

1. Kosaido (7868 JP) Reaches Value You Can Sell

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On Monday the 18th of March, Yoshiaki Murakami-associated companies announced they had raised their stake in Kosaido Co Ltd (7868 JP) above 10%. That stake raise happened at a price ABOVE where Bain Capital Japan’s bidding entity had set its “final” Tender Offer Price of ¥700/share beforehand, indicating there was no way Murakami-associated companies would accept Bain’s price.

On the 20th, Minami Aoyama Fudosan – another Murakami-associated company heretofore uninvolved – announced a Tender Offer for a minimum of 50.00% of Kosaido (and up to 100% of the shares out) at ¥750/share (and announced they had bought more bringing their stake to 13.47% in total). 

The shares reacted strongly Friday the 22nd after a market holiday Thursday, rising 16.6% to close 14.5% through the Murakami-fund terms. 

After the close on Friday, the Murakami-affiliated company Reno KK which has been the lead entity to date in the effort – announced a larger position (as I noted on the 19th was likely). Also after the close, Kosaido itself made three public releases.

It is worth reading them, and it is worth thinking about what the company’s options are.

And now there is more below.

2. Hitachi Bumps Yungtay Bid to NT$65. Take It.

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This was the basis of the trade. Hitachi Ltd (6501 JP) has been susceptible to pressure for a bump since even before the Tender Offer was announced because of the proxy fight at last year’s board meeting for management rights. Hitachi supported the incumbent who consequently retired as chairman, but kept the continuity. The board was split 6:3. 

Since late January or early February when it became clear that board support for the deal was still split 6:3 and one of the points in a couple of the independent directors’ comments as reasons why the deal was not supported was that Hitachi’s bid at NT$60/share did not match an informal offer from Otis at $63/share, it has been clear that one way to extinguish that criticism was to bid NT$63 or higher. 

And now Hitachi has. After the close on Friday, a release from Yungtay Engineering (1507 TT) hit the mops system saying that Hitachi had amended the Public Purchase statement by raising the Purchase Price to NT$65/share. This is closer to the high end of the original valuations provided by the law firm and public accountancy firms of NT$40.27-68.31 and NT$55.15-67.83. Taiwan Hitachi Elevator released a press release carried by the ChinaTimes here.


Past coverage of this situation can be found at:
28 Oct 2018 – Going Up! Hitachi Tender for Yungtay Engineering (1507 TT)
17 Jan 2019 – Hitachi Tender for Yungtay Engineering Launches
26 Feb 2019 – Yungtay Noises Haven’t Produced a Result Yet
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8 Mar 2019 – Yungtay Tummy Rumblings Continue But Not Clear To What Avail

3. Consumer Electronics Chains Set for Major Boost This Year – But It Will Be Temporary

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Consumer electronics retailers have struggled since 2014, with 2018 proving a rare respite from decline as sales remained flat.

The consumption tax increase in October, along with some other factors, means the market is expected to grow this year, but it could be a while before that happens again.

4. Lasertec (6920 JP): Pricing in Long-Term Growth

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Lasertec hit a new high in the semiconductor stock rally that followed Micron Technology’s March 20 earnings call. On Friday, March 22 (March 21 was a holiday in Japan), Lasertec was up 8.4% to ¥4,900. At this price, the shares are selling at 42x our EPS estimate for FY Jun-19, 36x our estimate for FY Jun-20 and 31x our estimate for FY Jun-21. On a 5-year view, earnings growth could bring the projected P/E multiple down to 21x, in our estimation.

Following strong 1H results, management left FY Jun-19 sales and profit guidance unchanged, but raised semiconductor-related orders guidance by 13% while cutting  orders guidance for FPD-related and other products by nearly 40%. Total new orders guidance was raised from ¥37 billion to ¥39 billion, compared with sales guidance of ¥28 billion, implying an increase in the order backlog from ¥39.9 billion to ¥50.9 billion.

With this in mind, we have raised our sales and profit estimates for FY Jun-20 and added new, higher estimates for FY Jun-21 and beyond. Rising demand for EUV mask blank and mask defect inspection equipment should drive an increase in total sales from ¥29 billion this fiscal year to ¥38 billion in FY Jun-21, and approximately ¥50 billion in FY Jun-23. Over the same period, operating profit should rise from ¥7.0 billion to ¥9.5 billion, and then to approximately ¥14 billion.

Risks for investors include the potential delay or reduction of orders and shipments (as just happened with FPD inspection equipment), high volatility in quarterly orders, sales and profits, and extended valuations.

5. Gold May Rise on Lower Real Ylds; Canada Leads Fall in Real Ylds; Aust Inflation Expectations Slump

  • The broad decline in global bond yields and curve flattening suggest that the market has become more concerned about weak global economic growth.
  • The fall in yields is at odds with the rise in equity and commodity prices this year, but the later may have lost upward momentum.
  • Safe haven currencies, gold and JPY, have strengthened this week and are likely to perform well if yields remain low.
  • US real yields have fallen more than nominal yields this year, with a partial recovery in inflation expectations from their fall in Q4 last year. Lower real yields point to weaker fundamental support for the USD, and further support safe havens like gold.
  • Canadian real long term yields have fallen more abruptly than in the USA, into negative territory, suggesting the outlook for the Canadian economy has deteriorated more than most. This may relate to concern over a peaking in the Canadian housing market. The fall in real yields suggests further downside risk for the CAD.
  • Long term inflation breakevens have fallen in Australia sharply since September last year to now well below the RBA’s 2.5% inflation target.
  • Australian leading indicators of the labour market have turned lower, albeit from solid levels, and may be enough, combined with broader evidence of weaker growth, for the RBA to announce an easing bias as soon as April.
  • Asian trade data and flash PMI data for major countries point to ongoing and significant weakness in global trade.

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