Thailand

Brief Thailand: Moore’s Law May Not Be Dead, After All and more

In this briefing:

  1. Moore’s Law May Not Be Dead, After All
  2. RRG Weekly – Is Modi Government Cooking the Books? Brexit Risks Rise. South Africa Could Surprise
  3. Upstream Oil & Gas M&A Review: Surge of Takeovers and Mergers in 2018 – What to Expect in 2019
  4. SAPPE: New Strategic Partner Drive 2019 Earning Growth
  5. GLOW’s Done Deal As SPA (Almost) Completes

1. Moore’s Law May Not Be Dead, After All

2019 03 14%20moore's%20law

For years semiconductor makers and investors have worried that Moore’s Law will end.  Although it is not difficult to find proponents of this argument today, this Insight provides evidence that the venerable phenomenon not only is still moving forward, but that it has, in some cases, been moving faster than it has in the past.

2. RRG Weekly – Is Modi Government Cooking the Books? Brexit Risks Rise. South Africa Could Surprise

  • Russia: Recent study estimates that unreported activity accounts for about 20% of GDP. Moscow could use this lost tax revenue.
  • Singapore: MAS qtrly survey of professional forecasters estimates 2019 GDP growth at 2.5% for this year, down from median estimate of 2.7% in the September survey.
  • South Africa: Morgan Stanley is calling for outperformance by South African economy and stocks in the coming months.  Focus on Healthcare and Retail Names)
  • India: Modi’s government is accused of politicizing economic data government in a growing debate over the credibility of India’s official growth estimates.

3. Upstream Oil & Gas M&A Review: Surge of Takeovers and Mergers in 2018 – What to Expect in 2019

Oilforecastchart

The last three years have been characterized by significant M&A activity in the upstream oil and gas industry. As the oil cycle recovered from the price bottom in January 2016, lower asset prices and corporate valuations created opportunities for the companies with a stronger balance sheet to grow inorganically while their weaker competitors were forced to downsize their portfolios. 2018, in particular, has seen a surge of corporate M&A which has been driving consolidation in the industry. This insight examines the trends that have shaped the M&A markets since 2016 with a closer view of 2018 and the outlook for 2019.

Exhibit 1: M&A volume compared to the E&P index and the oil price since 2016

Source: Energy Market Square, Capital IQ. Market value weighted index including independent E&P companies with market value greater than $300m as of 19 April 2018. Data as of 7 March 2019. The M&A volume in September 2018 includes the merger of Wintershall and DEA with an estimated value of $10bn.

4. SAPPE: New Strategic Partner Drive 2019 Earning Growth

Picture1

We cut our target price by 22% to Bt24.7 to factor in  disappointing 2018 result. However, we maintain our BUY rating on the back of positive outlook toward its new products and market expansion plan.

The story:

  • Posted net profit of Bt50m in 4Q18, down 36%YoY and 25%QoQ
  • Trimmed 2019-21E forecast by 23.8%-24.3% respectively
  • Expanding strategic partnership
  • Our new target price of Bt24.7 is based on a target PE’19E of 18.8x which is equivalent to the World’s consumer staples sector.

Risks:  (1) Fluctuations in raw material prices

             (2) Exchange rate fluctuations

             (3) Highly competitive industry

5. GLOW’s Done Deal As SPA (Almost) Completes

Price%20mar

The revised SPA between Engie SA (ENGI FP) and Global Power Synergy Company Ltd (GPSC TB) is expected to the close this week, triggering a mandatory Tender offer for Glow Energy Pcl (GLOW TB).

The revision was a remedial requirement (announced on the 27 Dec) after the Office of the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) resolved to approve, in principle, the proposed merger of GSPC and GLOW, provided GLOW sells Glow SPP1 before or at the same time as the merger. The ERC had previously rejected the merger on the 11 October.

The divestment of SPP1 to B Grimm Power (BGRIM TB) for Bt3.3bn (~2.5% of GLOW’s market cap at the time) was announced on the 22 February and was completed yesterday

Subsequent to the SPP1 sale, the purchase price under the SPA was adjusted to Bt91.9906/share, a ~3% decline from the initial Bt94.892/share price under the original SPA.

My discussions with GLOW indicate the SPA is expected to complete this week – i.e. Engie crosses its 69.11% holding in GLOW to GPSC – and that the 247-3 and 247-4 forms will be submitted by GPSC in “around” 1-2 weeks after the close of the main transaction. The ERC signed off on the SPA last Friday.

Assuming late-May payment, this is currently trading at a gross/annualised spread of 1.6%/8.8%.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.