Thailand

Brief Thailand: RRG Weekly – Fed Highlights Headwinds – Greece Greases Growth – Thai Election Sun Too Close to Call and more

In this briefing:

  1. RRG Weekly – Fed Highlights Headwinds – Greece Greases Growth – Thai Election Sun Too Close to Call
  2. Snippets #21: Bremain, TMB Rights Issue
  3. Tisco – A Bright Bank in a Dim Rate World
  4. Thailand’s Election – Growth Story Plays Wait and See
  5. Asian Credit Monitor: The Pad Thai Election

1. RRG Weekly – Fed Highlights Headwinds – Greece Greases Growth – Thai Election Sun Too Close to Call

  • US: Fed Sees Tailwinds from Global Growth Shifting to Headwinds from China and Europe.
  • Greece: Growth supported by ‘Golden Visa’ (5-year visa for investing 250,000 Euro) and strong tourism arrivals. 2.3% GDP in 2020.
  • Thailand: Sunday election between Shinawatra-linked Pheu Thai Party and military backed Palang Pracharat Party. Too close to call.
  • Brazil: Former Brazilian President Michel Temer has been arrested in São Paulo as part of the Car Wash corruption investigation. Brazil stocks fell on the news.

2. Snippets #21: Bremain, TMB Rights Issue

Alex%20face

These are the five developments/news flows/trends and their potential impact on Thai equities you should be aware of in recent weeks: 

  • Reversing Brexit. A special report highlighting the possible reversal of Brexit should have limited impact on Thai equities, though a few names like SSI, Thai Union, and Minor do float up on the screen.
  • TMB announces a 5 for 1 rights issue at Bt2.07/sh, which could raise US$570m of new capital for their acquisition of Thanchart and imply a 65-35 split of ownership between the two banks.
  • Politically motivated wage hike. Some of the political campaigns by smaller parties are even more populist than the major parties, implying wage increases between 10-30% from current levels. This could really destabilize Thailand’s long-term prospects as an investment base. 
  • Italian-Thai Chairman thrown into prison. Premchai Karnasutra, who killed one of Thailand’s last 9 black leopards, is sentenced to 16 months in jail. Share prices actually rose!
  • Bangkok’s third airport! The Navy is putting up the UTaPao airport construction up for bid. Front runners include the CP-led consortium, which includes ITD, but contenders include the BTS-STEC consortium and another smaller one.

3. Tisco – A Bright Bank in a Dim Rate World

1

The Fed’s comments may be a surprise to many, but we hope not to our readers. Granular US bank data has indicated for some time, that rising rates were more driven by policy than by demand.  As the world now braces for rate cuts and slower growth, there remain a handful of small banks in Asia Pacific that offer respite. Thailand’s Tisco Financial Group (TISCO TB) ranks as having one of the highest dividend yields in Asia Pacific at 7.8%. Where Tisco remains small, growth prospects are far better than for mainstream banks Bangkok Bank Public (BBL TB), Siam Commercial Bank Pub Co (SCB TB) and Kasikornbank PCL (KBANK TB). Additionally, Tisco has seen a steady rise in profitability with ROA now at 2.31% from 1.84% two years ago and from 1.30% in 2014. This profile of rising and high returns, while still small in a local context, and with one of the best dividend yields anywhere, make it a bright spot in a low rate world.

4. Thailand’s Election – Growth Story Plays Wait and See

Fig%201%20repurchase%20rate

With the elections this week, the Bank of Thailand (BoT) held rates steady at its March MPC meeting. We are eagerly awaiting the outcome of the election. We won’t place any bets on which party(ies)/coalition(s) will form the new government, but once the political fog clears, the growth story is positioned to continue.

5. Asian Credit Monitor: The Pad Thai Election

Prayut abhisit

We expect the upcoming March 24th general election in Thailand to be the first step toward a check-and-balance system but also see this election leading to another election in 2-3 years with the current poll pointing to either an indecisive faction with the junta’s leader, General Prayut Chan O-Sha as the Prime Minister (PM) or  a loose faction with Abhisit Vejjajiva as the PM. In either case, we do not expect the new government to have the decisive vote in the parliament. 

With all the campaign promises, most of which copied Thaksin’s populism style, we also expect rising domestic spending post-election. We expect the voting turnout to be a record 80% or above and believe this election is at least a step toward a more transparent government with a valid opposition and that should induce more investments into the country. That said, we see the event as credit positive for Thailand. Though Thailand’s USD and THB bonds are not attractive and/or sufficiently liquid to international investors, in our view, we believe Thailand is worth monitoring on its role to be the center of the Greater Mekong region, let alone ASEAN.

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.