In this briefing:
- TWPC: Sign of Recovery from 4Q18 Earnings
- PLAT: Already Priced in the Delay in Opening a New Project
- Confluence of Politics – China Bans Australian Coal Imports (Flash Note)
1. TWPC: Sign of Recovery from 4Q18 Earnings
TWPC 4Q18 recurring profit was Bt86m (+135%YoY, +975%QoQ). The easing in cassava supply help supporting TWPC both selling volume and profitability.
- The strong revenue at Bt2.1bn (+12%YoY, +25%QoQ) and GPM at 17.2% (+0.7ppts YoY, +3.2ppts QoQ) should reflect the easing cassava supply and mark its earnings bottom out.
- TWPC FY2018 recurring profit was Bt197m (-48% YoY), largely eroded by starch industry downturn.
- TWPC announced a dividend payment of Bt0.32 (XD on 07-May-19), which is equivalent to 4.0% dividend yield.
We maintain our BUY rating with 2019E target price of Bt10.0, derived from 16.5x PE. We believe 2019 will be turnaround year for TWPC as the starch business down-cycle should have already ended. We like TWPC for its scalability with its strong brands in large markets both starch and food (Vermicelli and noodles).
2. PLAT: Already Priced in the Delay in Opening a New Project
PLAT reported 4Q18 net profit of Bt198m (-3%YoY, +6%QoQ) and in-line with our expectation.
- Slow sales growth (+3%YoY) due to the delay in opening The Market Bangkok project from Dec 18 to 14 Feb 2019 caused a YoY drop in 4Q18 performance. In summary, 2018 earnings grew 2%YoY driven by 5%YoY in sales growth. We also believe current share price already priced in this delay.
- Despite a drop in 4Q18 earnings YoY, we expect strong recovery in 1H19 earnings driven by opening The Market Bangkok (70% booked).
- We maintain our positive view toward its outlook back by the rise in average rental rate trend after long term contracts expiration in 2020-2021E.
- Announced an annual dividend payment of Bt0.2 (XD on 4 Mar), which is equivalent to 2.6% upcoming dividend yield.
We maintain BUY rating with a target price of Bt9.4 based on DCF (10.8%WACC, 0% TG)*.
3. Confluence of Politics – China Bans Australian Coal Imports (Flash Note)
- China implements coal import caps specifically targeting Australian producers
- Unclear as to how widespread these restrictions will eventually be
- Thermal and metallurgical coal exports affected
- Impacting ~A$8.4Bn of metallurgical coal exports; or 4.4% of national income
- Thermal coal exports affected worth ~A$3.8Bn; or an additional 2% of national income
- Collectively, thermal and metallurgical exports equate to ~0.9% of Australian annual GDP
- Actions appear to be a response to blocking Huawei bidding for the 5G network
- Recent Chinese cyber-attacks harden Australian Government’s resolve
- Expect similar Chinese measures (in time) to be applied to other commodities and industries
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