Value Investing

Brief Value Investing: Tokyo Kiraboshi Financial Group (7173 JP): Red Dwarf and more

In this briefing:

  1. Tokyo Kiraboshi Financial Group (7173 JP): Red Dwarf
  2. Stake in Quadric.io Following Renesas; Denso Attempts to Keep Chip Makers Close to Achieve AD Aims

1. Tokyo Kiraboshi Financial Group (7173 JP): Red Dwarf

7173 tkfg 2019 0212 fy%20guidance

Tokyo Kiraboshi Financial Group (7173 JP) (TKFG) progresses from bad to worse, and its stock price is behaving accordingly.  Amidst volatile trading, the share price is gradually sinking back towards the 52-week intra-day low of ¥1,454 that was reached on Christmas Day 2018 before closing that day at ¥1,504.  3Q FY3/2019 (9 months to 31 December 2018) consolidated results represented a decline of over 56% YoY at the recurring profit level, with net profits down 34% YoY after tax adjustments.  On a quarterly basis, Q3 (October-December 2018) net operating profits collapsed 96% to just ¥66 million, while recurring profits fell 68% YoY to just ¥565 million with a small net loss of ¥9 million as a result of lower fee income and sharply higher credit costs.  Hardly a ‘glittering’ performance.

Trading on a forward-looking price/earnings multiple of 11.7x (using the bank’s current FY3/2019 guidance) and a price/book ratio of 0.19x, TKFG is expensive compared to peer regional banks.  Indeed, adjusting the group’s earnings per share (EPS) for the ¥55 billion (US$507 million) in two still-outstanding preference share issues raises the annualised PER to over 19x: roughly twice that of peer banks.  TKFG’s RoA and RoE ratios are woefully low at 0.09% and 1.71% respectively, loan growth has shrunk to just +0.5% YoY, deposits have fallen alarmingly (down 4.5% YoY), and the overhead ratio has shot up to 95% in Q3.  Yet, despite all these ‘red flags’, TKFG still managed to attract an aggregate foreign ownership of 17.4% as of 31 March 2018 (the most recent data publicly available): a strange choice.  Caveat emptor (may the buyer beware) !

2. Stake in Quadric.io Following Renesas; Denso Attempts to Keep Chip Makers Close to Achieve AD Aims

It was reported last Thursday that Denso Corp (6902 JP) through its wholly-owned subsidiary NSITEXE, Inc. acquired a stake in quadric.io, a fabless semiconductor start-up company based in Burlingame, California. It seems that the company has begun its planned investments for 2019. Last year, Denso increased its stake (from 0.5% to 5%) in chipmaker- Renesas Electronics (6723 JP) to support its progress of ADAS and related technology. We also mentioned in our insight, Denso Prepares for the Future; Investments in Tohoku Pioneer EG Following JOLED and ThinCI, that Denso has been making a series of investments to prepare itself for being the leading software solution provider alongside its hardware expertise, supporting its change in business model. Last year, NSITEXE invested in ThinCi, its partner, since 2016, in the development of a Data Flow Processor (DFP) designed to help autonomous vehicles make quick decisions in complicated and fast-evolving situations. Denso/NSITEXE’s investment in quadric.io has a similar goal. The investment in quadric.io is said to help the start-up in its development of edge processing units (EPUs), which are high-performance semiconductors that could be used as a foundation for enabling automated driving technology.

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