Month: May 2008

 

SPAusNet – BT

SP Ausnet delivers on stable returns

SP AUSNET offers predictable and stable returns, managing director Nino Ficca said yesterday.

‘We’ve delivered what we’ve said,’ Mr Ficca said during a briefing on the FY2008 results of the 51 per cent Singapore Power unit.

He was responding to a question on the performance of the stock since it listed in December 2005 in Australia and Singapore, and which, except for a brief period last year, has languished below its IPO price.

SP Ausnet has traded at an average of $1.57, according to Bloomberg. It’s IPO price was $1.75 and A$1.38.

Senior managers of SP Ausnet, which owns and operates power transmission networks in Australia’s Victoria state, are in Singapore this week to meet investors.

Mr Ficca noted that stock markets have been volatile but ‘this is very predictable and stable … our track record speaks for itself’.

Distribution since listing, including next month’s payout of the FY2008 final dividend, will total 26 Australian cents (34 Singapore cents).

It announced a final distribution of 5.788 Australian cents, taking the full-year 2008 distribution to 11.564 Australian cents. Singapore shareholders will receive 11.264 cents less a withholding tax of 0.3 per cent, said Lucinda Kerr of SP Ausnet’s investor relations.

‘We’re not a capital growth stock. It’s more of a distribution yield stock,’ said Ms Kerr, referring to the predictability of the company’s cash flow and its regulated revenue.

For the next three years, 90 per cent of SP Ausnet’s total revenue is assured as it has locked in 100 per cent of regulated revenue.

For current FY2009, SP Ausnet has again guided for 2.5 per cent growth in dividends.

The firm has reaffirmed guidance given earlier this year and expects revenue and earnings before interest tax, depreciation and amortisation growth of about 8 per cent. Net profit after tax is expected to be in line with that previously, due to increased interest charges.

SP Ausnet posted a full-year net profit of A$157.5 million for the period ended March 31, down 11.7 per cent because of costs related to the scrapped Alinta deal from its parent Singapore Power. Earnings per share was 2.54 Australian cents.

SP Ausnet’s stock closed one cent higher at S$1.63 yesterday.

May 2008

Results Announced

  • 22-May-08 (AM) : SPAusNet (2H08 – Mar) – DPS A$ 5.788ct (Gross) / A$ 5.6225ct (Net of With-holding tax)
  • 14-May-08 (AM) : SingTel (Q408) – EPS 6.87ct (todate 24.9ct) ; DPS 6.9ct (todate 12.5ct)
  • 13-May-08 : ComfortDelgro (Q108) – EPS 2.41ct
  • 13-May-08 : SBSTransit (Q108) – EPS 4.98ct
  • 7-May-08 : StarHub (Q108) – EPS 4.7ct ; DPS 4.5ct
  • 6-May-08 : STEng (Q108) – EPS 4.11ct

STI = 3192.62 (+31.84)

Stock

Period

DPS ct

Price

Yield

PE

Div Breakdown

SPH

FY07 : Aug

26.0

S$4.28

6.075%

13.38

Interim 7ct ; Final 9ct + 10ct (Special)

SingPost

FY08 : Mar

6.25

S$1.09

5.734%

14.04

Q1 1.25ct ; Q2 1.25ct ; Q3 1.25ct ; Q4 2.5ct

Sing Food

FY07 : Dec

5.0

S$0.80

6.250%

13.11

Interim 1.8ct ; Final 3.2ct

STEng

FY07 : Dec

16.88

S$3.18

5.308%

18.76

Final 4ct + 10.88ct (Special) ; Interim 2ct

Transport

Stock

Period

DPS ct

Price

Yield

PE

Div Breakdown

SBSTransit

FY07 : Dec

17.25

S$2.11

8.175%

12.89

Interim 6ct ; Special 8ct ; Final 3.25ct

ComfortDelgro

FY07 : Dec

10.15

S$1.61

6.304%

15.00

Interim 3.125ct + Special 3.375 ; Final 3ct + Special 1.5ct

SMRT

FY08 : Mar

7.75

S$1.68

4.613%

16.97

Interim 1.75ct ; Final 6.0ct

TELCO

Stock

Period

DPS ct

Price

Yield

PE

Div Breakdown

SingTel

FY08 : Mar

12.5

S$3.81

3.281%

15.30

Interim 5.6ct ; Final 6.9ct

M1

FY07 : Dec

15.4

S$1.96

7.857%

10.59

Interim 2.5ct + 4.6ct (Capital Reduction) ; Final 8.3ct

StarHub

FY07 : Dec

16.0

S$2.86

5.594%

15.28

Q1 3.5ct ; Q2 4.0ct ; Q3 4.0ct ; Q4 4.5ct

Funds / Infrastructure

Stock

Period

DPS ct

Price

Yield

NAV

Div Breakdown

SPAus

2H : Mar-08

A5.6225

S$1.63

9.014%

A$1.08 (NTA)

2H A5.6225ct ; 1H A5.6142ct @ 1.2585

MIIF

2H : Dec-07

4.25

S$0.87

9.770%

$1.31

2H 4.25ct ; 1H 4.15ct

MacCookPSF

Q3 : Mar-08

A2.31

S$0.845

14.288%

A$1.033

Q308 A2.31 @ 1.2525 ; Q208 A2.31ct @ 1.2485 ; Q108 A2.31ct @ 1.3144

* SPAus and MacCookPSF DPU in A$. Yield is Calculated Using Latest Exchange Rate (1.3066) fm Yahoo

NOTES :

  • Mkt Price is as on 30-May-08
  • SPAus : 2H08 (Mar08) – A5.788ct (before tax) / A5.6225ct (after tax) ; 1H08 (Sep07) – A5.776ct (before tax) / A5.6142ct (after tax)
  • SingTel : Q408 (Mar) – Final 6.9ct ; Q208 (Sep07) – Interim 5.6ct
  • StarHub : Q108 (Mar) – 4.5ct
  • SingPost : Q408 (Mar08) – 2.5ct ; Q308 (Dec07) – 1.25ct ; Q208 (Sep07) – 1.25ct ; Q108 (Jun07) – 1.25ct
  • SMRT : Q408 (Mar08) – Final 6.0ct ; Q208 (Sep07) – Interim 1.75ct
  • MacCookPSF : Q308 (Mar08) A2.31ct @ 1.2525 ; Q208 (Dec07) A2.31ct @ 1.2485 ; Q108 (Sep07) – A2.625ct (Gross) / A2.31ct (After With-hldg Tax)
  • SPH : 1H08 (Feb) – 8ct
  • MIIF : 2H07 (Dec) – 4.25ct ; 1H07 (Jun) – 4.15ct
  • ST Engg : Q407 (Dec) – 4ct + Special 10.88ct ; Q207 (Jun) – 2ct
  • ComfortDelgro : Q407 (Dec) – 2.65ct ; Q207 (Jun) – Interim 3.35ct + Special 4.15ct
  • SBSTransit : Q407 (Dec) 3.25ct ; Q307 (Sep) – 8ct ; Q207 (Jun) – 6ct
  • Sing Food : Q407 (Dec) – 3.2ct ; Q307 (Sep) – 1.8ct
  • M1 : 2H07 (Dec) – Final 8.3ct ; 1H07 (Jun) – Interim 2.5ct + Capital Reduction 4.6ct

SingTel – BT

What next, SingTel?

THE abrupt collapse of takeover talks between South Africa’s MTN Group and India’s Bharti Airtel over the weekend has not drawn much interest from the market.

Some are hopeful this could mean a special dividend is on the cards soon, while others think SingTel may keep its money chest full for the time being, given that other projects are brewing.

When SingTel’s associate, 30 per cent-owned Bharti, announced it was in talks with MTN early this month, there was a fair bit of buzz. After all, if successful, the deal would be the largest takeover involving an Indian company, and it could have given a boost to SingTel which has been eyeing telcos in the Middle East and Africa.

There was speculation that the takeover – which had valued MTN, South Africa’s largest telco, at a reported US$50 billion – might see SingTel get involved either as a co-buyer or increasing its stake in Bharti where it is already the biggest shareholder. Merging MTN and Bharti would create the world’s sixth-largest mobile operator, with more than 130 million subscribers in around two dozen countries.

But Bharti, India’s leading mobile operator, said on Saturday it had called off the talks after MTN proposed a new structure which would have seen the Indian group becoming a unit of the South African-based mobile phone operator.

The new structure envisaged Bharti Airtel becoming a subsidiary of MTN and the exchange of majority shares of Bharti Airtel held by the Bharti family and SingTel, in exchange for a controlling stake in MTN.

‘Bharti believes that this convoluted way of getting an indirect control of the combined entity would have compromised the minority shareholders of Bharti Airtel and also would not capture the synergies of a combined entity,’ it said.

Bharti added that it had lined up funding from bankers of over US$60 billion.

Many believed that when SingTel did not announce a special dividend – which had been expected – when it released full-year (FY) 2008 results on May 14, it was saving up cash for the takeover.

The telco had, after all, between 2004 and 2007 returned extra cash to shareholders via capital reduction and special dividends when it did not make any significant investments.

Commenting on SingTel’s latest dividend, CEO Chua Sock Koong said: ‘We are balancing our desire for an efficient balance sheet with financial flexibility to make further investments.’

DBS analyst Sachin Mittal sees two outcomes from the scrapped takeover bid.

‘We expect SingTel’s share price to benefit from this news in the near term due to two key reasons: (1) Bharti’s stock price has fallen by close to 10 per cent from its peak in the last one month on possible overpayment concerns. As Bharti constitutes 33 per cent of our sum-of-the-parts valuation for SingTel, if Bharti stages 5-10 per cent recovery, SingTel can register 2-3 per cent recovery. (2) SingTel had omitted special dividends with its FY08 results (we had expected 8 cents) possibly to reserve cash for MTN deal. With no cash outlay required for the MTN deal now, investors can hope SingTel to announce special dividends in FY09, given its net debt to earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation at 0.9x is much below the optimal ratio of 1.5x-2.0x.’

Mr Mittal also thinks that SingTel remains under pressure to invest in emerging market telcos to deliver on its guidance of double-digit growth in earnings in the medium term (5-7 years).

But UBS’ Suresh Mahadevan does not think a special dividend is on the cards for the time being. He also said ‘SingTel’s strategy doesn’t revolve around acquisition’, adding that the ‘group has a fairly good footprint in the region, especially in India and Indonesia’.

As for the prospect of a special dividend, Mr Mahadevan points to Bharti’s statement where it had received a positive response from banks on funding the proposed takeover.

He figures Bharti would have done the deal with or without SingTel’s help.

It is good for SingTel to have financial flexibility in the meantime since it has put in a bid with partners Axia Netmedia of Canada and Singapore Press Holdings for the rewiring of the nation’s high-speed broadband network, he said.

Perhaps the lack of buzz stems from shareholders’ faith in SingTel’s management, and the general flight to quality during uncertain times. SingTel, along with rivals StarHub and MobileOne, continue to be rated favourably for their high dividend yields.

Said Mr Mahadevan: ‘Singapore telcos have good management teams which are completely aligned with shareholders’ interests.’

Or it could also be the start of the mid-year school holidays with many market players away.

TELCO – DBS

Big brother’s guidance positive but no near term catalysts

SingTel aggression not for long term: We do not subscribe to the view that SingTel would continue to be aggressive on market share gains for bigger scale that could be useful for National Broadband Network (NBN). Its experienced management is well aware of the fact that competitive response would halt its advance and hurt earnings of all players including its own.

Market share focus was a tactical move. We believe that SingTel focused on market share gains last year in order to (1) re-contract post-paid subscriber base three to six months ahead of full mobile number portability (MNP) introduction in June 08 (2) re-position itself to capture growth in the rapidly growing pre-paid mobile segment. It was a tactical move that paid off initially but strong competitive reaction rendered the move ineffective as SingTel’s EBITDA for Singapore declined 1% despite strong 10.7% revenue growth in 1Q 2008.

Margins should improve in 2H 2008 as evident from SingTel’s guidance for Singapore. There is hardly any room for SingTel’s Singapore margins to drop further given its stable margin guidance for Singapore in FY09. In the near term, we expect the three Telcos to report lower EBITDA margins YoY but higher QoQ in 2Q 2008 due to MNP from June 08. However, we expect to see margins reverting back to healthy levels in 2H 2008, when operators would be done with re-contracting their subscriber base. This is also reflected in the stable margin guidance issued by StarHub and M1.

SingTel involves risk of overpayment for overseas acquisitions. SingTel is under pressure for making overseas acquisitions in order to deliver on its guidance of double-digit earnings growth in the medium term, which we think is not possible without new acquisitions. However, acquisitions are no longer cheap with the rush among big global Telcos to acquire companies in emerging markets that may not be earnings accretive initially.

Downgrade the sector call to neutral with M1 as top pick. M1 is cheap at about 11x FY08 PER compared to 14.8x for StarHub and 14.7x for SingTel. Its dividend yield is highest among all the Telcos at 7.4% compared to 5.7% for StarHub and 3.4% for SingTel. StarHub trades at about 35% premium to M1’s PER valuations and the expected news flow on NBN could have an adverse impact on StarHub given that NBN would break StarHub’s and SingTel’s broadband duopoly with M1 as the chief beneficiary.

StarHub – BT

StarHub plans major infrastructure upgrade

FOLLOWING hot on the heels of arch-rival SingTel, StarHub plans to boost the speed of its mobile broadband services through a major infrastructure upgrade.

The operator’s existing 3.5G or HSPA (high speed packet access) network will get a facelift over the next 12 months to deliver better coverage island-wide and handle larger volumes of mobile data.

SingTel and M1 have introduced HSPA networks to power their mobile broadband offerings, but StarHub is claiming a speed victory over its competitors through this upgrade.

When its move to HSPA+ is completed in the second quarter of 2009, its download speeds will increase to 21Mbps (megabits per second) – a 1.5 times improvement from the current limit of 14.4 Mbps.

This means customers will be able to surf the Internet and download e-mail attachments on the move at speeds that are superior to most fixed-line broadband packages available today.

Uplink speeds will also be improved, from 1.9 Mbps currently to 11Mbps, slashing the time needed to add large files to Web pages or email documents.

The upgrade will increase the number of StarHub mobile base stations to at least 3,500. This is because operators need to add more such equipment to accelerate data transmission over the cellular airwaves.

‘Since our 3.5G launch in 2007 we have seen a dramatic 23-fold increase to our mobile data traffic as more and more mobile customers surf the Internet wirelessly, and access our mobile TV content,’ said David Stone, StarHub’s integrated network engineering head, said in a statement yesterday.

StarHub’s transition to HSPA+ will be funded from a $200 million war chest it previously set aside for the rollout and enhancement of its third-generation mobile network.

Like its previous upgrade, the contract for the new project has again been awarded to Chinese network equipment giant Huawei Technologies.

Last week, SingTel said it will invest $220 million in an island-wide network upgrade to set the stage for higher-speed mobile broadband services.