Month: November 2008
SingTel – DBS
Regional associates – victims of high competition and low usage
Story: We are concerned that regional subscriber growth may not translate into earnings growth. ARPU and EBITDA margins of regional associates are under pressure, due to (i) intense competition in Indonesia, Pakistan and Bangladesh (ii) softening minutes of usage in Philippines on the back of weak economic outlook. While usage may recover with better economic outlook, high competition may continue to dent the group earnings.
Point: We want to highlight three key points.
Telkomsel earnings may continue to decline. While Telkomsel may show some improvement from 2QFY09 results, as minutes of usage (MoU) increase in response to sharp price cuts, its SGD earnings contribution is likely to decline 23% (Prev 14% decline) in FY09 and 10% (Prev 8% decline) in FY10. A part of it can be attributed to an 18% weakness in Indonesian currency (IDR). Our assumption of SGD/IDR of 7300 compared to current exchange rate of 8000 implies downside risk to our estimates. Revision in Warid, Bharti and Globe earnings. We project Warid to post losses of S$90m (Prev S$23m loss) in FY09 due to higher network rollout and borrowing costs. We project Bharti’s pretax SGD contribution to increase 1% (Prev 9%) in FY09 as a result of higher USD borrowing costs and 18% (Prev 17%) in FY10, reflecting the low base. Globe contribution could decline 10% (Prev 5% decline) in FY09 due to lower usage and grow 5% (Prev 0%) in FY10 as economy stages a recovery.
Open-ended guidance for associates. Following the 2QFY09 results, management lowered its guidance for regional associate’s pre-tax earnings contribution from “low-double digit growth” to “lower than last year”. However, the guidance did not specify whether single digit or double-digit decline. We estimate associate contribution in FY09 and FY10 could decline 15% (Prev 4%decline) and grow 6% (Prev 4%) respectively.
Relevance: We lowered our FY09 and FY10 earnings estimates by 5.1% and 5.5% respectively, which are 5% and 7% below revised street estimates respectively. Maintain FULLY VALUED, with SOTP-based target price of S$2.34. We advise investors to accumulate SingTel towards our trough valuation of S$2.02.
November 2008
Results Announcement
- 4 Nov 08 : SFI (Q308) – EPS 1.1ct (todate 4.7ct)
- 4 Nov 08 : STEng (Q308) – EPS 4.31ct (todate 12.42ct)
- 5 Nov 08 : StarHub (Q308) – EPS 4.65ct (todate 13.15ct) ; Div 4.5ct (todate 13.5ct)
- 12 Nov 08 (AM) : MIIF (Q308) – EPS -7.05ct (todate -9ct)
- 12 Nov 08 (AM) : Singtel (Q209) – EPS 5.45ct (todate 10.97ct) ; Div 5.6ct
- 12 Nov 08 : SBSTransit (Q308) – EPS 2.7ct (todate 9.76ct)
- 13 Nov 08 : ComfortDelgro (Q308) – EPS 2.32ct (todate 7.45ct)
- 20 Nov 08 (AM) : SPAus (1H09) – EPS A5.85ct ; Div A5.927ct
|
Stock |
Period |
DPS ct |
Price |
Yield |
PE |
Div Breakdown |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
SPH |
FY087 : Aug |
27.0 |
S$3.55 |
7.606% |
13.15 |
Interim 8ct ; Final 9ct + 10ct (Special) |
|
SingPost |
FY08 : Mar |
6.25 |
S$0.76 |
8.224% |
9.79 |
Q1 1.25ct ; Q2 1.25ct ; Q3 1.25ct ; Q4 2.5ct |
|
Sing Food |
FY07 : Dec |
5.0 |
S$0.905 |
5.525% |
14.84 |
Interim 1.8ct ; Final 3.2ct |
|
STEng |
FY07 : Dec |
16.88 |
S$2.36 |
7.153% |
13.92 |
Final 4ct + 10.88ct (Special) ; Interim 2ct |
|
Stock |
Period |
DPS ct |
Price |
Yield |
PE |
Div Breakdown |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
SBSTransit |
FY07 : Dec |
17.25 |
S$1.69 |
10.207% |
10.32 |
Interim 6ct ; Special 8ct ; Final 3.25ct |
|
ComfortDelgro |
FY07 : Dec |
10.15 |
S$1.36 |
7.463% |
12.67 |
Interim 3.125ct + Special 3.375 ; Final 3ct + Special 1.5ct |
|
SMRT |
FY08 : Mar |
7.75 |
S$1.63 |
4.755% |
16.46 |
Interim 1.75ct ; Final 6.0ct |
|
Stock |
Period |
DPS ct |
Price |
Yield |
PE |
Div Breakdown |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
SingTel |
FY08 : Mar |
12.5 |
S$2.55 |
4.902% |
10.24 |
Interim 5.6ct ; Final 6.9ct |
|
M1 |
FY07 : Dec |
15.4 |
S$1.26 |
12.222% |
6.81 |
Interim 2.5ct + 4.6ct (Capital Reduction) ; Final 8.3ct |
|
StarHub |
FY07 : Dec |
16.0 |
S$2.08 |
7.692% |
11.11 |
Q1 3.5ct ; Q2 4.0ct ; Q3 4.0ct ; Q4 4.5ct |
|
Stock |
Period |
DPS ct |
Price |
Yield |
NAV |
Div Breakdown |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
SPAus |
1H : Sep-08 |
A5.7431 |
S$1.02 |
11.178% |
A$1.00 (NTA) |
1H A5.7431ct |
|
MIIF |
1H : Jun-08 |
4.25 |
S$0.285 |
29.825% |
$1.14 |
1H 4.25ct |
|
MacCookPSF |
FY09 : Jun |
A1.75 (Gross) |
S$0.175 |
39.484% |
A$0.762 (NTA) |
Q408 A2.31ct @ 1.3092 ; Q308 A2.31 @ 1.2525 ; Q208 A2.31ct @ 1.2485 ; Q108 A2.31ct @ 1.3144 |
* SPAus and MacCookPSF DPU in A$. Yield is Calculated Using Latest Exchange Rate (0.9926) fm Yahoo
NOTES :
- Mkt Price is as on 28-Nov-08
- SPAus : 1H09 (Sep08) – A5.927ct (before tax) / A5.7431ct (after tax)
- SingTel : Q209 (Sep08) – Interim 5.6ct
- StarHub : Q308 (Sep) – 4.5ct ; Q208 (Jun) – 4.5ct ; Q108 (Mar) – 4.5ct
- SMRT : Q209 (Sep08) – Interim 1.75ct
- SingPost : Q209 (Sep08) – 1.25ct ; Q109 (Jun08) – 1.25ct
- SPH : 2H08 (Aug) – 9ct + 10ct (Special) ; 1H08 (Feb) – 8ct
- ComfortDelgro : Q208 (Jun) – 2.6ct
- SBSTransit : Q208 (Jun) – 3ct
- MIIF : 1H08 (Jun) – 4.25ct
- ST Engg : Q208 (Jun) – 3ct
- Sing Food : Q208 (Jun) – 1.8ct
- M1 : 1H08 (Jun) – Interim 6.2ct
- MacCookPSF : FY09 (Jun) – A1.75ct (Gross ie. before with-holding tax) / Quarter ; Source : SGX
- MacCookPSF : Q408 (Jun08) A2.31ct @ 1.3092 ; Q308 (Mar08) A2.31ct @ 1.2525 ; Q208 (Dec07) A2.31ct @ 1.2485 ; Q108 (Sep07) – A2.625ct (Gross) / A2.31ct (After With-hldg Tax)
SPAusNet – CIMB
Steady and predictable
• Steady demand in Victoria state. As the second most populous state in Australia with an annual population growth rate of 1.7%, the establishment of new townships and customer connections for gas and electricity distribution can drive steady demand growth for SPN.
• Certainty of revenue and cash flow. Management reiterated that regulated revenue (90% of group revenue) has been locked in until 2011. All the latest resets were done by Apr 08 and there are no further regulatory resets until 2011.
• Focus on maintaining A rating. While management acknowledges that mediumterm interest rates could fall and it may miss the opportunity to refinance at lower rates, its focus is on managing its long-term average cost of debt. Its key objective is to continue to meet and exceed credit rating criteria to maintain its A debt rating. This is important as A ratings will make it easier for SPN to secure future financing
• Reiterate Outperform, maintain forecasts. We maintain our core net profit forecasts and DCF-derived target price of S$1.44 (WACC 10%). Distribution for 1H09 was within guidance and the stock will go ex-dividend on the SGX on 28 Nov 08 for an interim dividend of 5.927 A cts.
SingTel – CIMB
The Down Under adventure
Australian NBN process
Telstra submits non-compliant bid. Bidding for the Australian next generation broadband network (NBN) has come to a dramatic end with the favourite Telstra submitting a non-compliant non-binding proposal. Telstra will only submit a full bid if the government deigns to address a supposed lack of clarity over structural separation, 12-month negotiations under the RFP, concerns over detailed use of Telstra’s information and the government’s proposed commercial terms. Key details of Telstra’s proposal are as follows:
• Telstra will invest A$5bn on a self-funded network capable of providing 25-50 Mbps downlink to 65-75% of the population and downlink of 12-20 Mbps to the rest of the population.
• Telstra will roll out to 90% of the population if the government can provide A$4.7bn as a loan with concessionary interest.
• The network would be open access where Telstra would not seek legislative protection against competing infrastructure.
• Telstra would provide a A$29.95/month entry level 1Mbps retail plan.
• The proposal is subject to certain clauses such as no further separation (at the sub-ULL level).
Six bids received. Six bids were received, with Telstra, the Optus-backed Terria Consortium, Axia Netmedia and Acacia submitting national bids. The Australian government also received two state-based proposals from the Tasmanian state government and TransACT. Many details are shrouded in secrecy but the panel is expected to make its recommendation in eight weeks and an awarded is expected at end-Mar 09.
Criteria for RFP requirements of the NBN. To recap, the network:
• Should deliver a minimum of 12 Mbps to 98% of Australian businesses and homes.
• Is to be rolled out and made progressively operational over five years using fibre-tothe-node (FTTN) or fibre-to-the-premises technologies.
• Should earn the state a return for its A$4.7bn investment.
• Facilitate competition through an open-access regime that will give all service providers equal access to the network on a price and non-price basis.
• Should enable uniform and affordable retail prices to consumers, no matter where they live.
Evaluation criteria. Evaluation criteria for the RFP consist of the following:
• The extent to which the proposal meets government objectives for the NBN project.
• Capacity of the proponent to roll out, maintain, upgrade and operate the NBN.
• Nature, scope and impact of any legislative/regulatory changes needed to facilitate the proposal.
• Cost to the government.
• Acceptability of the contract terms and conditions proposed and the extent to which they depart from the notified commercial terms.
• The extent of the proponent’s compliance with the RFP.
Our comments
Spanner in the process…. Much confusion hangs over whether Telstra’s noncompliant proposal can be regarded as a valid bid although the Communications Minister has accepted it. We believe that Telstra is hedging its position by keeping all options open, including ruling itself out of the running if the government does not sit down to negotiate on its terms. Should that occur, Telstra’s chances will be reduced dramatically as its proposal is in contravention of the 98% population coverage criterion and is in non-compliance with the RFP. If the government capitulates and sits down to negotiate, there would be a huge outcry from the other bidders which could lead to more complications.
…which improves Optus’s odds. As such, we believe that the Terria consortium (to which Optus is a partner), along with Axia Netmedia (which has extensive FTTN experience in France, Canada and won the rights to Singapore’s NetCo) have emerged as the new favourites for the NBN but that is predicated on whether the government considers the proposal by Telstra as a bid and whether it will sit down to negotiate on Telstra’s terms. Axia is also a consortium member together with SingTel that won the bid to build the NetCo portion of Singapore’s NGNBN.
Negative if Optus wins… We would be negative if Terria/Optus win as the economics of the NBN is questionable despite Telstra’s aim to achieve an 18% IRR on its investment. We question the economics of the project given the astronomical estimated cost of A$10bn-15bn to be spent over five years, the long gestation period for this service, the slower speeds (minimum 12 Mbps for FTTN) vs. current wireless speeds (14.4Mbps for Telstra now and 21 Mbps by 2009), the retail pricing (which is unlikely to be significantly below current levels) and legislation which could be employed by Telstra over last-mile access.
We are especially concerned about funding as Optus is likely to shoulder the burden alone as its other consortium members lack the balance-sheet strength for a meaningful equity infusion. There has been talk that SingTel would contribute A$1bn- 2bn in equity for the project and an Optus spokesperson has said that “it (SingTel) would contribute whatever (funding) we needed to.” However, we believe that such injections would stretch SingTel’s balance sheet, which currently stands at 1.1x net debt/annualised EBITDA, and drain SingTel’s cash of S$1.1bn. This would hamper SingTel’s ability to pursue any acquisitive opportunities.
…as the incumbent holds the advantages. Telstra is actually in pole position by virtue of its incumbency, as it has the financial means, ownership of the copper network and passive infrastructure, scale and expertise. If Telstra loses, we believe it is likely to proceed with its own network along the lines of its proposal and roll out faster and gain access to consumers faster by undercutting the business case of the official NBN bid.
But neutral if it loses out. As in Singapore, we believe that Optus’s bid is more of a tactic designed to keep Telstra’s bidding honest. While never likely to gain complete structural separation given the lengthy litigation battle that would ensue and the cries by Telstra over a complete destruction in value, we believe that Optus has already achieved a positive outcome by gaining open access to the fixed network which would leave Optus room to attack the fixed market dominated by Telstra. It would also save Optus on capex which could be put to more productive use.
Valuation and recommendation
Maintain earnings forecasts, Neutral rating and sum-of-the-parts target price of S$2.72. Given the many moving parts and lack of transparency surrounding the NBN process, we are retaining our earnings forecasts and target price of S$2.72 for SingTel. Also intact is our NEUTRAL rating. We believe the stock lacks catalysts due to currency volatility despite its holdings in free cash flow-positive Tier-1 telcos in the region.
SingTel – DB
Underlying valuation now attractive
Now is the time to revisit STel; Upgrade to Buy
After a period of being cautious on STel, we are now more positive and upgrade it to Buy. We had previously argued that the implied valuation of the Sing/Australia business was too high and that it did not deserve to trade at a NAV premium. But recent price movements have eroded these arguments. Therefore, although we trim our target price to S$3.23 on various factors, we view current valuations as attractive and recommend Buy. Furthermore, we expect STel to become relatively more defensive although emerging market & FX exposure risks remain.
Underlying valuations now attractive
For much of 2008, STel traded at a NAV premium while Sing/Australia was often more expensive than the listed Associates. But STel now trades at a NAV discount and the core Sing/Australia ops have de-rated to 11-12x fwd PE (vs 20x at the peak). And as there is a strong correlation between the Sing/Australia fwd PE and subsequent STel price trends, any further downside should be limited. Given the NAV discount and the reduced core fwd PE, we view current prices as attractive.
Although forecasts and target price trimmed
We however trim our forecasts to reflect 1H08 performance, recent FX trends and recent adjustments to Associate forecasts. For example, FY09e underlying NPAT is reduced -12% to S$3.37bn especially as recent FX trends will impact 3Q09. Furthermore, FX changes, estimate revisions and new Associate valuations reduce our target price by 52 cents/share to S$3.23 (-14% on previous published).
Revised S$3.23 TP and upgrade to Buy. Risks: FX & competition
Our S$3.23 SOTP TP is based on S’pore S$0.88/share (DCF: 7.1% WACC, 0%g), Optus S$0.78/share (DCF: 9.6% WACC, 1% g), DB covered listed Assocs at TP, non-DB covered listed Assocs at market value and investment value for others. Given current valuations, the NAV discount and the reduced Sing/Australia fwd PE, we are now Buyers especially as we believe STel should be increasingly price defensive. Risks to our view and Buy rating include adverse FX trends, increasing competition and an emerging market sell-off.