Month: November 2008

 

SingTel – DBS

Regional Associates Take a “U” Turn

Story: Underlying net profit of S$801m (-12.4% y-o-y, -7.4% qo-q) was exactly inline with our expectations of S$800m. Assuming no forex change from 2QFY08, net profit would have declined 5% y-o-y. The result could disappoint the market, as street estimates suggest flat FY09 earnings versus our estimate of 7% decline y-o-y.

Point: We want to highlight four key points.

Singapore and Australia better than our expectations, despite adverse iPhone impact. Singapore EBITDA at S$500m was down 1.8% y-o-y only despite S$27m adverse impact of iPhone launch. Australia EBITDA at A$479m was up 0.4% y-o-y, despite A$44m adverse impact of iPhone launch.

Regional associates below our expectations. Associate contribution was down 25.5% y-o-y compared to our estimate of single digit decline. Assuming no forex change from 2QFY08, associate contribution would have been flat. What surprised us was Bharti’s pre-tax earnings contribution, down 5.1% y-o-y, against our expectations of 10% growth. SingTel has attributed the decline to S$57m fair value loss on Bharti’s foreign borrowings. We did not see this item in Bharti’s results and need to check with management on the disparity. The other associates were more or less in line with our expectations.

Maintained guidance for Singapore and Australia. Surprisingly, management maintained its guidance of EBITDA growth for Singapore and Australia. In our estimates, we have assumed Singapore EBITDA to be flat and Australia EBITDA to decline 1.5% y-o-y (AUD).

Lowered guidance for associates. Management lowered its guidance for associate pre-tax earnings contribution from “lowdouble digit growth” to “lower than last year”. In our estimates, we have assumed associate contribution to decline 3.8% y-o-y, which we think has downside risks.

Relevance: 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. In our view, if forex rates stay at current levels, SingTel’s FY09F earnings could be 2%-3% lower than our current projections.

SingTel – BT

SingTel reports big subscriber gains in Q3

Growth reflects strong take-up of iPhone 3G and other initiatives

An exclusive bite at Apple’s iPhone 3G has helped put Singapore Telecom’s mobile subscriber base in the pink of health, with the operator chalking up the biggest subscriber gains in the third quarter of this year.

SingTel added 45,000 new post-paid mobile customers in Q3, more than twice as many as its two major rivals.

StarHub reported ‘net add’ of 17,000 new post-paid subscribers or users who sign up for a monthly call plan, while MobileOne added 4,000.

‘The growth in the number of post-paid mobile customers is the highest quarterly increase in recent years,’ SingTel said yesterday. ‘This reflected the strong take-up of the iPhone 3G as well as the success of targeted acquisition initiatives.’

SingTel launched Apple’s second-generation touch-screen handset with three dedicated subscription plans on Aug 22. StarHub and M1 were expected to follow suit by the end of this year but confirmed last week this will not happen because Apple is focusing distribution efforts on markets where the phone has yet to debut.

Since the iPhone 3G is only sold with a SingTel plan here, the company’s Q3 mobile statistics show that fewer than 45,000 units were sold a month into its debut. Apple forbids telcos from disclosing iPhone sales figures, but some industry watchers put the local volume around 60,000 so far.

Sales of the iPhone 3G may have lifted SingTel’s subscriber base in the Q3, but the victory was achieved at the expense of short-term profit. This is because the handset is sold with a heavy upfront subsidy which can only be recovered through long-term subscription and solid mobile data usage. SingTel warned last week that its Ebitda – earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation – for local operations will be slashed by about $27 million as a result higher phone subsidies.

In Q3, the company added 76,000 new pre-paid customers on the back of strong demand among foreign workers, taking its total customer gain to 121,000.

On a regional level, SingTel, which reports its Q2 results today, said its combined subscriber base across its eight markets jumped 9.6 per cent sequentially to 216.7 million at end-September.

Indian associate Bharti recorded the biggest improvement, adding 8.1 million customers in Q3. Indonesian unit Telkomsel and Thailand’s AIS added 8.06 million and 810,000 subscribers respectively.

Philippine operator Globe reported a quarterly increase of 1.01 million customers, while Pakistani telco Warid and PBTL in Bangladesh enjoyed double-digit gains.

SingTel shares closed 6.4 per cent lower at $2.35 yesterday.

SingTel – DBS

One more associate disappoints

Story: Globe Telecom’s 3Q08 net profit declined 22% y-o-y, which is significantly lower than our expectations of flat earnings. This is third consecutive quarterly disappointment from Globe, whose 9M08 profit has declined 9% yoy. We understand that Globe’s earnings are under pressure due to lower phone use among subscribers and intense competition in the sector. Globe contributes about 5.6% of SingTel’s earnings. As such adverse impact on SingTel’s full year earnings would be close to 0.5%.

Point: We want to highlight two key points. Disappointing numbers even if we ignore exchange rate. We expect SingTel to report 2Q09 underlying net profit of S$800m down 13% y-o-y on 12 Nov. Except Bharti, all the regional associates, along with Singapore and Australia operations are expected to be significantly below market expectations, even if we ignore the impact of unfavorable exchange rates.

Street too bullish but downside risks can weigh more. We anticipate street to start cutting SingTel’s earnings estimates after seeing 2QFY09 disappointment. Our FY09 and FY10 numbers are 12% and 16% below consensus respectively. If forex rates stay at current levels, SingTel’s FY09F earnings could be 2%-3% lower than our current projections. Every 10% decline in the AUD, INR or IDR should lower group earnings by c.2% each.

Relevance: 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.

M1 – CIMB

Upgrade of wireless broadband speed

Last night, M1 announced that its high speed packet access (HSPA) network has become the first in Singapore and Asia to go live with downlink speed of 14.4 Mbps and uplink speed of 5.76 Mbps following an upgrade to its network. However, M1’s customers would be able to enjoy the top speeds only when supporting devices come on to the market.

M1 will launch two new mobile broadband plans on 8 Nov at S$51.36/month and S$69.30/month. The former plan will provide a downlink speed of 4 Mbps and uplink speed of 1 Mbps while the latter will provide a downlink speed of 7.2 Mbps and uplink speed of 2 Mbps. Existing customers on 3.6 Mbps will be given a free upgrade to the new 7.2 Mbps broadband plan by month-end.

Warfare heated up

Hot on the heels of SingTel and StarHub. The announcement follows hot on the heels of SingTel and StarHub’s recent announcements that they would be upgrading speeds on their wireless broadband plans. StarHub had disclosed that it would be offering faster uplink speeds of 5.76 Mbps by end-December while downlink speeds would be upgraded to 21 Mbps from 14.4 Mbps. Similarly, SingTel would upgrade downlink and uplink speeds to 7.2 Mbps and 1.5 Mbps respectively from 3.6 Mbps for downlink and 384 Kbps for uplink.

Not a surprise. We are not surprised by this latest news as we had felt that M1 would need to respond to its rivals. M1’s latest move raises the competitive heat in wireless broadband where StarHub has been fairly aggressive in offering discounts on subscriptions, even throwing in free wireless modem and subscriptions if one signs up for the higher-speed fixed broadband plans.

No significant impact. We see this more as a defensive move to counter StarHub’s speed advantage in this segment. While the 4 Mbps tariff is attractive and M1 could lure new or poach subscribers, we believe that competitors are likely to react by offering similar or lower rates to match M1’s. Furthermore, it is unlikely that customers will be attracted by the higher speed of 7.2 Mbps as headline tariffs are fairly comparable with those of SingTel or StarHub. While M1 offers certain bundled plans, these cannot compete with its rivals’ more effective bundling or quad play propositions. Lastly, there is still a lack of consumer devices that support such high speeds.

Competing for speed to revive flagging data ARPUs. M1 is also competing for more premium users by offering higher speeds with higher monthly subscriptions in a bid to revive its flagging data ARPUs which dropped to S$28 (-11.1% qoq; -11.7% yoy) in 3Q. We believe this is another means to protect its margins given the higher margins commanded by data services.

Valuation and recommendation

Maintaining earnings forecasts, OUTPERFORM but raising target price. We are leaving our forecasts intact until we see greater traction with its new wireless plans. However, we have raised our DCF-based (WACC 8.3%) target price to S$2.32 for end-CY09 from S$2.24 for end-CY08 as we roll forward our valuation by a year. We keep our OUTPERFORM rating intact as M1 averts a costly bidding warfare, offers the highest yield in the sector and benefits from cost savings from the upgrade to its backhaul. The main share-price trigger here is any capital management initiatives.

StarHub – OCBC

Keeps 7% revenue growth for 2008

Mildly upbeat 3Q08 results. StarHub Ltd posted 3Q08 revenue of S$524.6m, up 2.2% YoY but down 1.3% QoQ; this was about 2.3% and 2.7% short of our estimate and the consensus number, respectively. Although net profit fell 2.3% YoY to S$79.4m, it was up 23.7% QoQ; it was also about 6.0% ahead of our forecast albeit still 3.5% shy of consensus. 9M08 revenue rose 7.9% to S$1,590.9m, meeting 74.3% of our full-year estimate, while net profit fell 3.6% to S$223.7m, or about 74.2% of our FY08 forecast. It also declared a S$0.045 dividend as expected.

Decline in mobile revenue. On the mobile front, StarHub saw revenue fall 0.7% YoY and 1.8% QoQ to S$264.4m. One reason was the 13.4% YoY (+2.1% QoQ) drop in pre-paid revenue following a 71k decline in subscribers – it was a pre-meditated move to stabilise its user base and this resulted in its ARPU (Average Revenue per User) improving back to S$22, up from S$20 in 2Q08, though still much lower than the S$26 in 3Q07. While StarHub added 17k new post-paid customers, ARPU eased from S$77 in 2Q08 (S$79 in 1Q08) to S$74 – 50% of the drop was due to more data-only subscribers and the rest coming from drop in minutes used from 515 in 2Q08 (523 in 1Q08) to 492 per month. It added that it would be keeping a close watch on this as it could be a precursor to further drops as the recession deepens.

Keeps 7% revenue growth guidance. StarHub was able to reduce its average acquisition cost per user back from S$148 in 2Q08 (S$124 in 1Q08) to S$104. While we do expect this number to increase going into the holiday season, management does not expect a big blow-out due to the uncertain economic environment. StarHub also revealed that it will not be launching the Apple iPhone 3G this year and this should also help to keep its handset subsidies in check. However, we do not rule out an increase in churn on this news. Nevertheless, management remains confident that it can maintain its 7% growth guidance for this year.

Keep BUY with S$2.81 fair value. But outlook for 2009 is more uncertain and we have pared our FY09 numbers slightly to adopt a more conservative stance. While this drops our fair value to S$2.81 (prev: S$3.19), we keep our BUY rating due to its attractive dividend yield (7.9% expected for 2009) and its fairly defensive business.