Author: tfwee
SMRT – CIMB
Ridership rises
• Maintain Outperform. 2QFY10 net profit of S$52.8m (+24.1% yoy) was 15% above our and market consensus, accounting for 31% of our full-year estimates. The outperformance was due to lower fuel costs and a fall in other opex. Our earnings estimates are unchanged as we expect operating expenses be higher in 2H10. Maintain Outperform with our DCF-derived target price unchanged at S$2.09 (WACC: 8.6%, terminal growth: 2%). We like SMRT as a beneficiary of higher tourist arrivals in Singapore. Rerating catalysts could include further overseas acquisitions and growth from new MRT lines.
• Above expectations. Despite fare reduction, revenue grew 1.1% to S$229.4m thanks to contributions from the new Circle Line, higher rental revenue and higher overseas revenue. Operating expenses fell on lower energy costs (-16.9% yoy) and other expenses (-8.8% yoy). Within energy, diesel costs fell by 44% yoy to S$8.5m, while electricity costs rose by 113% yoy to S$16m due to increased train runs and the operation of Circle Line. An interim dividend of 1.75/share was declared.
• Operational review. Train revenue rose marginally thanks to higher average ridership and contributions from the Circle Line. However bus revenue fell on lower average fare and average daily ridership while taxi revenue fell on smaller average hired-out fleet. Rental growth (+13% yoy) was boosted by improved yield and increased rental space.
• Operating expenses to be higher in 2H10. 3Q09’s fare-based revenues are expected to be lower yoy on lower fares and higher transfer rebates. However SMRT is expecting higher rental revenue and higher fees from overseas projects. Outlook for taxis has improved after trimming the fleet by 12% yoy. 2H10 operating expenses are likely to be higher hoh due to more scheduled repairs and maintenance, and costs related to the opening of remaining Circle Line stations.
SingTel – DBS
Would market like the show of support from SingTel?
• SingTel would raise its interest in Bharti AirTel from 30.43% to 31.95%, by paying INR 18-30 bn to Bharti’s parent company.
• This translates to INR 311-519 per Bharti share in our view, compared to the current price of INR 293, implying 7.6x-12.4x FY10 EV/EBITDA
• We expect SingTel to report 2Q10F underlying earnings of S$937m (+17% yoy, -1% qoq) broadly inline with consensus on 11 Nov.
• We would be buyers below S$2.85. Maintain HOLD with revised STP based target price of S$3.15 as we lower our fair value of Bharti.
Implications of Bharti deal. SingTel would pay between INR 18 bn-30 bn for an additional 1.52% stake in Bharti. Given, 3.8 bn Bharti shares, it translates to INR 311-519 per Bharti share. This implies FY10F EV/EBITDA of 7.6x-12.4x and PER of 13.5x-22.4x on our EBITDA and profit of INR 162 bn and INR 88 bn respectively. Given prospects of Bharti’s earnings decline next year, we think, market may not
appreciate the price being paid by SingTel.
Bharti’s results were slightly below consensus, but outlook could be worse than consensus. Bharti’s 2QFY10F net profit of INR 23.2 bn (-8% qoq, +13% yoy) was inline with ours and c.5% below consensus. ARPU decline of 9% qoq was worse than street expectations of 6-7%. We expect significant decline in tariffs as new players (Etilsalat, Telenor, Sistema) deploy lower pricing while smaller players (Aircel, Tata-Docomo, Idea) adopt per second billing to attract subscribers. We are 7%/15% below FY10F/11F consensus earnings for Bharti. We lower our fair value of Bharti to INR306 at 13.5x FY10F PER (prev 345), given our regional PER average of 14.4x/13.3x for 2009/10 respectively
Telkomsel results and outlook slightly better than consensus. Based on PT Telkom’s 3Q09 results, we estimate that Telkomsel had a net profit of IDR 3.6 tr (flat qoq, +34% yoy), attributable to increased market share and forex gains. We expect 20% y-o-y earnings growth in 2009, and our FY09/10 forecasts are 3%/3% higher than consensus. Another positive for SingTel is that IDR and AUD have strengthened against SGD by 2% and 9.8% qoq.
SingTel – BT
SingTel ups stake in Bharti Airtel
SINGAPORE Telecommunications is shoring up its stake in Bharti Airtel, India’s biggest wireless operator, to 31.95 per cent from 30.43 per cent.
In a regulatory filing yesterday, it said that wholly- owned subsidiary Pastel has agreed to buy 730,000 shares in Bharti Telecom from the Bharti Group for between 18 billion rupees (S$536.2 million) and 30.1 billion rupees in cash. Bharti Telecom holds about 45.3 per cent of the share capital of Bharti Airtel.
With this share acquisition, SingTel’s effective interest in Bharti Telecom will rise from 32.81 per cent to 36.16 per cent, and its effective interest in Bharti Airtel from 30.43 per cent to 31.95 per cent. The share transaction, subject to applicable approvals or consents being obtained, is expected to be completed on Nov 12.
SMRT – BT
SMRT’s Q2 net profit rises 24% to $52.8m
LOWER energy costs and the government’s Budget measures helped SMRT Corp to a 24.1 per cent year-on-year increase in net profit to $52.8 million for its second quarter ended Sept 30.
Measures like the Jobs Credit scheme and property tax rebates, as well as lower operating expenses, lifted profit, though this was partly offset by a fare reduction package that began on April 1.
Q2 revenue grew more slowly, edging up just 1.1 per cent to $229.4 million, mainly due to higher revenue from the operation of Circle Line Stage 3 (CCL3), increased rental revenue and higher revenue from overseas.
‘We have delivered a reasonable set of results this quarter,’ said SMRT president and chief executive Saw Phaik Hwa. ‘Looking ahead, the group’s profitability will continue to be impacted by the fare reduction package ending June 2010, lower Jobs Credit, volatility in diesel prices and the ramp-up costs to prepare for the progressive opening of the remaining Circle Line stations.’
SMRT runs Singapore’s biggest rail network, plus a smaller fleet of buses and taxis.
Revenue from train operations rose a marginal 0.4 per cent to $123.3 million in Q2 – despite the fare reduction – because of higher average daily ridership and the start of CCL3. Along with higher other operating income, operating profit rose 7 per cent to $38.7 million.
Bus revenue slipped 4.6 per cent to $51 million on lower average fare and average daily ridership. But lower diesel costs resulted in an operating profit of $1.8 million, compared with an operating loss of $1.1 million a year back.
Taxi rental revenue fell 2.6 per cent to $17.9 million in Q2 on a smaller average hired-out fleet. But taxi operations posted an operating profit of $0.8 million because of lower other operating expenses from a smaller average holding fleet.
The rental business fared better, with Q2 revenue growth of 13.1 per cent to $16.1 million on better yield and increased space at redeveloped MRT stations. Operating profit climbed 10.8 per cent to $12.7 million.
Equally robust were engineering and other services, with revenue rising 38.0 per cent to $13.4 million and operating profit soaring five times to $5.5 million on increased contribution from consultancy and overseas projects.
But advertising revenue slumped with the economic downturn and was down 9.8 per cent to $5.4 million, causing operating profit to fall 10.8 per cent to $3.4 million.
For its first half ended Sept 30, 2009, SMRT’s net profit rose 21.9 per cent to $101.0 million. But year-to-date revenue edged up only 0.5 per cent to $445.3 million.
An interim ordinary dividend of 1.75 cents per share has been declared.
Looking ahead, SMRT said that third-quarter group revenue is expected to be higher, mainly because of stronger non-fare revenue from rents and fees from overseas projects. In addition, the first payment of 240 million renminbi (S$49 million) for 49 per cent equity interest in Shenzhen Zona will be made by Q3.
SMRT – CS
2Q10 results: another pedestrian quarter
● SMRT delivered September 2009 quarter results that were largely in line with our estimates. Revenue grew 1% YoY, while earnings were up 24% YoY, due to lower fuel costs (-17% YoY), savings from the government’s Jobs Credit initiatives, and boost from other income.
● Management declared an interim dividend of S1.75cts, unchanged from the previous year, and shared further details on the recently completed Shenzhen ZONA acquisition, which is expected to contribute materially to earnings within five years.
● 6MTD revenues and earnings are at 50% and 65% of our full-year estimates, respectively. Going forward, we see costs rising in line with increased staff and maintenance expenses for the CCL Stage 3, and the new six-month electricity contract at 11% higher tariffs. Beyond factoring in contributions from other income (in FY10) and ZONA (from FY11), our forecasts are kept largely intact.
● We continue to see SMRT’s valuation at about 16x P/E as demanding versus its 14x historical average, the Singapore market, and CD, given the latter’s stronger earnings profile and China leverage. Our DCF-based target price is S$1.60 (from S$1.57). We maintain our UNDERPERFORM rating.