Author: tfwee

 

STEng – DBS

Dividend concerns unfounded

Excluding one-off impairment charge in 4Q08, FY08 net profit of S$473.6m (down 6%) was in line with our expectations. Allaying market concerns, ST Engineering declared a 100% dividend payout, amounting to 15.8cts per share for FY08. While a record orderbook of S$10.6b secures 60-70% of FY09 revenues, headwinds in aerospace sector will continue to be a drag on earnings. We lower our EPS forecasts for FY09 and FY10 by about 8% each. However, gross cash level above S$1b and strong free cash flow generation of close to S$500m per year should help STE sustain its dividend payout record, translating to a dividend yield of 7.5% Maintain BUY, TP reduced to S$2.50.

4Q08 earnings hit by one-off items. 4Q08 PBT came in at S$89m (down 38% y-o-y), largely due to the impairment of three equity investments worth S$23m (two in Electronics, one in Land Systems) and a S$31.7m allowance for doubtful debts related to the bankruptcy of aerospace customers, Sterling and EAMS. Net profit of S$102m was boosted by a tax credit of S$18m.

Weaker performance in key sectors. Apart from provisions for doubtful debt, aerospace segment PBT of S$272m (down 20% y-o-y) was hit by high depreciation charges on new facilities, prototyping costs for PTF conversions and a weak US$ impact of S$19m. Marine revenues and margins were weak as major revenues from the frigate program were booked in FY07 and losses were recognised on a contract signed last year.

Dividend yield secured by record orderbook. Risk to the orderbook is minimal as defence and government related projects make up more than 50%. The Group is also expected to be a key beneficiary of the increased government spending on infrastructure projects worldwide. Net cash of close to S$200m and strong operational cashflows indicate dividend sustainability and a yield of 7.5% at current trough valuations. Maintain BUY, at a reduced TP of S$2.50.

STEng – DMG

Cautiously optimistic despite turbulence

Better than expected if certain items were excluded. In the year to Dec 08, ST Engineering’s (STE) net profit came off by 5.9% to S$473.6m on the back of a 5.8% increase in revenue to S$5,344.5m. Full year net profit had fallen short of our estimates at S$514.2m, although we note that it would have came in at S$529m and beaten our expectations should the S$25.9m impairment of investments and the S$29.5m allowance for doubtful debts be excluded.

Still expecting comparable earnings in FY09 despite the current economic turmoil. With its order book at a record S$10.6b (of which S$3.6b would be fulfilled in FY09), management highlighted that its mixture of commercial and government contracts would serve as a good buffer in this current downturn, especially so given that the various countries are implementing their respective stimulus packages to make up for the shortfall in private sector spending.

Furthermore, STE’s extensive geographical reach would also ensure that the risks pertaining to protectionism issues – as the various governments attempt to restrict spending to their own countries – are kept low. Additionally, we also note that STE’s exposure to new markets, which have been less affected by the current downturn, have also been steadily increasing.

Earnings and target price revision. Given the tepid economic outlook, we have reduced our FY09 earnings by 18% to S$465.2m (-1.8% YoY). We have also introduced FY10 earnings, which we estimate to grow 10.9% to S$516.0m. At S$2.06, STE is trading at 13.3x FY09 and 12.0x FY10 P/E, which is at the lower end of the trading band. Assuming that the Group keeps to its 100% payout, dividend yield remains attractive at 7.5 – 8.3% for the next two years. Based on our DDM, we attain a price target of S$2.47 (previously S$2.83), suggesting a 19.8% upside from current levels. The new target price implies a prospective P/E of 15.9x, lower than the 5–yr average of ~20x. Maintain BUY.

STEng

ST Engg Q4 profit down 30%

Full-year earnings dip to $473.6m, due to doubful debts, impairment charge

ST Engineering’s net profit for the fourth quarter ended Dec 31 has fallen 30.1 per cent to $102.3 million, from $146.4 million a year earlier.

However, sales rose 3.8 per cent year on year to $1.35 billion, from $1.3 billion in the same quarter last year.

For the full year, ST Engg made a net profit of $473.6 million, down 6 per cent from $503.5 million, even though turnover was up 6 per cent at $5.34 billion from $5.05 billion previously.

Much of the hit was due to an impairment charge of $23 million for quoted securities, while the company also made a net allowance of $32.4 million for doubtful debts.

Full-year diluted earnings per share came to 15.74 cents, down 7 per cent from 16.91 cents for FY2007. The company declared a final dividend of 12.8 cents to take full-year payout to 15.8 cents, or 100 per cent of net profit, as has been the custom.

Chief executive officer Tan Pheng Hock said that ‘definitely, the scale and size of (potential) acquisitions will affect’ future dividend payouts but said that the company, which has a triple-A rating, would prefer to take on debt for any new purchase.

Mr Tan noted that the company still had cash and cash equivalents of $1.05 billion, with net cash from operating activities of $511.4 million.

Meanwhile, the company has withdrawn all its money from fund managers, and so will not likely take any hit if markets head further south. It has also ‘very liquid’ cash parked with associated companies in the Temasek Holdings stable, which can be drawn on within two months, Mr Tan said.

All its business segments reported lower profits for the full year, except for Land Systems. Aerospace was the second-hardest hit, after Marine, with pre-tax profit falling 20 per cent, to $272.1 million.

The aerospace business accounts for about half of group earnings and had been hurt by unfavourable exchange rates, higher depreciation, more doubtful debts following the bankruptcies of two clients in the last quarter, and lower contribution from its component and engine repair/ overhaul business group.

Mr Tan said that the company’s strong order book – $10.6 billion at the end of last year, with $3.63 billion of that due this year – would afford it ‘operating leverage to weather an uncertain 2009’. However, ‘a drastic deterioration in our operating environment would affect our performance.’

Otherwise, the company expects higher sales and comparable pre-tax profits this year compared to last, he said.

Mr Tan also disclosed that ST Engg would save about $20 million from the recently announced one percentage point cut in corporate tax rates and the Jobs Credit scheme and said that there were no plans to lay off staff in Singapore.

ST Engg shed 13 cents or 5.9 per cent to close at $2.06 yesterday, its lowest since late October.

SPAusNet – BT

SP AusNet faces class-action lawsuit

Groups in Victoria state claim its power lines caused bushfires

SP AusNet, a subsidiary of Singapore Power, is facing a class-action lawsuit relating to the bushfires that have ravaged south-eastern Australia.

The Australian electricity and gas distributor said yesterday that a writ had been filed in the Supreme Court of the state of Victoria from groups claiming that faulty power lines had caused loss and damage. This confirmed earlier Australian media reports of the law suit.

A company spokeswoman said ‘the claim is premature and inappropriate, given the establishment of the Royal Commission’ and that SP AusNet will vigorously defend the claim.

‘Our bushfire mitigation and vegetation management programmes comply with Electricity Safety (Bushfire Mitigation) Regulations and are audited annually by Energy Safe Victoria,’ the spokeswoman said yesterday.

SP AusNet, which is 51 per cent owned by Singapore Power and listed on the Australian and Singapore bourses, services more than one million customers in south-eastern Australia. It owns Victoria’s primary electricity transmission network, an electricity distribution network in eastern Victoria and a gas distribution network located in central and western Victoria.

Some 1,500 properties had power restored by SP AusNet crews over the weekend, including more than 200 in parts of King- lake, Kinglake West, Castella, Glenburn and Marysville.

SP AusNet and mutual aid crews have restored power to more than 11,200 homes since last Saturday’s firestorm ripped through the state.

‘The areas still to be restored include those hardest hit by the fires in King- lake, Marysville, Narbethong and Flowerdale areas. There are still about 2,800 connections to be made in these areas, where possible,’ SP AusNet said.

Yesterday, the company also stressed that it has insurance policies in place consistent with industry standards.

Listed on the Singapore Exchange (SGX) in December 2005, SP AusNet had said in its IPO prospectus that it carried various types of insurance, including property damage and combined liability (including bushfire liability, product liability, personal injury, automobile liability and professional indemnity).

But it had also mentioned that while it maintained insurance that it believed was consistent with industry standards to protect against operating and other risks, not all risks were insured or insurable. SP AusNet self-insures its towers, poles and wires and associated equipment.

Extensive bushfires in 2003, which destroyed 185 electricity poles and disrupted service to numerous customers, cost SP AusNet some A$1.3 million (S$1.3 million) in repair costs.

SPAusNet – BT

Aussie inferno survivors file lawsuit against SP Ausnet

Australian wildfire survivors have launched a lawsuit against a Singapore-owned electricity firm alleging a downed power line sparked one of the blazes, it was reported yesterday.

Kinglake residents are launching a class action against SP Ausnet and the Victoria state government claiming that the power line set off a fire near the town that killed at least 100 people, The Age newspaper said.

The newspaper said that police investigating the causes of the fires had removed a length of fallen cable and a power pole as evidence.

The firm reportedly handling the class action, Melbourne-based Slidders Lawyers, on its website urges residents affected by the bushfires to contact it and seek compensation.

SP Ausnet, part of the Singapore Power Group, refused to comment directly on the lawsuit, saying its priority was restoring power to fire-affected areas as quickly as possible.

‘We stand ready to assist the relevant authorities with their inquiries if it is necessary for us to do so,’ it said in a statement.

The fire at Kinglake, about 50 kilometres north of Melbourne, was one of the most ferocious to sweep through Victoria state last week, killing at least 100 people and destroying about 1,000 homes.

Victoria Police chief commissioner Christine Nixon said authorities were still determining how the Kinglake fire started.

‘At this stage we are not able to confirm how it started. I understand there is some legal action that people are taking, but at this stage we’re still investigating its cause,’ she told Channel Nine television.

More than 180 people have been killed in multiple blazes in Australia’s worst ever bushfire disaster. — AFP