There are concerns that the outbreak of coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in Wuhan, China, may hurt earnings of travel/tourism related stocks, including AirAsia. Our analysis shows that AirAsia’s performance was surprisingly resilient during the past pandemics, i.e. SARS (2003), H1N1 (2009), Ebola (2014) and Zika (2016).
We notice that the impact of these pandemics to the global air travel sector was relatively short-term in nature and it was barely noticeable on a full-year basis (as traffic recovered strongly after the pandemics) (see Exhibit 1 for the global air passenger traffic).
Zooming in on AirAsia (Exhibit 2 and 3), it actually showed annual passenger growth even during the past pandemics. The impact of these pandemics, at most, only lasted for 1-2 quarters.
As such, for now, we do not see the need to cut our FY20F traffic growth rate assumption of 15% (vs. 19% yoy for 9MFY19) and earnings forecasts for AirAsia.
We maintain our SELL call for AirAsia for different reasons. The positive outlook for Malaysia’s tourist arrivals (ahead of the Visit Malaysia Year 2020) should serve as a tailwind to AirAsia’s key strategy to aggressively grow its top line. However, this is offset by AirAsia’s higher cost structure following the sale-and-leaseback of its fleet (which mean its planes are now largely leased vs. owned previously).
We value AirAsia at RM1.40 based on 8x FY21F EPS, a 30% discount to its much larger global peers (Rynair and Southwest Airlines) with an average forward PE of about 11x to reflect AirAsia’s relatively smaller size.
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....