In 1Q2020, Suria handled a total of 89,579 (-0.1% Y.o.Y) TEUs, accounting to 25.6% of our assumption of 350,000 TEUs for 2020. In the meantime, the group’s total tonnage handled fell 15.6% Y.o.Y to 6.5 mln tonnes due to lower bulk oil, palm oil, fertiliser, palm kernel oil and general cargo throughput. We see further weakness in the TEUs and tonnage handled moving into 2Q2020 before slight pickup in 2H2020 owing to the prospect of economic recovery.
At the same time, the Baltic Dry Index plunged below 400 points in mid-May 2020 – the weakest level in over four years, dragged down by global trade disruption from Covid- 19. Additionally, renewed tensions between the Trump administration and China sparked fears over further supply constraints. This suggests that a recovery is relatively far fetch at current juncture.
On the property development, the joint venture with SBC Corporation Bhd for the Jesselton Quay Central (JQC) project (current phase) has hit a minor snag due to the Movement Control Order (MCO) taking place. Hence, we see the targeted completion at end-2020 will be delayed to 1H2021.
We maintained our HOLD recommendation on Suria, but with a lower target price of RM1.37 (from RM1.45) taking into the account of the slowdown in business activity due to the Covid-19 which we have revised our earnings assumption by -34.3% and -31.7% to RM38.1 mln and RM40.2 mln for 2020 and 2021 respectively after accounting to the lower TEUs (current assumption for 2020 at 300,000) and delay in property project completion.
We value Suria through a sum-of-parts (SOP) approach as we valued both its port operations and property development segments on a discounted cash flow approach (key assumptions include a WACC of 8.5%, terminal growth rate of 1.5%) to reflect its ability to generate recurring revenues and steady earnings growth over the longer term. Meanwhile, we ascribed a 10.0x (unchanged) target PER to both its logistics and bunkering contracts as well as engineering and ferry terminal operations businesses, based on their potential earnings contribution in 2020.
We continue to like Suria for its position as the leading port operator in Sabah, having secured long-term concession agreements with relevant authorities until 2034 with a relatively large scale port expansion plan in store, whilst the property development segment will continue to see strong progressive billings over coming years. Risks to our recommendation include dependency and sensitivity to commodity prices (mainly crude oil and crude palm oil). The port operation business is highly regulated by the State and Sabah Ports Authority that requires a number of approvals, licenses, registrations and permits from various regulatory authorities. Weaker-than-expected property sales could see delays in payments from its joint-venture partners on the property development segment. Any delay in project completion from the expected timeline completion will also tighten cash flow projections and thus reducing our DCFderived valuations
Source: Mplus Research - 21 May 2020
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Created by MalaccaSecurities | Nov 15, 2024