WPRTS’s FY22 results beat our forecast. Its top line grew as a contraction in container volume was more than cushioned by a higher average yield (due to the strength in gateway cargoes). It guided for a recovery in 2HFY23 with an overall FY23F container volume growth of 0% to 5% and a single-digit growth in FY24F. We raise our FY23F core net profit by 4% and lift our TP by 7% to RM3.65 (WACC: 6.4%, TG: 2%) from RM3.40 but maintain our MARKET PERFORM call.
Its FY22 core net profit of RM642.7m (excluding RM14m asset writeoffs and write-back of a RM42.9m JV impairment loss) beat our forecast by 10% but met consensus estimates. The variance against our forecast came largely from our under-estimation of the investment tax allowance. The group declared a second interim dividend of 7.46sen, bringing the full-year FY22 dividend to 14.37sen which is above with our assumption of 12.9sen).
YoY, its FY22 revenue grew marginally (+2%). A contraction in container volume (-6%) was more than offset by a higher average revenue per TEU (+6%).
The lower container volume was due to a sharp drop in the transhipment volume (-10%), weighed down by supply-chain disruptions arising from China’s zero-Covid policy and the RussiaUkraine war that hurt the global trade. This was partially mitigated by a strong gateway container volume (+9%) on the back of brisk exports by local manufacturers spurred by the ringgit’s weakness.
Meanwhile, the higher revenue per TEU was driven by the strong gateway volume as mentioned, which typically commands a better rate as compared to transhipment.
The conventional cargo volume rose to 12.1m metric tonnes (+8%) driven by: (I) inbound and outbound cargoes of recycled paper and those from IKEA’s regional distribution centre in Malaysia, and (ii) construction equipment trade.
Its core net profit fell by 13% due to higher unsubsidised diesel fuel cost (+69%) and a higher effective tax rate of 25.9% (FY21: 22.3%) arising from the imposition of prosperity tax.
QoQ, its 4QFY22 revenue was flat as a marginal recovery in transhipment volume (+1%) was offset by a weakened gateway volume (-2%) on easing commodity prices and intensifying lockdowns in China before the easing towards end-December. However, its 4QFY22 core net profit rose 18% mainly due to a lower effective tax rate of 6.5% (3QFY22: 32.9%) arising from the recognition of investment tax allowances.
The key takeaways from the results briefing are as follows:
Forecasts. We raise our FY23F net profit forecast by 4% mainly due to the higher FY23F container volume growth assumption as mentioned above.
We continue to like WPRTS for: (i) its resilient earnings underpinned by long-term contracts with key clients such as Ocean Alliance, (ii) its long-term growth driven by the Westports 2 expansion project, and (iii) its price competitiveness, i.e. lower transhipment tariffs vs. peers such as Port of Tanjung Pelepas and Port of Singapore. However, these are weighed down the unfavourable outlook of the seaport segment amidst the slowing global trade on the back of seemingly prolonged inflation and hence a high interest rate environment globally.
We lift our DCF-derived TP by 7% to RM3.65 (from RM3.40) based on the discount rate equivalent to its WACC of 6.4% and a terminal growth rate of 2%. There is no adjustment to our TP based on ESG given a 3-star rating as appraised by us (see Page 4). Maintain MARKET PERFORM.
Risks to our call include: (i) a significant slowdown in the global economy, dampening the global containerised trade traffic, (ii) rising operating costs, particularly fuel, and (iii) its expansion plans fail to materialise.
Source: Kenanga Research - 25 Jan 2023
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