Kenanga Research & Investment

Glove - 1QCY24 Report Card: Weak Earnings Undertone

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Publish date: Mon, 10 Jun 2024, 11:07 AM

We reiterate our UNDERWEIGHT rating on the sector. Players either were in the red or reported tepid profits in 1QCY24, with only one meeting our expectation. The weak earnings undertone in 1QCY24 suggests the operating environment remains challenging, plagued by overcapacity, predatory pricing by certain overseas players, weak demand and the high cost of inputs. On a slightly brighter note, further decommissioning of older production facilities locally should help to ease supply pressure, at least bringing about more rational competition amongst local players. Following a premature run-up in their share prices, we avoid all names under our coverage, namely HARTA (UP; TP: RM2.33), KOSSAN (UP; TP: RM1.48), SUPERMX (UP; TP: RM0.83) and TOPGLOV (UP; TP: RM0.75).

A weak 1QCY24 earning season. There was a slight sequential weakening in earnings delivery (against our expectations) by the sector in the recently concluded 1QCY24 reporting season with 25%/75% of results coming within/below compared to 25%/50%/25% above/within/below in 4QCY23. Out of the four companies under our coverage, only one came in within our forecasts (KOSSAN), while three came in below (HARTA, SUPRMX and TOPGLOV). Overall, players are benefiting from a lower cost base following the decommissioning of inefficient production capacity in the industry.

The weak earnings undertone in 1QCY24 suggests the operating environment remains challenging, plagued by overcapacity, predatory pricing by certain overseas players, weak demand, and the high cost of inputs. Despite registering a third consecutive quarterly profit, KOSSAN and HARTA’s tepid 1QCY24 profitability was lower QoQ, dragged down by subdued sales volume and sustained high input nitrile butadiene rubber price. On the other hand, SUPERMX and TOPGLOV suffered their 6th and 7th consecutive quarterly losses, respectively. However, SUPERMX and TOPGLOV’s losses narrowed, thanks to: (i) depleting highcost inventory, and (ii) lower cost base following the decommissioning of inefficient production capacity.

Oversupply to persist. Based on our estimates, the demand-supply situation will only start to head towards equilibrium in CY26 when there is virtually no more new capacity coming onstream while the global demand for gloves continues to rise by 15% per annum, underpinned by rising hygiene awareness. MARGMA projects 12%-15% global demand growth for rubber gloves annually from CY23, following an estimated 25% contraction to 300b pieces in CY23. We project the demand for gloves to rise by 30% in CY24 to 390b pieces (due to a low base effect in CY23) and resume its organic growth of 15% thereafter. This will result in an excess capacity of 212b pieces in CY24. The overcapacity still persists which means low prices and depressed plant utilisation will continue to plague the industry in CY24.

Assumptions. Our CY24 forecasts assume: (i) an ASP per 1,000 pieces of USD20 similar to CY23, and (ii) an average plant utilisation of 45% vs. an estimated 40% in CY23. In the meantime, we do not have any top pick for the sector.

Source: Kenanga Research - 10 Jun 2024

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Albukhary

Kenanga's Analyst must be a Glove Hater, as its analysis are too bias.

Company like Harta & Kossan has already mentioned in the AGM or Analyst briefing that their plant utilisation has increased to 80%, and even Top Glove also re-commissioning few plants (previously was shut down) as existing plant are insufficient to meet the demand.
Why Kananga still using 45% plant utilization in their research report?

1 week ago

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