We initiate coverage on Daya with a MYR0.48 FV, pegged to 15x FY14F EPS, in line with other small cap oil & gas (O&G) companies. The O&G division will spearhead its growth going forward, given its ambition to expand its expertise beyond the downstream segment. We like Daya’s strong earnings growth, attractive 12x FY14F P/E and potential ownership of vessels to capture higher recurring earnings.
Investment Merits
Joining the fray
We believe that Daya management’s apparent shift in focus to expand its offshore O&G capability has been timely. Despite the lack of a track record, Daya managed to clinch a North Sea subsea services contract from Technip that was heavily contested by other more established international players. This provides a solid foundation to back its bid for more Malaysian offshore O&G contracts.
The right ingredients
Daya’s push to break out of its bread-and-butter business can be credited to its highly capable management team, which has a diverse background and expertise. The presence of management personnel with prior working experience in international O&G companies also provides inroads into abundant overseas contract opportunities.
Ready commitment the winning factor
We view that Daya’s ready commitment to deploy the state-of-the-art SD1 OSCV as the winning factor behind the landing of the Technip contract. The risk taken by the group to charter the vessel from SIOFF for the purpose of the contract also represents management’s confidence in its offshore services capability.
Capex-light model
SIOFF’s willingness to jointly-control future offshore subsea construction vessels (OSCVs) helps lighten the burden of high capital expenditure and financing costs that come with 100% ownership. It also allows room for the group to venture into other offshore O&G opportunities such as risk-sharing contracts (RSCs).
Undemanding valuation
Daya is currently trading at 12x based on our FY14 EPS estimate of MYR0.032, making it one of the cheapest proxies to the O&G sector. Its growing subsea services business, sizeable construction and engineering orderbook, positive contribution from its tank-cleaning services, and the ramping-up of its solvent and waste oil recycling plant underpin our bullish earnings estimate for FY14 onwards.
Investment Risks
Falling out with SIOFF
Its subsea services division would be at risk should SIOFF: i) bids for similar contracts on its own, ii) refuse to charter its OSCVs for future bids, or iii) charge higher charter rates that will erode profits.
Loss of key personnel
We believe that Daya’s growth is highly leveraged on a few key personnel. Any departure may stunt its potential. Inability to fill in the gaps It is possible that Daya may not be able to secure OSCV spot charters in time for the “naked period”, ie after the end of the long-term charter (100-175 days) with Technip every year. However, we view this risk as limited, owing to the growing need for such vessels in the market.
Exchange rate volatility
Considering that the bulk of its O&G revenue is USD-denominated, the greenback’s weakness vs the MYR will lead to lower profitability for Daya’s O&G segment.
The Perfect Concoction
Background
Daya was established in 1994 and was initially involved in the: i) manufacturing compounds for cables and wires, and ii) trading in specialty chemicals, related polymer and compounds, and hardware. It was listed on the ACE Market in July 2005 and transferred to the Main Board in November 2009.
Today, Daya is a small integrated O&G player that offers mainly offshore and onshore services. These include the provision of: i) complete logistics, trading and distribution of specialty chemicals and catalysts, ii) technical services to the downstream O&G sector, and iii) subsea and crane services.
The management team
Dato’ Azmil Khalili bin Dato’ Khalid
Dato’ Azmil is an independent non-executive chairman of the group and was appointed to the board on 19 Sept 2007. He graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in civil engineering and subsequently with a Master’s in business administration. He currently holds positions in various listed and non-listed companies that are involved in the construction of infrastructure, environment, building and manufacturing plants, property development, quarrying, and solid waste management, among others. He was a former non-independent non-executive director of M3energy, an exploration & production (E&P) company with strategic focus on marginal field development.
Dato’ Mazlin bin Md Junid
Dato’ Mazlin is an executive vice chairman, president and group CEO. He was appointed to the board on 16 Aug 2007 following the merger between DSSB and Daya Materials group. He holds a Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering and a Master’s in business administration. His stint in several well-regarded organisations such as Sime Darby (SIME MK, BUY, FV: MYR10.73), Sapura Industrial and Sapura Technology provides him with vast experience in corporate management, business and financial management. Dato’ Mazlin is the driving force behind Daya’s pursuit of the O&G sector. The group’s gradual shift started in 2007 when DSSB merged with Daya Materials group via a reverse takeover, which also saw Dato’ Mazlin’s appointment to the board. He is now largely involved in the group’s O&G segment.
Nathan Tham Jooi Loon
Mr Tham was appointed to the board on 30 May 2005 and currently holds the position of group managing director. He is a qualified chartered financial analyst (CFA) and was formerly attached to Chase Manhattan Bank in 1989 before joining UBS in 1995, becoming its executive director responsible for Malaysian investment banking and Asia-Pacific M&A practices. We believe his entry into the group marks the beginning of several acquisitions and mergers that have proved instrumental in transforming Daya into the entity that it is today. He became involved in the business upon the invitation of his brother, Daya co-founder Mr Tham Wooi Loon in 2005. The former took over as group managing director when the latter resigned in 2011.
Fazrin Azwar bin Md Nor
He is Daya’s senior independent non-executive director and was appointed to the board on 30 May 2005. He holds a Bachelor of Law (LLB) Honours from the University of Malaya. He is an advocate and solicitor, and is a member of the Malaysian Bar. He is also a chartered member of the Malaysian Institute of Directors and the Institute of Internal Auditors Malaysia. He holds several board positions in companies that are involved in the packaging, steel fastener and paint industries, among others.
Dato’ Sri Koh Kin Lip
Dato’ Sri Koh is an independent non-executive director and was appointed to the board on 22 Dec 2008. He graduated from Plymouth Polytechnic, UK, with a Higher National Diploma in business studies and a Council’s Diploma in management studies. He is the founder of Rickoh Holdings SB, a flagship family company incorporated in 1987 with interests in property investment and development, leasing of properties, insurance brokerage, oil palm plantations, sea and land transportation for CPO and palm kernels, IT business, golf equipment and accessories trading, quarry operations, and hotel businesses.
Lim Soon Foo (with Ronnie Lim Hai Liang as alternate director)
Mr Lim is an independent non-executive director and was appointed to the board on 15 Aug 2011. He has been a member of the Chartered Institute of Shipbrokers, London, since 1979 and holds positions in companies that provide highly specialised services in the Asia-Pacific fibre optic submarine cable industry. He also holds board positions in several non-listed companies that are involved in plantation, logging and real estate.
Mark Midgley (of Daya Offshore Construction)
Daya Offshore Construction (DOC) is helmed by two highly experienced personnel based in Oslo, Norway, namely Mr Mark Midgley and Mr James Klopper. Mr Midgley joined DOC as CEO in 2012. He has a Bachelor of Engineering degree in mechanical engineering and started his career in the O&G industry with Wharton Williams in the Middle East in 1983. Mr Midgley holds a 20% stake in DOC.
James Klopper (of Daya Offshore Construction)
Mr Klopper has been DOC’s COO since April. He began in O&G career with Clough Offshore where he spent 10 years working in various countries within the Asia-Pacific region. He subsequently worked for several O&G giants like McDermott (MDR US, NR), Subsea 7 (SUBC NO, NR) and Petrofac (PFC LN, NR).
O&G At The Forefront
Onshore activities. The onshore O&G business under Daya Secadyme SB (DSSB) revolves around the transportation, trading and distribution of specialty chemicals and catalysts. This 100%-owned subsidiary was injected into the group via a reverse acquisition in Aug 2007. The MYR24m acquisition was satisfied via: i) the issuance of 83.6m new ordinary shares in Daya at an issue price of MYR0.23 per share, and ii) a cash consideration of MYR4.8m.
DSSB holds 25 important licences from Petronas, complemented by an ISO 9001:2008 certification. Its heavy investment on logistic equipment over the years lent credibility that helped bag the rights to represent 50 different international principals like Arkema Inc, Sud-Chemie Inc, JJ Degussa Chemicals, Infineum International and The Dow Chemical Co (DOW US, NR). Petronas and Gas Malaysia (GMB MK, NR) are among its local customers.
DSSB is also the sole supplier of odorants for gas in Malaysia and has extended its footprint into Surabaya, Indonesia, via a contract with Pertamina. DSSB’s market presence in Indonesia is still small, but it has the scope to expand beyond Surabaya going forward. The Indonesian market remains attractive, given its tremendous population growth and the use of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) LPG, to which DSSD’s odorant is added into, has yet to reach nationwide acceptance and hence provides opportunities for expansion.
Onshore/offshore activities. Daya Proffscorp SB (DPSB), another unit within the O&G segment, is mainly involved in the provision of mobile cranes and heavy lifting services for both the onshore and offshore O&G industries. It has a fleet of 25 cranes, ranging from a 20-tonne Tadano to a 400-tonne Liebherr, aged 2-30 years. Offshore activities. Offshore works are undertaken by its Daya Offshore Construction SB (DOC) subsidiary. It offers specialised subsea construction, installation, engineering, as well as inspection, repair and maintenance (IRM) services locally and abroad. DOC operates a fleet of vessels, coupled with technically advanced equipment, survey systems, remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) and modulated diving systems (MHS). The company is currently backed by a team of 40-50 people. The game changer. In August 2013, Daya announced that its sub-subsidiary, Daya OCI (Labuan) Ltd (DOCIL) entered into a charter party contract with Technip Norge AS (Technip) to provide an OSCV (the SD1) that will undertake a range of offshore services works for Technip in the North Sea and North Atlantic. DOC will execute the charter on behalf of DOCIL.
The contract is the group’s biggest achievement to date, as it marks its maiden foray into the international offshore subsea services market. DOCIL trumped six other international bidders who have far superior experience in executing works of such nature, especially in the harsh environment of the North Sea. Apart from providing a team of highly-experienced engineers, it was the deployment of the state-of-the-art SD1 by a fledgling O&G services company that greatly impressed Technip.
The arrangement entails a daily charter rate of USD102,000 per day for a period of 100-175 days per year for seven years. The contract is set to commence in 1Q14. A shorter-term charter of 40 days commenced in mid-September and 4Q13 will be the first full-quarter contribution from Daya’s charter services. We gather from management that Technip has agreed to charter the SD1’s “sister” vessel (the SD2), under similar terms but for a shorter period of three years.
Source: RHB
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King Kong73
hahaha...baru ada coverage...already sudah tahu lama mah
2013-10-31 15:20