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Maintain BUY and MYR0.45 TP, 38% upside with c.2% FY23F yield. Findings from our ground checks at the public display of the new Shah Alam Sports Complex (which Malaysian Resources Corp is involved in) indicate that the progress of this project is on track. We gathered that the Selangor Government and MRC are gathering feedback via the public display prior to finalising the stadium’s design. Meanwhile, the state government is obtaining the development permit from authorities, with construction likely to start sometime between February and April.
Details of the public display. Online feedback forms had questions regarding changes respondents want for the stadium – ie sustainable development, traffic and flood management. The capacity of the new Shah Alam stadium is planned to be at 35-45k spectators vs c.80k spectators previously. Despite the smaller capacity, we believe this would result in better utilisation, as the redevelopment plans include recreational, commercial and residential parts (ie a sports-themed mall, hotel) together with a transit hub linked to the Light Rail Transit 3 (LRT3) station. The new stadium features an ethylene tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE) ceramic coating for its roof and cool air circulation under seats which promotes thermal stability. There would also be a retractable football pitch facilitating easier transformation from sports to multipurpose mode for other events.
We sighted an underground water storage system (UWSS) from the proposed layout (Figure 3). This is a crucial element as Section 13 of Shah Alam (the location of the Shah Alam stadium) is a flood-prone spot. This UWSS feature was likely mooted back in 2015, when former Shah Alam mayor Datuk Ahmad Zaharin mentioned about utilising a portion of the Shah Alam stadium grounds to stop flash foods from occurring. The Shah Alam City Council, in Apr 2022, had allocated MYR150m to upgrade drainage systems and retention ponds in the city over three years.
No changes to earnings forecasts pending further details on: i) Land to be swapped in exchange for MRC’s works on the complex, and ii) the job value to redevelop the complex, as MRC and the Selangor Government finalise the project details post public display. Initially, the cost was estimated to be MYR787m – c.10% of its unbilled orderbook excluding the long-term Bukit Jalil Sentral job. All in, our SOP-derived TP remains at MYR0.45 after ascribing a 0% ESG premium to MRC’s intrinsic value, based on our in-house proprietary scoring methodology. We favour MRC for diversifying its property arm into industrial properties, ie Ipoh Raya Integrated Park and new overseas markets – Australia and New Zealand (total GDV: >MYR1.5bn). An upcoming catalyst would be the potential reinstatement of omitted works for LRT3 worth c.MYR1bn – partly mitigating risks from the Mass Rapid Transit 3 project. Valuations are undemanding as the stock is trading -1.5SD from its 5-year mean P/E.
Key downside risks include a prolonged slowdown in the property market and regulatory risks impacting project timeline rollouts and costs.
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....