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Still BUY, new MYR3.55 DCF TP (from MYR4.10), 34% upside. Hartalega’s 1QFY25 (Mar) core earnings leapt to MYR37m from MYR1.8m a quarter ago, making up 16% and 19% of our and Street’s full-year projections. Its results were in line, as we expect stronger quarters ahead, backed by a pick-up in restocking activities, customers’ greater acceptance of its cost pass- throughs, and cost normalisation. We keep our bullish outlook. We think its stock re-rating is warranted, based on a gradual uptick in market dynamics.
Results overview. HART’s 1QFY25 core earnings of MYR37m stemmed from an improvement in industry operating dynamics. ASP rose 3.8% QoQ in 1QFY25 (4QFY25: +1.7% QoQ) at USD20.80/1,000 pieces. Consequently, volumes sold rose 6% QoQ to 5.9bn pieces, resulting in a plant utilisation rate of 78% (+5ppts QoQ). Notably, there were 600m gloves in shipments delayed in 1QFY25 due to logistics issues. Nonetheless, HART was able to ship out the goods in July.
Outlook. The rubber glove industry’s demand-supply dynamics continue to show signs of recovery, on the back of: i) The inventory-destocking cycle coming to an end; ii) improving order visibility (2Q24 Malaysia YoY glove export growth accelerated to 29% from -0.3% in 1Q24); iii) customers are becoming more accepting of price hikes. With the industry excess capacity gradually dissipating, we expect to see a demand-supply equilibrium by the end of 2024. While we remain sanguine on the recovery in demand, the recent global equity sell-off led to a c.25% share price correction over the last month. Nevertheless, we note that global glove demand was resilient during the past financial crises in 2000-2001 and 2007-2008 (Figure 3).
Earnings adjustment. We cut FY25-26 earnings estimates by 9% and 7%, to account for the weakening USD (Figure 4).
Still a BUY. Post estimates adjustments, we arrived at a lower TP of MYR3.55 (includes a 2% ESG discount). Our DCF-derived TP implies 39x CY25 P/E, or 1.2SD above its pre-pandemic 5-year historical mean of 27x. We expect HART to chart growth ahead, propelled by a pick-up in customer order replenishments, increasing acceptance of its cost pass-throughs, and cost normalisation (nitrile prices have eased by 3% QTD). We continue to like HART for its robust balance sheet, efficient operating model, and the company being a key beneficiary of the secular recovery in the medical glove sector.
Key downside risks: Lower-than-expected sales volumes, weaker-than- expected USD vs MYR, and raw material prices being higher than estimated.
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....