We remain UNDERWEIGHT on the Malaysian telecoms space due to the sector’s demanding valuations, vis-à-vis its regional peers. Valuations have seen new heights in the last two years due to the combination of a benign competitive environment and compression in bond yields. Nonetheless, we think stocks which offer better revenue growth potential (such as Telekom Malaysia) could fare better.
Catalysts still some distance away
We remain UNDERWEIGHT on the Malaysian telecoms space due to the sector’s demanding valuations, vis-à-vis its regional peers. While we believe the sector’s fundamentals remain sound, the telcos are facing headwinds in monetising da ta withtraditional SMS revenue under threat.
The notable highlights during 3Q13 were: i) a marked erosion in SMS revenue, and ii) the presence of tax incentives that boosted earnings. In the fixed line industry, Telekom Malaysia (T MK, NEUTRAL, TP: MYR5.50), or TM, continues to execute well on UniFi, although Maxis (MAXIS MK, SELL, TP: MYR5.90) managed to capture a slightly higher share of the industry net additions in 3Q13. There is no change to our recommendations on the stocks.
While we view the implementation of the 6% goods and services tax (GST) as a potential re-rating catalyst for the sector, we note that its implementation will only take place in April 2015. Hence, we believe the market will likely price in the positive earnings impact of passing on the prepaid service tax to consumers as we approach 2H14.
DiGi (DIGI MK, SELL, TP: MYR4.10) is seen to be the biggest beneficiary, as we estimate about 65.0% of its revenue comes from prepaid users, followed by Celcom (50.0%) and Maxis (45.0%). Our scenario analysis indicates sharp rises in our FVs for the mobile players, if the 6.0% service tax is no longer absorbed: i) DiGi (+MYR0.60 to MYR4.70), ii) Axiata (+MYR0.45 to MYR7.00), and iii) Maxis (+MYR0.50 to MYR6.40), mainly due to the significant earnings boost (10-15% in FY15).
Valuations at new plateau but face risks
Telecom valuations have seen new heights in the last two years due to a combination of a benign competitive environment as well as compression in bond yields. The mobile operators’ forward P/E multiples have trended higher from the mid- to highteens level to about 20-25x currently. Nonetheless, we think stocks which offer better revenue growth potential (such as TM) could still fare better. Stocks that have seen their dividend yields compressed (such as Maxis) may struggle amid rising bond yields, given that the US Federal Reserve is trimming i ts monthly bond purchases to USD75bn from USD85bn.
The competitive environment has been relatively benign in the last two years, in our view. As seen in the charts below, mobile operators have managed to keep their operating metrics relatively stable: i) EBITDA margins have been resilient, ii) blended ARPUs have held up as voice erosion was not as bad as previously feared, and iii) Maxis lost a bit of its market share due to some complacency in prepaid but this could reverse with its new CEO, Morten Lundal, on board. Unsurprisingly, shareholders have been rewarded with generous dividends.
The compression of the MGS yield (using the 10-year tenure bond as a guide) may have also acted to push valuations higher given the generous dividends paid out by mobile operators, in particular Maxis. We think a reversal of this trend may have a potential negative impact on valuations.
Competitive landscape unlikely to change significantly
The competitive landscape is unlikely to change materially going forward, in our view. The WiMAX players are still struggling to generate profits and thus will not likely cause too much ripples in the market, in our view. Given their heavy reliance on mobile broadband for the bulk of their revenue, we believe they may continue to struggle, unlike the mobile operators who can fall back on their traditional voice and SMS segments (which command better margins).
Green Packet is one of WiMAX players who has been in the market the longest, but has yet to make a profit. Meanwhile, YTL Communications SB (YTL Comms) entered the mobile broadband market with its WiMAX network in early 2011, but has not significantly altered the competitive landscape, in our view.
The successful launch and execution of the high-speed broadband (HSBB) network by TM also meant that the appeal of mobile broadband (which is WiMAX players’ key focus) has been restricted to a declining number of users requiring true Internet mobility, as more consumers become increasingly content with the proliferation of fast WiFi.
Market maturity a likely cause for benign competition
We believe the relatively benign competition is partly due to an increasingly saturated mobile market, which implied that any aggressive price cuts may not yield significant accretion to subscriber and voice usage growth. The relatively benign competitive environment does not mean that the mobile operators are seeing high sequential revenue growth. Instead, it has been quite modest (averaging just 1-2%), which we believe is a reflection of market maturity.
We note that Maxis made some downward price adjustments in 2012, but we view these as measures to mitigate further erosion in Maxis’ subscriber market share by bringing its pricing closer to its peers rather that outright price undercutting. Going forward, Maxis does not expect to make further significant price adjustments as it did in 2012. Instead, it will be working on improving its distribution network and branding, which could result in an uptick in spending on advertising and promotion.
Pockets of earnings growth recovery in 2014
Overall, we expect industry revenue growth to moderate to 4.6% in 2014 from 5.6% in 2013. We note that SMS is facing notable cannibalisation from substitution into data. SMS revenue has been relatively flat following the restriction on mobile operators from selling bulk SMS since March 2012. However, with smartphone adoption and over-the-top usage rising, the sequential q-o-q decline (approximately mid-single digit) in SMS revenue has been quite noticeable in 2013.
Source: RHB
n00bpelabur
Wow from these report clearly new innovation app like whatsapp and wechat are killing all telco in sms revenue particular user with smartphone. Looks like all telco must diversified in internet package or data package subscription to gain more revenue this days.
2013-12-29 00:50