Within expectations. IJM Corporation Berhad (IJM) recorded a marginal decline of -4.1%yoy in its 2QFY25 core earnings to RM135.6m, after excluding an unrealised foreign exchange loss of -RM70.0m. The cumulative 6MFY25 core earnings recorded a growth of +12.7%yoy to RM234.7m which came in at 40.2% of ours and 46.3% of consensus' full year estimates. We deem this as within estimates on the back of expectations of stronger construction progress in 2HFY25.
Construction margins to pick up. Construction revenue jumped +49.8%yoy to RM623.3m while PBT soared +87.8%yoy to RM28.7m, attributable to higher construction activities. PBT margin grew to 4.6% from 3.7% in the same quarter last year. This is expected to pick up further in 2HFY25 upon stronger progress of the group's newer construction projects. Three of these projects, namely the Maple Tree Logistic hub, a semiconductor project in Penang and a data centre project in Johor, have yet to reach the 10% threshold.
RM5.0b replenishment target intact. Since Apr-24, IJM has secured RM2.1b of new projects, making up 42.0% of its FY25 target of RM5.0b.
In a briefing yesterday, management held on to the target as they aim to secure several projects before the FYE in Mar-25. These include the extension of the New Pantai Expressway (NPE) of about RM1.4-1.5b and a civil housing project in Nusantara with a size of over RM1.0b, which is currently under evaluation by Indonesia's Finance Ministry. Other projects in the tender book are two data centres, two warehouses, several semiconductor projects and the Penang International Airport expansion. IJM is also keen to participate in the upcoming Penang LRT project, for the above sea alignment from Komtar to Penang Sentral.
Property development. Revenue from the division declined -12.6%yoy to RM405.2m, delivering a PBT of RM30.2m (-60.4%yoy). Excluding foreign exchange movements and gains from land sales and gains from land sales in 2QFY24, the segment's PBT for the quarter would have been an increase of +7.5%yoy. Management is scaling back its FY25 sales target of RM2.0b to RM1.6b-1.7b due to a pushback of new property launches as approvals by authorities have been held back. This is due to stringent requirements for more in-depth geotechnical studies/reports to be submitted following the fatal sinkhole incident on Jalan Raja Laut in Aug-24. Property sales at 1HFY25 stood at RM613m. Unbilled sales stand at RM2.0b.
Manufacturing and quarrying. Despite a lower revenue of RM266.7m (-15.6%yoy), the segment remained the top PBT contributor during the quarter, recording an increase of +7.2%yoy to RM47.9m. The lower revenue was due to lower tonnage of piles delivered and ready mixed concrete products while the stronger PBT is attributable to higher operating efficiency, leading to a growth in margin from 14.1% to 18.0%.
Kuantan Port. The ports subdivision saw revenue declining -6.2%yoy to RM114.3m during the quarter while PBT slid - 19.3%yoy to RM33.8m, mainly due to lower cargo throughput, which declined to 6.6m tonnes from 6.7m tonnes in the same period last year.
Tolls division. The toll division also saw a decline in revenue, down by -16.9%yoy to RM100.1m, with a loss before tax of -RM1.1m during the quarter. This was due to lower traffic volumes in IJM's overseas tollways where one of the concessions in India has ended. On top of that, there is an absence of compensation income post restructuring of local toll roads.
Acquisition of JRL in UK. IJM has proposed to acquire a 50% stake in JRL Group Holdings Ltd, a diversified construction group in the UK for GBP50m (RM283m) at a forward PE of about 6x. IJM's effective stake in JRL will be 30% which makes it an associate company, as the acquisition will be made through a soon to be set up 60% subsidiary IJM Corporation (UK) Ltd. JRL is no stranger to IJM as its 85% construction arm Midgard, was the main contractor for Royal Mint Gardens Phase 1, IJM Land's maiden property development project in the UK that was completed in 2019. It was also recently appointed as the contractor for Phase 2. Management expects synergistic opportunities with JRL, which has a strong control of the supply chain in the UK at about 80%. JRL has an outstanding order book of GBP1.5b (RM8.5b). JRL was in the red in 2022 and 2023 at -GBP38.3m and -GBP26.6m, mainly due to higher costs of raw material and labour and interest costs on fixed-price contracts. As at Aug-24, JRL has rebounded into the black with a PAT of GBP10.3b. IJM is targeting to complete its due diligence on JRL within three months.
Earnings estimates. We are maintaining our earnings estimates on the back of expectations of better quarters ahead.
Target price. As such, we are also maintaining our TP at RM3.89, derived by pegging its FY26F EPS of 17.7 sen to a forward PER of 22x, which is +1SD above its seven-year mean.
Maintain BUY. We expect IJM to continue being among the key beneficiaries of the positive prospects for the construction sector, on the back of a strong pipeline of jobs that can be expected to move forward with more civil job flows, which is also expected to drive the demand for its piles and concrete products. Despite the slightly lower target of property sales for FY25, we expect RM2.0b of unbilled sales to aid in the group's performance for the year. All factors considered; we reiterate our BUY recommendation on IJM.
Source: MIDF Research - 28 Nov 2024