Value Investing

Brief Value Investing: Geo Energy (GERL SP): Recovery in Coal Price from 4Q18 Bottom; Continue to Wait for M&A Action and more

In this briefing:

  1. Geo Energy (GERL SP): Recovery in Coal Price from 4Q18 Bottom; Continue to Wait for M&A Action
  2. Hitachi High Tech’s Ace in the Hole
  3. Bank Alfalah: Metrics Point to Falāh
  4. Philippines: February Inflation Eases Back to BSP’s Inflation Target Range

1. Geo Energy (GERL SP): Recovery in Coal Price from 4Q18 Bottom; Continue to Wait for M&A Action

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Geo Energy Resources (GERL SP) reported weak 4Q18 results late last month. The reason for the 5M USD net loss in 4Q18 was mainly due to Chinese import restrictions for Indonesian coal in November and December last year. With the import quota removed as of January ICI4 coal prices have rebounded from +/-30 USD/ton late 2018 to 40 USD/ton this week. 

Geo remains in deep value territory (3x EV/EBITDA) as the company still has over 200M USD+ in cash it raised from a 300M USD bond placing almost 18 months ago. While the CEO announced plans to organize a HK dual listing in 1H19 this cannot materialize unless management can execute on a significant acquisition opportunity it has been considering for the last twelve months. With Indonesian elections coming up next month the hope is that clarity on this potential transaction can be sorted by late 1H19.

While Europe is obsessed with Climate Change doomsday scenarios being shouted around by school-skipping teenagers, the reality is that three out of four of the most populated countries in the world (China, India and Indonesia) will remain heavy users of coal for decades to come. With cleaner coal technology being the key differentiator how much pollution is emitted.

My Fair Value estimate (Base case) remains 0.35 SGD or 89% upside.  Please recall, Macquarie paid 0.29 SGD for a 5% stake in November 2018 and had warrants issued to it at 0.33 SGD.

2. Hitachi High Tech’s Ace in the Hole

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Last Friday, Hitachi (6501) was reported to be considering selling Hitachi Chemical (4217), according to media sources over the weekend. This has sent Hitachi Chemical and its parent into a frenzy with Hitachi Chemical ADR up 13% last Friday. We believe this news is relevant for Hitachi High Tech because both subsidiaries are 51-52% consolidated by the parent Hitachi, and both have arguably businesses with little synergy with the parent. We believe that Hitachi High Tech is also rumored to be on the block for sale or spin-off.  Media sources say that Hitachi is considering a sale of Hitachi Chemical and would reap Y300bn.  The current value of their 51% ownership in Hitachi Chemical is Y211bn, and thus there is 42% implied upside if the Y300bn figure is achieved.

To recap Q3 results for Hitachi High Tech from January 31, 2019, the numbers were decent with earnings above consensus forecasts by 33% for Q3 (Y15.8bn OP versus Y13.8bn forecast). The profit rise was due to improved margins in medical and continued strength in process semiconductor equipment. The shares are up 20% year-to-date, outperforming the Nikkei by 15%. Some of the fears of a sharp slowdown in semiconductor have been nullified by the continued strength in logic chip investments as well as the improved profitability in medical clinical analyzers. Medical profits soared 46% YoY in Q3 to Y7.6bn on a 13% YoY increase in revenues. OP margin improved from 12.3% to 15.8% YoY.

3. Bank Alfalah: Metrics Point to Falāh

Bank Alfalah (BAFL PA) is heading in the right direction as testified by its metric progression, embodied in its quintile 1 PH Score™.

Valuations are not stretched – especially the Total return Ratio of 1.8x and an Earnings Yield of 14.5%.

Combining the fundamental momentum signals (PH Score™) with franchise valuation, and a low RSI, places BAFL PA in the top decile of bank opportunities globally.

4. Philippines: February Inflation Eases Back to BSP’s Inflation Target Range

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  • Better-than-expected February inflation of 3.8%YoY wasn’t just a ‘base effect’ result. Broad food and transport CPI readings probably benefited from a year-ago, statistical high. It’s not the same for most of the non-food CPI items like rental & household utilities, and restaurant & miscellaneous goods & services that comprise discretionary expenditures. Lacking the base effect, inflation within this group seemed to have shed off last year’s price catalysts led by TRAIN’s excise hikes, high oil prices and supply shocks. 
  • Based on the PSA’s seasonally adjusted data, headline inflation’s annualized pace was a benign 1.2%.
  • Our updated monthly time series extrapolation showed headline inflation bottoming out at 1.3%YoY-1.4%YoY in September-October this year.
  • Sustained liquidity tightness amid inflation’s benign pace with a trajectory settling in the BSP’s target range could facilitate a staggered bank reserve ratio cut of 2% starting 2Q19.   
  • With the pro-growth bias of newly appointed BSP chief Benjamin Diokno (former Budget Secretary), the likelihood of a 25bp policy rate cut has been elevated in 3Q19 when inflation this year is expected to hit rock bottom and the ensuing size of positive, real interest rates could risk threatening growth.
  • Considering potential macro upsides this year, e.g., inflation bottoming out alongside consumption recovery, buying risk assets on dips is still the norm.

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