Maybulk’s 9MFY12 core earnings of RM24.1m were within our FY12 estimates of RM30.8m but significantly below consensus’ RM49.5m. Its 3QFY12 core earnings contracted sharply by 61% y-o-y in tandem with the 15.3% y-o-y drop in revenue while operating costs were flat amid high bunkering costs. We have yet to see any recovery for the sector as the global economic slowdown had given rise to the supply-demand imbalance for dry bulk vessels. We remain bearish on the dry bulk segment and slash our FV further to RM1.10, based on 0.6x P/B. Maintain SELL.
Saved by associate. Maybulk’s 9MFY12 core earnings of RM24.1m were within our FY12 RM30.8m estimate but significantly below consensus’ RM49.5m. Its 3QFY12 core earnings contracted by a sharp 61% y-o-y in tandem with the 15.3% y-o-y drop in revenue while operating costs remained flat in view of high bunkering costs. Operationally, Maybulk is still in the red, posting an EBIT loss of RM6.4m although this was significantly offset by higher combined contribution of RM30.6m from its associate and JV, POSH. The company booked a gain of RM9.1m during the quarter as a result of vessel disposals and fair value gains in its investments.
Rate movement. The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) and Baltic Tanker Index (BTI) tumbled by 45% y-o-y and 20.5% y-o-y respectively in 3QFY12, resulting in the time charter earnings of its bulker division dropping by 30% y-o-y although the tanker segment saw rates inch up by 8.4% y-o-y. Panamax vessel rates hit a record low on the aggressive deliveries of new buildings amid reduced grain shipments due to the drought in the US and the Black Sea region. Coupled with losses from the three new vessels delivered, Maybulk’s dry bulk segment posted a PBT of RM0.9m YTD vs the RM63.6m it earned last year. Similarly, earnings on the tanker side came in lower, again due to the lower rates.
Another downgrade on bleak outlook. A recovery in the sector remains distant as the supply and demand imbalance of dry bulk vessels persists coupled with the slowdown in the global economy. Dry bulk trade is projected to grow at 5% in 2012 and 4% in 2013 vs a supply a growth of 12% in 2012 and 6% in 2013. The stellar earnings posted by POSH indicate that outlook in the offshore segment remains promising, driven by oil exploration activities.
Downgrade again. We remain bearish on the dry bulk segment. While we retain our earnings projections, we cut our FV further to one premised on 0.6x book value per share from 0.7x previously. This nudges down our FV to RM1.10, providing a downside bias of 16%. Maintain SELL.
Saved by associate. Maybulk’s 9MFY12 core earnings of RM24.1m were within our FY12 RM30.8m estimate but significantly below consensus’ RM49.5m. Its 3QFY12 core earnings contracted by a sharp 61% y-o-y in tandem with the 15.3% y-o-y drop in revenue while operating costs remained flat in view of high bunkering costs. Operationally, Maybulk is still in the red, posting an EBIT loss of RM6.4m although this was significantly offset by higher combined contribution of RM30.6m from its associate and JV, POSH. The company booked a gain of RM9.1m during the quarter as a result of vessel disposals and fair value gains in its investments.
Rate movement. The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) and Baltic Tanker Index (BTI) tumbled by 45% y-o-y and 20.5% y-o-y respectively in 3QFY12, resulting in the time charter earnings of its bulker division dropping by 30% y-o-y although the tanker segment saw rates inch up by 8.4% y-o-y. Panamax vessel rates hit a record low on the aggressive deliveries of new buildings amid reduced grain shipments due to the drought in the US and the Black Sea region. Coupled with losses from the three new vessels delivered, Maybulk’s dry bulk segment posted a PBT of RM0.9m YTD vs the RM63.6m it earned last year. Similarly, earnings on the tanker side came in lower, again due to the lower rates.
Another downgrade on bleak outlook. A recovery in the sector remains distant as the supply and demand imbalance of dry bulk vessels persists coupled with the slowdown in the global economy. Dry bulk trade is projected to grow at 5% in 2012 and 4% in 2013 vs a supply a growth of 12% in 2012 and 6% in 2013. The stellar earnings posted by POSH indicate that outlook in the offshore segment remains promising, driven by oil exploration activities.
Downgrade again. We remain bearish on the dry bulk segment. While we retain our earnings projections, we cut our FV further to one premised on 0.6x book value per share from 0.7x previously. This nudges down our FV to RM1.10, providing a downside bias of 16%. Maintain SELL.
Source: OSK
No comments:
Post a Comment