S & P Results Review & Earnings Outlook
Tenaga’s strong 2QFY10 (Aug.) net profit (before forex gain) of MYR855.7 mln (+26.8% YoY) was driven by an 8.0% YoY electricity demand growth and lower generating costs (-5.8% YoY). The latter was partly due to a lower average coal cost of USD82/ton (from USD85/ton in 2QFY09) and the strengthening of the Ringgit (MYR).
As a result, net margin improved to 13.5% from 8.5% previously. This brings YTD net profit before forex gain to MYR1.61 bln, accounting for 52.2% of our previous FY10 forecast of MYR3.08 bln.
In line with the improved results, Tenaga has declared a higher interim gross DPS of 6.0 sen (FY09: 2 sen gross and 2 sen net).
The outlook remains positive as electricity demand is expected to remain strong. Tenaga’s long-term plan is to expand its existing 2,100MW Janamanjung plant by 2,000MW to be commissioned in 2016, in time with the drop in reserve margin to below 20% from 48% currently. This is in view of the fact that the power transmission from
Bakun to the peninsula is unlikely to take place now.
We revise higher our 2010 net profit forecast by 8.1% to factor in a stronger 8% YoY (from 4.0%) electricity demand and an average coal cost of USD90/ton (from USD85/ton), as it has already secured 91% of its FY10 coal requirement. We also assume an 8% demand growth in FY11 and a higher average coal cost of USD100/ton, but the impact
will be partially offset by the stronger MYR.
Recommendation & Investment Risks
We maintain our Buy recommendation on Tenaga but raise our 12-month target price to MYR10.00 (from MYR9.50).
Our target price continues to be DCF-derived, using a WACC assumption of 7.0% and an unchanged terminal value of 3%. Our target price includes a projected FY10 net DPS of 27.7 sen.
Tenaga’s earnings visibility has improved, given that coal cost is contained while electricity demand is recovering at a faster rate. Its valuations are undemanding with a FY11 PER of 10.4x, as compared with its forward PER range of between 10.3x-30.4x in the past five years, and its peer group average of 12.3x. Foreign shareholding in the company has also recovered slightly to 8.8% from the low of 8.5% in January 2010. As of one of the largest component stocks in the FBM KLCI, Tenaga has been a market laggard, underperformed the market barometer, rising merely 1.2% YTD vs. the index’s 5.0% YTD gain. Therefore, we believe Tenaga has ample upside potential, and therefore maintaining our Buy recommendation.
Risks to our recommendation and target price include: (i) an unexpected spike in coal price, (ii) a weakening MYR against major currencies, (iii) slower-than-expected growth in electricity demand, and (iv) the absence of tariff adjustment to allow fuel cost pass-through.
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