Categories
Shares Small Cap

Stevanto’s Near Term Outlook Foresight Uncertain

Business Strategy and Outlook

Stevanato is the market leader in pen cartridges and presterilized vials and holds the number position in prefillable syringes (behind Becton Dickinson). The company is a key supplier in the drug delivery supply chain, and provides drug containment and primary packaging solutions to 41 of the top 50 global pharma companies. Primary packaging is the material that first envelops a drug product, and safe production of drug-delivery packaging is critical for the successful delivery of pharmaceutical products. 

Stevanato aims to increase the percentage of product sales from high value solutions, which refers to products with proprietary intellectual property and greater complexity, such as presterilized drug containment and integrated self-injector pen and wearable devices. The company is prioritizing investment in research and development and broadening its offering through M&A. Capacity expansion is also a key component of Stevanato’s long-term strategic plan, and capital expenditures are likely to remain elevated over the next year or two. Competition for skilled employees is extreme, and future growth will depend on effectively hiring and retaining talent. 

Both the biopharmaceutical and diagnostic segments are expected to benefit from an increased contribution in high value solutions over time, which has been growing 20% year over year and now represents about 23% of consolidated revenue. It is anticipated the ongoing shift to high-value will provide a material tailwind for margin over the next five to 10 years, and also contribute to robust top line growth. It is seen an uncertain near-term outlook for the business, with both positives and negatives related to the ongoing pandemic. Some drug trials have postponed or delayed, leading to lower sales growth for some customers’ drug portfolios. However, this has been mitigated by the pressing need for vaccines and treatments, which has allowed Stevanato to enjoy compound annual top line growth near 25% over the last two years. The company supplies vials and syringes to about 90% of currently approved vaccines.

Financial Strength

Stevanato has a sound financial position.As of September 2021, total cash position in excess of long-term debt on the balance sheet was EUR 154 million. This was mainly related to the firm’s IPO from July 2021, which raised EUR 154 million. In analysts’ view, Stevanato has more than sufficient capital to fund increasing capacity investment, and it can also be seen the potential for tuck-in acquisitions to broaden the firm’s value proposition in the drug delivery supply chain.In the near term, however, Stevanato’s expansion plan is likely to be the focus of capital deployment. Because of a higher level of capital investment, the company reported free cash flow of negative EUR 9.9 million for the third quarter of 2021. It is anticipated significant earnings and cash flow growth over the next few years, and while free cash flow is likely to be close to flat in 2022, it is anticipated free cash flow above EUR 20 million in 2023. It is believed that it’s possible that some additional debt might be needed to cover cash flow needs, but, considering Stevanato’s current low degree of financial leverage, it is not to be concerned with an increase in debt at or below EUR 500 million.

Bulls Say’s

  • Stevanato has room to bring customers up the value chain to higher-value products and services, giving it a lengthy tailwind for earnings growth and margin expansion. 
  • In contrast to peers, Stevanato can use in-house produced glass vials and syringes for integrated selfinjector systems, reducing the number of vendors for customers and providing Stevanato with a possible cost advantage. 
  • As large economies such as India and China implement more stringent pharmaceutical standards, Stevanato stands to become a key cog in the supply chain in those countries.

Company Profile 

Italy-based Stevanato Group is a provider of drug containment, drug delivery and diagnostic solutions to the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and life sciences industries. It delivers an integrated, end-to-end portfolio of products, processes, and services that address customer needs across the entire drug life cycle including development, clinical, and commercial stages. Stevanato’s revenue is geographically diversified, with 60% of sales from Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), 27% in North America, 10% in Asia-Pacific (APAC), and 3% in South America. 

(Source: MorningStar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Property

Charter Hall Long WALE REIT (CLW) reports solid earnings up by 5.6%

Investment Thesis:

  • Trading at a discount to NTA and our blended valuation. 
  • Economic conditions appear to be improving ahead of expectations post the Covid-19 related impact – this should be positive for asset revaluations and rents. 
  • Strong history of delivering continuing shareholder return and dividends.
  • Solid balance sheet position.
  • Strong property portfolio metrics.
  • Selective asset acquisitions.
  • Expiry risk is relatively low in the near-term. 
  • Attractive yield in the current low interest rate environment. 

Key Risks:

  • Regulatory risks. 
  • Deteriorating property fundamentals, including negative rent revisions. 
  • Deterioration in economic fundamentals leading rent deferrals etc. 
  • Sentiment towards REITs as bond proxy stocks impacted by expected cash rate hikes.
  • Deterioration in funding costs.

Key highlights:

  • Charter Hall Long WALE REIT (CLW) reported a solid set of 1H22 results reflecting operating earnings of $97.8m, or 15.31cps, up +5.6%, and distributions of 15.24cps, up 5.1% on pcp.
  • CLW’s portfolio retained strong operating metrics – at period-end, CLW’s portfolio is 99.9% occupied and comprised 549 properties with a long WALE of 12.2 years.
  • In the half, CLW also completed its acquisition for $814m for a 50% interest in the ALE Property Group, acquired in partnership with Hostplus. The ALE Property Portfolio comprises 78 high quality pub assets, of which 74 bottle stores are in 99% metropolitan locations.
  • The ALE Property Portfolio comprises 78 high quality pub assets, of which 74 bottle stores are in 99% metropolitan locations.
  • The stock currently trades at a discount to its net tangible assets, most likely as investors are concerned over the impact of Covid-19 and associated regulatory lockdown measures, and its impact on property valuations.
  • However, over the longer term, based on the quality of CLW’s management team and property portfolio, and sustainable dividend yield.
  • CLW’s total property portfolio value increased ~$1.42bn to $6.98bn, driven by $923m of acquisitions and $532m in property revaluation uplift.

Company Description: 

Charter Hall Long WALE REIT (ASX: CLW) is an Australian REIT listed on the ASX and investing in high quality Australasian real estate assets (across office, industrial, retail, agri-logistics and telco exchange) that are  redominantly leased to corporate and government tenants on long term leases. CLW is managed by Charter Hall Group (ASX: CHC). 

(Source: Banyantree)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Shares Small Cap

Resale looks like a bargain as Poshmark has $26 fair value estimate

Business Strategy and Outlook:

Poshmark is among the largest apparel resale platforms on the market, boasting an interactive marketplace that benefits from a triumvirate of secular tailwinds: social commerce, an ongoing mix-shift toward online retail sales, and the stratospheric growth of the apparel resale market. The firm’s strategy coalesces around four key priorities: product innovation, category expansion, international growth, and buyer acquisition. We take a neutral view of management’s roadmap, with our research leaving us unconvinced that Poshmark’s international thrusts are poised to generate excess returns for investors, and surmise that purportedly adjacent categories like consumer electronics, art, or pets may not be concordant with the firm’s apparel core competency.

As a slew of firms have entered the resale space, competition has arisen around exclusive access to customers, inventory assortment, and distribution channels, with long-term equilibrium remaining uncertain. Consolidation looks inevitable, particularly as the scope of those companies’ offerings see increasing overlap, commensurate with category, price point, and geographic expansion. Poshmark’s right to win hinges on its ability to convincingly answer the “why Poshmark?” query, attracting platform participants with some combination of competitive seller services, frictionless listing, quick inventory turnover, attractive fees, broad assortment, and authentication services.

Financial Strength:

Poshmark’s financial strength is viewed as sound. The firm carries no long-term debt, has $236 million in cash and cash equivalents on its balance sheet as of the third quarter of 2021, and figures to be free cash flow positive over two of the next three years. The management has adequate wiggle room to pursue moat-bolstering investments, while narrowing operating losses should provide a route to enduring profitability by our midcycle (2025) forecasts. Following its IPO, the firm’s capital structure has simplified meaningfully, retiring $50 million in convertible notes issued during the third quarter of 2020 that carried a panoply of derivative clauses. Shareholder dilution hereafter should be limited to those shares issued in the normal course of business, with approximately 8.6 million options and RSUs outstanding (just north of 11% of free float) as of the third quarter balance sheet date. Poshmark’s waterfall of investment priorities is viewed as consistent with other high growth firms: pursuing internal investments and strategic mergers and acquisitions.

Bulls Say:

  • Five straight quarters of operating profitability (ending in the third quarter of 2021) suggest a strong underlying business model once acquisition costs normalize. 
  • Early traction in Australia and Canada could augur well for long-term success in those markets. 
  • Adding APIs and analytics tools for wholesalers and liquidators could add another platform use case, while generating higher units per transaction, average order values, and fulfillment cost leverage.

Company Profile:

Poshmark is one of the largest players in a quickly growing e-commerce resale space, connecting more than 30 million users on a platform that sells men’s and women’s apparel, accessories, shoes, and more recently consumer electronics and pet products. The marketplace operates in four countries–the U.S., Canada, Australia, and India–with a capital-light, peer-to-peer model that dovetails nicely with prevailing trends toward social commerce, apparel resale, and an ongoing pivot toward the e-commerce channel. With $1.4 billion in 2020 gross merchandise volume, or GMV, we estimate that the firm captured just shy of 10% of the global resale market, as rolling lockdowns and tangled supply chains provided a meaningful impetus for channel trial during 2020 and 2021.

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Property

Regulatory advantaged Las Vegas Sands positioned to benefit from Asian demand recovery in 2022

Business Strategy and Outlook:

Although the pandemic and government regulation continue to materially affect near-term demand in Macao (68% of estimated 2024 EBITDA), Las Vegas Sands and the gaming enclave are still thought of as well positioned for long-term growth. Not only does Sands hold a dominant mass and nongaming position on the attractive Cotai Strip, but the company will reinvest proceeds from the planned $6.25 billion sale of its Vegas assets (scheduled to close in 2022) in its Asian assets, strengthening the brand locally. Meanwhile, Sands’ position in the profitable Singapore gaming market (32% of estimated 2024 EBITDA), where a duopoly remains in place through 2030, is buoyed by the company expanding its presence with the renovation of its existing towers in 2022-23 and development of a fourth tower scheduled to open in 2025, solidifying our view of the firm’s long-term growth.

Although the pandemic and government regulation present material potential demand headwinds, analysts continue to forecast annual mid-single-digit steady-state visitation growth in Macao during 2025-30, supported by China outbound travel that they expect average high-single-digit annual growth during that time. Also, upcoming developments are expected that add attractions and improve Macao’s accessibility, which will improve the destination’s brand, supporting our constructive long-term view on Macao.

Financial Strength:

Las Vegas Sands entered 2020 with the industry’s strongest balance sheet, as its 1.5 times net debt/adjusted EBITDA was well below the 4 times covenant level. But given the material impact from COVID-19 on 2020-22 gaming demand, the company has suspended its dividend and share repurchases. That said, Las Vegas Sands ended 2021 with $1.9 billion in cash and $4 billion available in credit. This liquidity provides the company enough liquidity to operate at near zero revenue into 2023, assuming a monthly cash burn of around $350 million. Its liquidity profile stands to be enhanced further with the planned sale of its Las Vegas assets for $6.25 billion in 2022.

The proceeds from the sale are expected to be reinvested in its existing Macao (if the government allows) and Singapore properties and used to pay down debt in the back half of our 10-year forecast. As a result, the company’s financial health remains solid.

Bulls Say:

  • Sands is well positioned to exploit growth opportunities in the attractive Asia casino market with a dominant position in Singapore (around mid-60s EBITDA share) and China (around mid-30s EBITDA share). 
  • The company has a narrow economic moat, thanks to its possession of one of only two licenses to operate casinos in Singapore and one of only six licenses to operate casinos in China. 
  • Sands’ continued investment in Macao and Singapore support its competitive position.

Company Profile:

Las Vegas Sands is the world’s largest operator of fully integrated resorts, featuring casino, hotel, entertainment, food and beverage, retail, and convention center operations. The company owns the Venetian Macao, Sands Macao, Londoner, Four Seasons Hotel Macao, and Parisian in Macao, the Marina Bay Sands resort in Singapore, and the Venetian and Palazzo Las Vegas in the U.S. (which it plans to sell to Apollo and VICI for $6.25 billion in 2022). Sands are expected to open a fourth tower in Singapore in 2025. After the sale of its Vegas assets, the company will generate all its EBITDA from Asia, with its casino operations generating the majority of sales.

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Dividend Stocks Philosophy Technical Picks

La Nina and Investment Markets Wipe Out Profits, but Suncorp Inches Closer to Management Targets

Business Strategy and Outlook

Suncorp is a well-capitalised financial services business with a dominant market position in the Australian and New Zealand general insurance industry and a regional banking franchise headquartered in Queensland. In addition to offering insurance under the parent name, key brands in Australia include AAMI, GIO, bingle, Apia, Shannons and Terri Scheer. In New Zealand key brands include Vero, AA Insurance and Asteron Life. Some brands are specific to certain states, but at a group level, the insurer carries concentrated weather and earthquake risk in Australia and New Zealand, and in particular Queensland which makes up around 25% of gross written premiums in Australia. 

The group’s exposure to the Queensland market, where large natural peril events have tended to be larger and more frequent, heightens the risks. Reinsurance protection mitigates risks to some extent, but can be expensive, particularly following large events. Suncorp’s regional banking franchise is more concentrated than the major banks, with home loans making up around 80% of the loan book and Queensland accounting for more than half of total lending. Suncorp Bank’s smaller operating presence, higher funding and operational costs, and relatively limited product offerings have all led to lower margins relative to the majors.

Financial Strength 

Suncorp Group is in good financial health. As at Dec. 31, 2021, Suncorp Insurance had a prescribed capital amount, or PCA, multiple of 1.71 times the regulatory minimum. Following the payment of the final dividend, a special dividend, and AUD 250 million buyback, at a group level that leaves Suncorp with AUD 492 million of capital in excess of its common equity Tier 1 target. This excess capital provides a buffer for unforeseen insurance and bad debt events. The common equity Tier 1 ratio for the insurance business was 1.28 times post the final dividend payment, within the target range of 1.08-1.28 times the PCA, and well above the regulatory minimum of 0.6 times. The bank’s common equity Tier 1 ratio as at Dec. 31, 2021 was 9.9%, above Suncorp’s 9% to 9.5% target range. Suncorp targets a dividend payout of 60-80% cash earnings (excluding special dividends).

Bulls Say’s

  • Suncorp owns a portfolio of well-known insurance brands and a regional bank that lacks switching or cost advantages. A focus on processes and systems, largely digitising customer interactions, should support underlying earnings growth. 
  • General insurance is inherently risky, with factors such as weather, natural disasters, and investment markets affecting earnings and capital adequacy. 
  • Brand recognition and confidence claims will be paid are helpful in acquiring and retaining customers, but customers are price sensitive.

Company Profile 

Suncorp is a Queensland-based financial services conglomerate offering retail and business banking, general insurance, superannuation, and investment products in Australia and New Zealand. It also operates a life insurance business in New Zealand. The core businesses include personal insurance, commercial insurance, Vero New Zealand, and Suncorp Bank. Suncorp and competitors IAG Insurance and QBE Insurance dominate the Australian and New Zealand insurance markets.

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Shares Technology Stocks

ResMed reported 2Q22 results reflecting strong revenue growth to US$894.9m, up +12%, or +13%

Investment Thesis

  • Global leader in a significantly under-penetrated sleep apnea market. 
  • High barriers to entry in establishing global distribution channels. 
  • Strong R&D program ensuring RMD remains ahead of competitors.
  • Momentum in new masks releases. 
  • Bolt-on acquisitions to supplement organic growth.
  • Leveraged to a falling Australian dollar. 

Key Risks 

  • Disruptive technology leading to better patient compliance.
  • Product recall leading to reputational damage.
  • Competitive threats leading to market share loss.
  • Disappointing growth (company and industry specific).
  • Adverse currency movements (AUD, EUR, USD).
  • RMD needs to grow to maintain its high PE trading multiple. Therefore, any impact on growth may put pressure on RMD’s valuation.

Key Highlights 2Q22 Results

  • Revenue increased 12% (13% in constant currency) to US$894.9m driven by higher demand for sleep and respiratory care devices and a major product recall by one of the Company’s largest competitors. Across geographies, revenue in the Americas climbed +14%, in Europe, Asia, and other markets it increased +12%, and RMD’s software-as-a-service business saw +8% revenue growth. By product segment, globally in constant currency terms device sales increased by 16%, while masks and other sales increased by 10%.  
  • Non-GAAP operating income of $267.7m, up +5%. This equated to US$1.47 per share, up 4%.
  • Net income was up +12% to US$201.8m. 
  • Gross margin declined 230 basis points to 57.6%.
  • Diluted earnings per share was up +11% to US$1.37.
  • The Board declared quarterly dividend of US42cps. 
  • RMD’s balance remains strong with cash balance of $194m, $680m in gross debt and $496m in net debt, whilst debt levels remain modest, and the Company retains ~$1.6bn for drawdown under its existing revolver facility.

Company Profile 

ResMed Inc (RMD) develops, manufactures, and markets medical equipment for the treatment of sleep disordered breathing. The company sells diagnostic and treatment devices in various countries through its subsidiaries and independent distributors. RMD reports two main segments – Americas and Rest of the World (RoW) – with US its largest market. The company is listed on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) via CDIs (10:1 ratio). 

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Technology Stocks

Coupa’s Opening Strategy in Business Spend Management Paying Off as it Plays the Long Game

Business Strategy and Outlook

Coupa Software is a cloud-based business spend management, or BMS, platform that allows firms to monitor, control, and analyze expenditures to lower costs and improve operational efficiency. Morningstar analyts believe Coupa has a long growth runway ahead as it continues to make strategic investments to expand its platform and spend management use-cases. In a go-to-market model that focuses on co-selling deals with system integrators, Coupa has been able to expand its market reach significantly. As back-office digital transformations are accelerating and Coupa remains the market-leading cloud BSM vendor, morningstrar analysts expect Coupa’s partners to increasingly advance Coupa’s adoption throughout businesses as they guide their clients through digital transformation initiatives. As Coupa has long focused on a broader source-to-pay strategy, offering solutions that far exceed the functionality of its original transactional core, the company has made a high level of investments to build out its platform into a more holistic spend management tool. As the firm introduces new modules,  Morningstar analysts believe Coupa will benefit from alignment with a larger number of spend use-cases, greater suite synergies, and more cross-selling opportunities. Further, analysts also  believe a growing community will reinforce Coupa’s AI-based community intelligence offering, providing higher value prescriptive insights to optimize spend decisions.

Coupa’s Opening Strategy in Business Spend Management Paying Off as it Plays the Long Game

Coupa Software is a cloud-based business spend management, or BSM, platform that allows companies to monitor, control, and analyze expenditures to lower costs and improve operational efficiency.  Coupa has built a broad-reaching self-reinforcing ecosystem of AI-informed spend management and Morningstar analysts believe the firm will benefits from a strong network effect and high switching costs. Morningstar anlaysts fair value estimate for Coupa is $152 per share, down from $232, as they model more muted long-term growth. As Coupa has long focused on a broader source-to-pay strategy, offering solutions that far exceed the functionality of its original transactional core, the company has made a high level of investments to build out its platform into a more holistic BSM tool. As the firm introduces new modules, Morningstar analysts believe Coupa will benefit from alignment with a larger number of spend use-cases, greater suite synergies, and more cross-selling opportunities. Further, Morningstar analyst also  believe a growing community will reinforce Coupa’s AI-based community intelligence offering, providing higher value prescriptive insights to optimize spend decisions.

Financial Strength

Coupa is in a decent financial position. As of January 2021, Coupa had $606.3 million in cash and marketable securities versus $1.5 billion in convertible debt.Coupa has yet to achieve GAAP profitability, as the company remains focused on reinvesting excess returns back into the company, both on an organic and inorganic basis, to build out the platform and enhance future growth prospects. Coupa does not pay a dividend, nor repurchase stock, and for a young company pioneering a novel offspring under the ERP umbrella,  it can be considered as  appropriate that the company focuses capital allocation on reinvestments for growth. Even so, the firm has historically demonstrated strong cash flows, with free cash flow margins averaging 13% over the last three fiscal years. While cash flows were pressured in fiscal 2021 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, Morningstar analysts expect healthy free cash flows in later years. Coupa reached non-GAAP profitability in 2019, posting both a positive non-GAAP operating margin and positive non-GAAP earnings from then on. The company has averaged a non-GAAP operating margin of 9.1% since 2019, and as the company scales, we expect non-GAAP operating margins to reach into the low-30% range at the end of our 10-year forecast period. These positive results should translate to profitability on a GAAP basis in the future as well.

Bulls Say 

  • Coupa has strong user retention metrics, with gross retention above 95% and net dollar retention north of 110%. 
  • As Coupa expands its platform both organically and inorganically, we expect increasing suite synergies to accelerate cross-selling activity, further entrenching customers within Coupa and creating greater monetization opportunities. 
  • Continual annual subscription price point increases reflect the stickiness of Coupa’s modules and suggest significant competitive differentiation in winning new deals over less expensive alternatives.

About the Company

Coupa Software is a cloud-based provider of business spend management, or BSM, solutions. Coupa’s BSM platform provides visibility into all spend, allowing companies to gain control over their spending, optimize their supplier network and supply chains, and manage liquidity. The platform’s transactional core consists of procurement, invoicing, expense management, and payment solutions, while supporting modules ranging from strategic sourcing solutions to supply chain design and planning solutions round out the comprehensive spend management ecosystem.

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Property

Shopping Centres Australasia Property Group delivered strong first half results; FVE Increased to A$2.55

Business Strategy and Outlook

Shopping Centres Australasia Property Group (SCA) owns and manages a portfolio of about 85 smaller shopping centres in Australia. Gross rental income is about evenly sourced from anchor tenants such as supermarkets, and smaller specialty tenants. SCA actively manages its portfolio, remixing specialty tenants, undertaking developments, and acquisitions and divestments. From its 2012 listing through to June 2020 SCA acquired more than 50 neighbourhood and subregional assets, and divested more than 30 freestanding and neighbourhood assets. 

Morningstar analysts expect SCA to persevere with its strategy of active management, and to remain focused on neighbourhood locations. Even the larger assets in its portfolio are at the smaller end of the “subregional” category, with less floor space dedicated to department stores than other sub regional assets. Morningstar analysts don’t rule out SCA acquiring larger assets, but analysts see that as likely only if market dislocation creates irresistible acquisition opportunities. The neighbourhood property space is so fragmented Morningstar analysts think acquisitions in that segment are more likely. 

What Lockdown? Strong December Half From Shopping Centres Australasia; FVE Up 9%

Shopping Centres Australasia, or SCA, delivered a strong first-half result, and Morningstar analysts increased its fair value estimate by 9% to AUD 2.55 per unit. The main driver of increased valuation is the remarkable defensiveness of SCA’s convenience assets, proven by their performance through lockdowns. Morningstar analysts think SCA can, and will, run higher gearing toward the midpoint of its target range of 30%-40% net debt/assets, holding more assets in its portfolio and thereby generating a higher earnings yield over time.

Financial Strength 

SCA is in solid financial health after about AUD 280 million of equity was raised in April 2020, bolstering the balance sheet. Gearing reduced from 34% as at December 2019 to 26% in June 2020 (as measured by look-through gearing, which is net debt/assets, including debt obligations in underlying vehicles such as SCA’s funds). As recovery ensued, gearing rose to 32.5% as at December 2001.Other things being equal, SCA’s assets could more roughly halve in value before it would breach the 50% gearing limit specified in its banking covenants. SCA’s interest cover ratio was 6.0 times at December 2021, triple the covenant limit of 2 times. We expect gearing to rise gradually due to acquisitions, to roughly the midpoint of SCA’s target gearing range of 30%-40%.

Bulls Say

  • About half of income comes from supermarkets with long leases that have remained open even during COVID-19 lockdowns, suggesting that SCA’s income is resilient. 
  • Despite interest rate rises on the horizon, discount rates are unlikely to rise as high as historical levels on property assets that can consistently generate income. 
  • Good anchor tenants generate foot traffic, and SCA charges rent well below levels in high-end discretionary focused shopping malls, suggesting that SCA is less vulnerable to e-commerce.

Company Profile

Shopping Centres Australasia Property Group owns a portfolio of smaller shopping centres. About half of rental income comes from anchor tenants, typically Woolworths or Coles businesses, or in some cases discount department stores. Despite its Australasian name, the assets are mostly in regional or suburban areas of Australia, and the group divested its New Zealand assets in 2016. The portfolio assets are neighbourhood (about 75% by value) and subregional (25%) shopping centres

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Dividend Stocks

SkyCity is priced attractively for patient investors

Business Strategy and Outlook:

COVID-19 continues to weigh heavily on the firm’s near-term outlook. The Auckland casino–SkyCity’s core property–waded through over 100 days in lockdown during the period, heavily affecting visitor numbers at the group’s venues in the first half of fiscal 2022. Additionally, visitor numbers to the group’s second-biggest venue in Adelaide were subdued as capacity restrictions and domestic border closures in South Australia persistent for most of the first half of fiscal 2022. These are viewed as short-term issues, and it is expected SkyCity to bounce back when restrictions ease. SkyCity’s long-dated and exclusive licences in Auckland and Adelaide create a regulatory barrier to entry, underpinning the firm’s narrow economic moat, and position the business well to participate in the recovery as restrictions ease.

The Adelaide casino has remained open, albeit with restrictions for much of the first half of fiscal 2022. Renovations are complete and the group is poised to receive extra income from additional parking spots once city visitors return at greater levels. For now, the parking spots are being given away for a song, subject to visiting the casino facilities. New Zealand moved to a traffic-light COVID-19 protection framework in December 2021. This will reduce lockdowns and restrictions as the country allows more freedom for those who are vaccinated. Under red, the most extreme level of the traffic light system, hospitality venues may remain open with restrictions. While preferable to a full closure, we think it will still dampen revenue as many visitors choose to stay home out of an abundance of caution.

Financial Strength:

With a balance sheet well-positioned to weather the storm, analysts think current depressed prices present an opportunity for patient investors to gain exposure to a high-quality gaming business at a discount. However, the path to full capacity is likely to be gradual and material short-term catalysts are lacking. The analysts expect the recovery of SkyCity’s EBITDA to its prepandemic levels to take until fiscal 2023. In the second half of fiscal 2022, it is expected that the combined benefit of additional parking bays and the casino renovation to raise Adelaide’s EBITDA margins to 20% from 16%, in line with guidance. Visitors to the city of Adelaide have been subdued, at around 50% of prepandemic levels in the year to August 2021. 

Company Profile:

SkyCity Entertainment operates a number of casino-hotel complexes across Australia and New Zealand. The flagship property is SkyCity Auckland, the holder and operator of an exclusive casino licence (expiring in 2048) in New Zealand’s most populous city. The company also owns smaller casinos in Hamilton and Queenstown. In Australia, the company operates SkyCity Adelaide (exclusive licence expiring in 2035).

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

Categories
Global stocks Shares

Paylocity Wins Amid the War for Talent and a Bounce-Back in Labor Markets

Business Strategy and Outlook:

Paylocity delivered strong second-quarter fiscal 2022 results underpinned by a continued normalization of employment levels and growing demand for solutions to attract, manage, and retain employees amid fierce competition for labor and dispersed workforces. Amid tight labor markets and an intensifying war for talent, businesses are seeking solutions to attract and retain employees, which is creating industry tailwinds for all payroll and human capital management (HCM) players. Additionally, a sustained shift to dispersed workforces in a post-COVID-19 world is driving demand for HCM software that helps employers connect and manage remote employees or employees across multiple jurisdictions. Paylocity is expected to have capitalized on these tailwinds over the quarter through the appeal of the platform’s unique complimentary collaboration features such as social collaboration platform Community, and video and survey functionality. As with payroll and HCM peers, it is expected to uptake of these features aimed at driving higher employee engagement will entrench the software further into the client’s business and strengthen the customer switching.

Paylocity’s target market has naturally skewed upmarket in recent years as the platform and its embedded modules have evolved. Recent acquisitions including software integration tool Cloudsnap in January 2022 and global payroll provider Blue Marble in September 2021 position Paylocity well to cater for the needs of larger clients. To reflect this shift, the company has formally raised the upper limit of its target client to 5,000 employees, from 1,000 employees previously. At this stage, analysts maintain our longterm forecasts and take the announcement as a formalization of the current client mix, instead of a strategic shift upmarket.

Financial Strength:

The revenue growth estimated at a compound annual growth rate of 23% over the five years to fiscal 2026, driven by mid-single-digit industry growth, market share gains, and mid-single-digit revenue per client growth on greater uptake and monetization of modules. Over the same period, operating margins are expected to increase to about 20% from 9% in a COVID-19-affected fiscal 2021. This uplift is anticipated to be driven by operating leverage from increased scale, greater uptake of high margin modules, higher interest on client funds, and operating efficiencies from increased digital sales and service. Paylocity’s revenue increased an impressive 34% on the prior year. Following strong sales activity during the quarter and robust client retention, analysts have marginally lifted their full-year revenue and adjusted EBITDA forecasts 1% and 4%, respectively, to align with updated near-term guidance. EPS is expected to increase 14% to $1.48 in fiscal 2022, before growing at a CAGR of 32% to fiscal 2031 as Paylocity continues to grow scale and achieves operating leverage. 

Company Profile:

Paylocity is a provider of payroll and human capital management, or HCM, solutions servicing small- to mid-size clients in the United States. The company was founded in 1997 and targets businesses with 10 to 5,000 employees and services about 28,750 clients as of fiscal 2021. Alongside core payroll services, Paylocity offers HCM solutions such as time and attendance and recruiting software, as well workplace collaboration and communication tools.

(Source: Morningstar)

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