Tuesday 11 November 2014

Kim Heng Offshore & Marine

OCBC on 7 Nov 2014

Kim Heng Offshore & Marine reported a 23% YoY fall in revenue to S$13.8m and a 62% fall in net profit to S$1.2m in 3Q14, such that results were below our expectations. It was expected that 2H14 would be a stronger period due to delays in arrivals of drilling rigs and offshore support vessels from customers in 2Q14, but given the industry slowdown, work flow was not as forthcoming. Currently, the group has an order book of about S$80m vs. S$86m in Jul 2014, but with the recent de-rating of the broader sector, we lower our P/E from 10.5 to 10x, and also cut our FY14F and FY15F earnings estimates by 33% and 23% respectively with the weaker-than-expected results and a slowdown in industry activities. This lowers our fair value estimate to S$0.23. But given the upside potential of more than 20%, we maintain our BUY rating on the stock. Meanwhile, management is still keen to reward shareholders with a final dividend for the year.

3Q14 continues to be slow
Kim Heng Offshore & Marine reported a 23% YoY fall in revenue to S$13.8m and a 62% fall in net profit to S$1.2m in 3Q14, such that 9M14 net profit accounted for only 37% and 36% of ours and the street’s full year estimate. It was expected that 2H14 would be a stronger period due to delays in arrivals of drilling rigs and offshore support vessels from customers in 2Q14, but given the industry slowdown, work flow was not as forthcoming as expected earlier. In particular, there were seven rigs that did not arrive on time in 3Q14 for work, though four of them are currently in Kim Heng’s yard (~S$10-15m in revenue). Two jobs from Korea (~S$10m in revenue) also did not come as expected. 

More rigs may be warm-stacked in the coming quarters
Currently, there are about 20 idle rigs in or nearby Singapore, and about 15 in Labuan. Out of the 20 warm-stacked rigs, Kim Heng is currently servicing most of them, and we estimate gross margins of about 30-35% for such jobs. Looking ahead, management believes that more rigs may be coming to Singapore to be warm or cold stacked, presenting more business opportunities. Meanwhile the group is also exploring the possibility of buying old rigs, refurbishing them and selling for a profit. According to management, the group has had experience undertaking such jobs a few years ago.

De-rating of broader sector, but still keen to reward shareholders
Currently, the group has an order book of about S$80m vs. S$86m in Jul 2014, but with the recent de-rating of the broader sector, we lower our P/E from 10.5 to 10x for Kim Heng, and also cut our FY14F and FY15F earnings estimates by 33% and 23% respectively with the weaker-than-expected results and a slowdown in industry activities. Based on 10x FY15F earnings, this lowers our fair value estimate to S$0.23. But given the upside potential of more than 20%, we maintain our BUY rating on the stock. Meanwhile, management is still keen to reward shareholders with a final dividend for the year.

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