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Kimly is a prime heartlands gem: CGS-CIMB

Samantha Chiew
Samantha Chiew • 3 min read
Kimly is a prime heartlands gem: CGS-CIMB
With Koufu out of the way, Kimly's primed to be a gem.
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As food court operator Koufu on Dec 29, 2021, announced that it intends to delist and privatise, coffeeshop operator Kimly is set to be the prime heartlands F&B gem.

To recap, Koufu received from Dominus Capital (a holding company wholly owned by the group’s founders) an all cash 77 cent per share offer to take the company private. The offer price is a 15.8% premium to its last traded price.

Reasons for the offer were: Koufu does not need funding from equity capital markets; low trading liquidity of Koufu shares; for greater management flexibility in both strategy and operations; and removal of compliance costs associated with maintaining a listing status.

Lead analyst Kenneth Tan says, “We think the privatisation is highly likely to go through. The offer price is attractive, in our view, as it is close to Koufu’s all-time high share price since the company got publicly listed in 2018.”

The offer price implies valuation of about 16 times FY2022 price-to-earnings (P/E), comparable to the research house’s target P/E multiple of 17 times. Free float is also low, while Koufu’s founders already have deemed interest of 77.41% (via Jun Yuan Holdings) and only require an additional 12.59% (90% stake) to compulsorily buy out Koufu’s remaining shares from dissenting shareholders.

Should this privatisation go through, Koufu will be the third F&B company to be delisted from the SGX since 2020, following the footsteps of Neo Group and Breadtalk.

See also: RHB still upbeat on ST Engineering but trims target price by 2.3%

With Koufu out of the way, Tan sees this as a positive for Kimly. Kimly is currently trading at an undemanding valuation of about 13 times 2022 PE (-1 SD from five-year historical mean), a notable discount to Koufu’s privatisation valuation of 16 times PE.

Tan has reiterated his “buy” call on Kimly with a target price of 56 cents, while keeping the stock as his top sector pick, in view of the group’s favourable growth prospects.

Meanwhile, Kimly continues to benefit from structural trends of hybrid work arrangements becoming increasingly prevalent (which supports footfall at heartland outlets) and growing demand for online food delivery.

See also: UOBKH calls Centurion Corp a stock for ‘growth-minded investors’

“We also expect sequential earnings recovery in 1HFY2022 as footfall recovers upon the easing of dine-in measures locally since November 2021 (currently at five-pax cap). Kimly is also backed by net cash of $71 million as at end FY2021 (14% of current market cap), which we think should contribute to continued outlet expansion of about three outlets per year, and sustainable dividend yield of 4%,” adds Tan.

As at 3.55pm, shares in Kimly are trading at 41 cents or 3.4 times FY2022 book with a dividend yield of 4.4%.

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