Continue reading this on our app for a better experience

Open in App
Floating Button
Home Capital Broker's Calls

OCBC downgrades Hutchison Port Holdings Trust to 'sell' after HK$12.3 bil impairment blow

Michelle Zhu
Michelle Zhu • 2 min read
OCBC downgrades Hutchison Port Holdings Trust to 'sell' after HK$12.3 bil impairment blow
SINGAPORE (Feb 13): OCBC Investment Research is downgrading its call on Hutchison Port Holdings Trust (HPHT) to “sell” from “hold” while lowering its fair value to 22 US cents as at the close of Feb 12.
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

SINGAPORE (Feb 13): OCBC Investment Research is downgrading its call on Hutchison Port Holdings Trust (HPHT) to “sell” from “hold” while lowering its fair value to 22 US cents as at the close of Feb 12.

The move comes on the back of a large goodwill write-down as reflected in HPHT’s latest set of 2H18 results; its manager’s low DPU guidance of 11-17 HK cents for FY19; as well as “diminishing prospects” of an early termination of a voluntary debt program, in the research house’s view.

In a Wednesday report, analyst Deborah Ong notes that while HPHT has been trading at a historical P/B value of 0.66 times based on its 12 Feb closing price of 26 US cents, she no longer finds its unit levels attractive considering ongoing uncertainties on the macro level.

“The non-cash impairment of HK$12.3 billion (which includes a HK$11.4 billion goodwill impairment) was a large disappointment… In terms of the potential for future write-downs in goodwill, we believe the latest set of long-term volume growth assumptions used for Yantian of 1-3% are realistic for now,” comments Ong on the trust’s latest set of earnings.

“There is no more goodwill relating to Kwai Tsing… In other updates, we note that the Competition Commission has opened an investigation into the Seaport Joint Operating Alliance in Kwai Tsing. While we do expect cost savings from the cooperation, we await further updates on this issue,” she adds.

Further, the analyst does not approve of the manager’s commitment to continuing three more years of voluntary debt repayment, despite an expected Fed pause this year.

“Given that the program was artificially depressing distributions to unitholders (by ~11.5 HK cents a year), we were disappointed by management’s response,” says Ong.

Units in HPHT last traded 3.85% lower at 25 US cents to imply a 6.15% FY19F distribution yield before the midday break.

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2024 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.