Thursday, March 06, 2008
Results Brief: OOIL (316)
1st, it was quite remarkable that the rising oil price did not seem to bother the operation too much. OOIL still managed to grow its profit by 29% (recurring and excluding property revaluation) last year. Gross profit was down a bit but operating margin stayed at around 9%, indicating high efficiency.
In fact, last year's profit of $4.3b was not far off from the all-time-high of $4.9b (excluding port operation) achieved in 2004. To say OOIL is well managed is an understatement.
But the negative surprise was the lack of a special dividend, which surely has upset the market including myself. So far only about half of the $17.3b proceed from selling the North America ports has been paid out, and management continues to be mute about the use of fund. I recall UBS was once hired to advise on this matter but if there was any result, it wasn't made known to the shareholders. The cashflow breakdown also confirmed my earlier belief that the shipping business can be self-financed, i.e. cashflow coming in was sufficient for capital expansion. So there's really no need to keep a large pile of cash at the head office.
Another omission was the lack of the outlook section in the results announcement. Maybe the outlook is really cloudy that the management don't want to commit to any view, or they want us to know as little as possible.
China property business had some progress but contribution won't come until 2010. NAV was $5b. Applying a 2x p/b to it and adding the valuation of Wall Street Plaza, the property business should be worth $11.5b. However, the market doesn't seem to attribute much value to OOIL's property business.
Idle cash is at least $8.5b, from disposal proceed alone, and could be as much as double.
For the fleet, I'd stick to my estimate of $24b, i.e. $3b x 8 times p/e.
The combined valuation would suggest an upside of at least 50% from today's price.
DISCLOSURE: I hold 316 at time of writing.
i'm sure the outlook this year won't be as bright and there'll be a decline in profit, so in my valuation i've already used a lower averaged-out earning as a base. given OOIL's past record in weathering bad times and its cash reserve, i figure i probably won't lose my shirt even if i'm proven very wrong down the road. so it's a bet worth taking.
Right now we are in the strongest storm (global recession) and I'm quite confident Mr. Tung can carry us
through the low tie. He's trying to land in Bejing and Shanghai,just like
What Swire Pacific(Taikoo) did some 20 years ago. Go Mr. Tung!
soros hing, i think you referred to ex-chief executive mr. tung but he's not the one running OOIL, becoz if he was then i would've given 2nd or 3rd thought before buying it.
stephen hing, the p/e of 1.x has included an exceptional gain from the disposal of ports last year. but still OOIL valuation is cheap as you said.
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