Despite the positive 18% y-o-y growth in the number of passengers handled by MAHB, the recent 1QFY14 earnings results turned out to be another disappointment. Attention is now focused on what is seen as the wild card for the sector, MAS, for which we see bankruptcy as highly unlikely. The outlook remains challenging but yields have bottomed. NEUTRAL stance stays, with AirAsia as our Top Pick.
Round-up 1QFY14 Results
Another disappointing quarter. Despite the positive growth of 18% y-o-y in total number of passengers handled by Malaysia Airports, the recent 1QFY14 earnings results again disappointed, with two carriers, AirAsia (AIRA MK; BUY, FV: MYR2.78) and MAS (MAS MK, NEUTRAL, FV: MYR0.19), reporting numbers that were below our and consensus estimates. The remaining two – AirAsia X (AAX MK; NEUTRAL, MYR0.70) and Malaysia Airports (MAHB MK; BUY, MYR9.80) – reported numbers that were within our estimates. The overall sector losses - which were weighed down heavily by MAS’ larger-than-expected losses – were greater by 85% q-o-q at MYR296m, vs the core net profit of MYR96.8m achieved in 1QFY13.
This was despite the positive growth seen at carriers’ toplines. The disappointing results were attributed to the decline in passenger yields, as measured by ticket sales revenue per passenger collected for every kilometer, and also unit costs, which were also still inching higher.
Changes to forecasts. For the four companies under our coverage, we trim ourFY14 earnings forecasts for AirAsia by 53% while raising MAS’ estimated losses by 23%. Our earnings estimates for AirAsia X and Malaysia Airports are unchanged.
Passenger yields still under pressure, but show signs of bottoming. Yields remained under pressure during the quarter, down 10%/12%/23% y-o-y for MAS/AirAsia/ AirAsia X respectively. When comparing y-o-y, note that the drop in yields was also partly distorted by the higher base in 1QFY13, as Malindo – the newcomer in the Malaysian aviation space – had yet to commence operations. Malindo only started operations at end-March 2013.
While sector yields were lower y-o-y and seasonally q-o-q, we are seeing signs of yields bottoming. Not only is this evident in Malaysia but also regionally. However, we cannot solely attribute this to higher demand, noting that there has been a recent scale back in frequencies as some carriers undertook route rationalization to optimize aircraft deployment on higher yielding routes. Furthermore, we think MAS has come to its senses by raising its air fares, notably on the mid to long haul route, and realigning its airfares to those of full service offerings. Nonetheless, stiff competition remains prevalent on its domestic operation and to some degree, routes within Asean, as MAS is still pricing its airfares close to – and sometimes lower than –prices offered by AirAsia. Over the past few quarters since last year, MAS’ yields have declined sharply as a result of its aggressive promotion pricing, which sparked off a price war against the low cost carriers.
We have witnessed a q-o-q uptick of 1.4% q-o-q on AirAsia’s yields so far despite it being a seasonally weaker quarter. While we are more confident that AirAsia may potentially see a faster pick-up in yield recovery this year, we do not foresee the same happening for MAS. For a full-service carrier, airfares in this segment can be rather sticky in nature. Moreover, MAS is facing a tough challenge in ramping up its yields now that its competing low-cost carriers are operating out of KLIA2, which offers significantly more convenience and comfort for budget travelers. As such, MAS’ premium passengers may be tempted to fly on AirAsia, given the latter’s cheaper airfares.
Deferring aircraft deliveries. Among the three carriers in Malaysia, only AirAsia will be deferring the delivery of aircraft. The low cost carrier will see a net addition to its Malaysian fleet of only four aircraft, which is estimated to see FY14 capacity growing by 9% y-o-y. AirAsia is opting for the brand new A320 NEO aircraft (due to be launched only by 2016), which are more fuel efficient. As such, it will be deferring some of its existing 320 CEOs so that it can switch to the A320 NEOs once the model comes into production in 2016. The number of aircraft deferred totals 29 for the period 2015-2018.
Outlook ahead
The wildcard - will MAS collapse? We think that a bankruptcy is unlikely for MAS as Khazanah has publicly said that it will look into restructuring the carrier, as going through one would be a painful process across all stakeholders. We believe the best case for MAS is to maintain its listed status and undergo a restructuring exercise to boost yields and improve productivity, while trimming its sizeable workforce. Our ideal assessment is a combination of downsizing of MAS’ workforce and cutting capacity. We estimate that by downsizing its workforce by 19% and reducing capacity by 10%, the carrier may be able to trim its losses to MYR349m (from MYR767m) in FY15F.For more detail on MAS, please read our report issued last week by clicking here. MAS unlikely to make significant capacity cuts. Since 2010, MAS has trimmed its network by 27% by cutting its loss-making routes. Hence, any form of capacity cuts going forward may be in relation to frequencies, ie by allocating more capacity on higher-yielding routes where competition is less prevalent. Note that MAS has made great strides in boosting aircraft utilisation – the average utilisation rate of its widebody fleet as increased to 14 from 13 hours, while that for its narrow-body fleet improved to 11 hours from nine. We don’t see MAS cutting its capacity on a big scale, as this would require a significant downsizing of its workforce to optimize productivity levels. One likely option for the carrier in the near term is by deferring its aircraft deliveries, especially during current times when cash is really tight for the carrier.
May be positive for MAS’ competitors… Any capacity cut will be potentially positive for competitors as this will boost yields as more capacity is pulled out from the sector. However, we think a 10% capacity reduction would not be beneficial in a big way to its competitors, as the benefit to MAS outweighs it, noting the reduced losses from its loss-making and low-yielding routes.
… but not for MAHB. A reduction in capacity will not augur well for MAHB as this essentially means lower number of passengers handled at the KLIA main terminal,where airport tax is much higher compared to KLIA2. Although this could see competitors seeing a spillover of passengers, the risk for MAHB is the lower airport tax collected from spillover passengerss who may likely be departing out of KLIA2instead. KLIA2 is where most of MAS’ competitors are operating from. While this would not hurt our traffic projections for MAHB, the risk is in the lower average airport tax collected, of which a 10% shift in MAS passengers to KLIA2 from KLIA could dilute the blended airport tax collected by 3% from our FY15 estimated blended airport tax collected per passenger of MYR23. This would represent a drop in its total FY15f revenue (-1%, or MYR29.6m), and for net profit (down by 7.6%). This is a very small amount and should not be a cause for a major concern, provided there is not a significant capacity cut for MAS. In the near term, ascertaining the operational costs of KLIA2 remains a major concern for investors of MAHB, as operating it may dent its profitability, given its larger infrastructure.
2014 will still be a challenging year; Maintain NEUTRAL. 2014 will still be a challenging year for the aviation sector, with concerns centered on whether a yield recovery can be seen with the restructuring of MAS as a wild card to the overall sector outlook. We remain NEUTRAL on the sector, with AirAsia as our top pick, with our FV of MYR2.78 and target FY15 P/E of 12x unchanged. We also have a BUY on Malaysia Airports but advise only to accumulate aggressively on share price weakness, due to concerns over KLIA2’s operational costs that are making investors nervous. At the current price, AirAsia offers an attractive FY15 dividend yield of 4.8% at an attractive valuation of only 10.3x FY15 P/E vs its Asian low cost carrier peers’ FY15 P/E of 13.2x. We also like the carrier’s cost discipline, where its Malaysia operations remains strong despite the challenging times. However, we caution that its India operations could set back its earnings, and for this we have factored in losses of MYR60m/MYR80m/MYR30m for FY14/FY15/FY16 respectively, given the challenging landscape there.
Source: RHB
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arque
Post removed.Why?
2014-06-16 11:03