The balance sheet looks bad. Everyone still hesitating to enter due to this issue. Hope you can enlighten us how the management can solve this issue. Thanks.
That depend lah ... Counter with good Growth Prospect U buy and hold can earn good annual ang pow LayHong with it strengthening for a premium league Will earn you a Growth machine lo.
It's not as bad as you think to raise fund via rights issue. Another poultry player, Malayan Flour also proposed rights issue of rculs and the share price has plunged 10%. Not too bad.
We all are panic to see Sapura Energy plunged recently due to rights issue. Its rights issue not 1:4 or 1:5 but as high as 5:3, so nobody wants to subscribe.
The concept is simple - Lay Hong has 3 main segments: Eggs (24% revenue), Processed food (50% revenue), and Others (26% revenue). The "Others" segment generally contributes minimally to earnings, while processed food has stable margins from their pricing power. Therefore, the main swing factors are only "Egg" segment profits and feed cost movements.
Using the above information plus egg & feed price trends, I observe q-o-q fluctuations and estimate what were their impact to earnings after considering capacity expansions as well. There's a lot of calculation.
But after stripping out the volatile portion, the remaining "stable" portion is always roughly RM7-8 million per quarter.
I admit it might not be 100% accurate, in fact it might be far from actual contribution. So it's still an estimation. But the idea makes sense: There are only 2 segments contributing to profit. The segment with higher margins should contribute more to bottomline.
Thanks for asking. I wasn't sure I should include this explanation in the article because it might become too long-winded.
To me, the insight analysis over the 3 articles from Chicken King made reasonable sense.
I have been monitoring Lay Hong for quite sometimes, even way back before QL gave up on their pursuit in taking over Lay Hong. But the valuation in terms of share price had stopped me from making any move.
Until late when I saw the rapid decrease in share price over just a month plus time, I asked myself, how can such a good company with such strong branded products suffered such huge drop in share price?
It seemed like a perfect storm, all bad news came at the same & short time. Anyway, perfect storm good for those not in yet.
Then I decided to go in with 2 questions: What is upside potential? What is downside risk?
Bearing any external factors, the answers were: Upside = huge Downside = limited
I started to buy at 60 cents all the way to 53 cents.
Since Chicken King has written the business & possible potential growth, I will share my findings on the financial cash flows & needs with hope to help ease on certain guesses about the company may go for right issues.
LayHong has good potential but I think one must ready to hold till next year 2019 to see its fruits. The new JV food processing plant will commence in Sept 2018 and it will take some times to setup and fine tune the machinery and processes. I suppose it will take months before the production can run smoothly and production output can contribute significantly to earnings.
Thank you for your comment, r18, wish you doing good.
r18 aiyo, moneySIFU, I really admire of you. Which kind of person dare to buy in while others still in panic selling mode. Only the person who has far-sightedness and full of confidence can do this impossible job. Kudos! Kudos! 04/09/2018 18:29
The original question simply requires you to post up spreadsheet + chart of the 'egg prices and feed costs, considering capacity expansions as well' and exchange rates - saying 'there's a lot of calculation' wont quite do
After all, youve written four long posts, and the main selling proposition for LH is their NH/frozen food segment (which can be seen as a consumer-play)
UOBKH research report has no such information. Tracking only publicly available information (qtrly and AR), I dont see how you could 'backward calculate' the 7-8mil per quarter profit contributions (and I assume you mean PBT)
Chicken King It is actually based on a few assumptions and from whatever information on segmental margins I could dig up from analyst reports.
The concept is simple - Lay Hong has 3 main segments: Eggs (24% revenue), Processed food (50% revenue), and Others (26% revenue). The "Others" segment generally contributes minimally to earnings, while processed food has stable margins from their pricing power. Therefore, the main swing factors are only "Egg" segment profits and feed cost movements.
Using the above information plus egg & feed price trends, I observe q-o-q fluctuations and estimate what were their impact to earnings after considering capacity expansions as well. There's a lot of calculation.
But after stripping out the volatile portion, the remaining "stable" portion is always roughly RM7-8 million per quarter.
I admit it might not be 100% accurate, in fact it might be far from actual contribution. So it's still an estimation. But the idea makes sense: There are only 2 segments contributing to profit. The segment with higher margins should contribute more to bottomline.
Thanks for asking. I wasn't sure I should include this explanation in the article because it might become too long-winded.
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Posted by Jon Choivo > 2018-09-02 19:05 | Report Abuse
This was pretty decent.