The FIFA World Cup 2014 may give a boost to Malaysia’s adex and media counters (notably in the TV space), as it has in the past. Our 2014 overall adex growth estimate of 8% is conservative (vs 15.6% during World Cup 2010), owing to tighter adex spending by advertisers. MPR is still our Top Pick, while Astro is now a NEUTRAL – which leads us to downgrade the sector to NEUTRAL from Overweight.
Malaysia’s Media Sector – Strategy 2014
World Cup heralds adex growth. The FIFA 2014 World Cup is scheduled to be held in Brazil on 12 June-13 July 2014. Historical data shows that gross adex usually goes up during the year the FIFA World Cup Year is held due to the large fan, which gives rise to opportunities for advertisers to mount more marketing campaigns, especially on TV. Based on data we gathered, gross adex (ex-Pay TV) rose 15.6% y-o-y during the World Cup 2010, with free to air (FTA) TV adex growing at the fastest - at 18.2% y-o-y - followed by newspapers’ 14.1% y-o-y. (Note that adex from point of sales surged 44.8% y-o-y, mainly due to a very low base).
Expecting 8% y-o-y growth. We expect overall gross adex to rise by 8% in 2014, which is 1.48x of our projected 2014 GDP growth of 5.4%. This is conservative compared to the 2010 (the previous World Cup year), which saw adex growing by 15.6%, or 2.2x of the GDP growth of 7.2%. The slower growth is attributed to: i)household spending cuts in view of the gradual removal of subsidies, ii) tighter advertising spending, and iii) the shifting trend towards the online advertising given the rise of the social media platform. However, since the election year - which contributed to uncertainties in planning advertising campaigns last year – is over, this will be positive for businesses to plan and budget their advertising campaigns more efficiently.
TV to see the strongest growth in 2014. Adex for the TV segment – for which we expect to see the strongest growth – will increase by 8.9% in 2014, mostly driven by heightened advertising during the World Cup, new TV channels (notably in high definition) and new TV programmes. This bodes well for MPR and ASTRO, for which we expect EBITDA to go up 12% and 7% this year on the back of a revenue growth of 7.6% and 9.2% respectively.
Boost to TV players’ earnings. The 2014 World Cup is expected to give a boost to this year’s adex, which will bode well for the media sector’s revenue and earnings growth, especially the TV segment. An indicator of this is the revenue growth chalked up by Media Prima (MPR MK, BUY, FV: MYR3.60)’s TV segment of 34% and 19% respectively in 2006 and 2010, which translated into PBT growth of 64% and 118% over the same period. Astro (ASTRO MK, NEUTRAL, FV: MYR3.36)’s revenue and PBT growth also grew, rising 17% and 27% respectively in 2006.
Newsprint cost should be flattish. We expect the newsprint prices to be flattish, at USD595-605 per tonne in 2014 (vs USD600-610 per tonne last year), as global demand for newsprint has waned due to the shift to online media. Media players with exposure to print such as MPR and Media Chinese International (MCIL MK, NEUTRAL, FV: MYR1.06) will see their margins expand, as a result.
MPR is our Top Pick. We see Media Prima – being the country’s only integrated media player - as the major beneficiary of higher adex growth in 2014, driven by the World Cup, as TV is biggest profit contributor given its high margin, which happens to also be higher than Astro’s due to its cheaper content cost. We also see its revenue from digital media and content production growing. This, coupled with flattish newsprint cost, offers scope for overall margins to improve. On the back of a revenue growth forecast of 9%, we expect MPR to post double-digit earnings growth of 16% from wider margins as well as narrower losses from its content creation division.
MPR offers >5% dividend yield. MPR is generous in paying decent dividends to its shareholders. In FY12, it has paid off its accumulated losses and began reporting positive retained earnings, which may have put it in a more comfortable position to pay higher dividends to investors (capped at 75%). As MPR’s management is reviewing its dividend payout policy, there is a possibility of higher dividends moving forward. MPR is a quality stock to own for its decent dividend yield of 5.4-6.2% and earnings growth potential. We maintain a BUY on MPR, with our FV unchanged at MYR3.60 based on 15x FY14F P/E, based on +1 SD from the mean of its historical trading band.
ASTRO is a longer-term investment. We continue to believe that ASTRO is a longer-term investment, since it is currently reinvesting heavily in order to remain as the Pay TV market leader. Over the years, it has successfully maintained its position as the largest Pay TV operator through its strategy of providing quality content and a superior viewing experience for subscribers. These were accomplished through investments that required heavy capex. We believe this will elevate its average revenue per user (ARPU) and help maintain its market leadership - which consequently will translate to improved profitability. Our DCF-based FV for ASTRO isat MYR3.36, based on a WACC of 8.45%, and terminal growth rate of 1.5%. With less than a 10% upside, we downgrade Astro from Buy to NEUTRAL.
MCIL still lacks strong growth catalysts. MCIL has the single largest exposure to print media. The medium is now facing challenges from e-substitution and advertisers switching to the FTA, which commands a larger audience base. Although Chinese newspapers are among the best performers in attracting gross adex compared to other languages, the trend may not sustain for long - since digital papers would become more common as more sophisticated technology and better internet infrastructure is developed. The accessibility to information online has also changed the landscape of the newsprint segment. Additionally, MCIL’s overseas businesses in North America and Hong Kong are facing an earnings decline due to competition in the region, where online penetration for advertisements is much higher. As such, MCIL’s earnings outlook is bleak; we project its net profit to decline by 17% in FY14.
Nonetheless, we believe its strong presence in the Chinese community would continue to keep its cash flow healthy, at least enabling the company to maintain its 50% dividend payout policy, which would translate to a 5.3% forecasted dividend yield. Since it lacks positive earnings catalysts, we remain NEUTRAL on the stock, with no change to our FV of MYR1.06. Our FV is premised on 11.6x CY14F P/E, which is the mean of its 5-year historical trading band.
CHM’s value underlies on its associate in Australia. We think Catcha Media(CHM MK, BUY, FV: MYR0.96) is an undervalued stock. Interestingly, CHM’s 29% stake in iCar (ICQ AU, NR), based on its market cap, has exceeded its market cap by 46%. Essentially, CHM investors would own ICQ shares at a discount on top of owning CHM’s operations for free. Although CHM is still reporting losses owing to ICQ being in its early growth stage, we expect earnings from the company to improve further after the acquisition of Says.com, which is a profitable online content-sharing company. We are maintaining our BUY recommendation for CHM, with an unchanged FV of MYR0.96, based on a SOP valuation.
Downgrade sector to NEUTRAL. With two BUY and NEUTRAL calls each following the downgrade of ASTRO today, we downgrade the media sector to NEUTRAL. While the 2014 World Cup is expected be adex-positive, we think the expected 8% growth for this year is nothing to shout about owing to household spending cuts and tighter adex allocations by businesses and the Government, coupled with the shift towards online advertising. Within the sector, we prefer companies with exposure to the TV medium, as these will benefit most from advertising relating to the 2014 World Cup. This justifies MPR as our Top Pick for the sector.
Source: RHB
Azlina Mohd Yusof
mcil has been a misleading counter all the way...
2014-01-13 13:26