Showing posts with label Inari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inari. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 July 2021

JHM: New Addition to the "Auspicious" BKIP

 


Batu Kawan Industrial Park (BKIP) in southern Penang mainland has been a great success since Boon Siew Honda first moved into it in year 2011.

There is no surprise that the state government has started the planning of BKIP2 located south of BKIP at Byram Nibong Tebal.

Up to today, many global technology giants have set up their facilities in BKIP.

Those companies include Hewlett-Packard, VAT, Jabil Circuit, Broadcom (Avago), Western Digital, Boston Scientific, Haemonitics, Micron, Hotayi, Flex, Lam Research, Bosch Automotive etc.

Apart from international companies, many local technology-related companies have set up their plants in BKIP as well.

Most of them are listed in Bursa Malaysia and their presence in BKIP indicate expansion of their businesses.

So, with increased business volumes and profits, their share prices have gained tremendously since they planned their move into BKIP.

Who are they?

Tuesday, 9 June 2020

How Do I Choose A Stock To Buy?

A reader asked me how do I filter the stocks to buy. It's not easy to answer.

To make it short, I don't have a systematic way when it comes to selecting a company for investment. 

I'm not sure whether there is any established or better way to select or filter from a list of close to one thousand listed companies.

Basically, I have done it in many ways and I'll briefly discuss about them here.

First, I'll start with how I come to know a stock.


Screen through every single companies painstakingly

This was the method I used when I first joined the stock market back in year 2005. At that time, internet information was scarce. 

There was a thick book like a "Yellow Pages", which contained the information of all the listed companies in KLSE such as the business nature, historical revenue/profit, financial ratios such as EPS, ROE, PE ratio, debt/equity, as well as historical price chart.

I can't remember the name of this white & green colour book now as I have lost it many years ago.

Before I bought my first shares, I read a few investment books and I decided to follow their suggestion by looking at the fundamentals of the companies. So I made a stock selection criteria of ROE >15%, EPS growth >15% for at least 3 years & PE <10.

With these criteria, I screened through every companies in that thick book one by one. At last I came out with a few companies that matched the criteria. I still remember that the first 2 stocks I bought were Mahsing & WCT, and I made a profit from them.

Anyway, that kind of book is not published anymore due to the abundance of information which can be easily obtained on the internet.


Use KLSE Screener

Many years ago I came across this tool. I'm sure that most readers know what is it all about. You just need to key in your selection criteria (PE, ROE, DY, EPS etc) and the software will filter for you.

This is very easy and fast, and you can do it on your computer or smartphones. However, I seldom use it and don't really use it to select stocks since I started this blog.


From articles and news

Basically I do not actively look for a stock to buy, as investing in stock market is not a big part in my life, yet. I am quite passive.

I don't read business news and watch the stock market everyday. I do it sporadically when the interest comes and when I have the time.

You know, there are many articles that promote a stock in investment forum such as i3investor, some are very good and some are not. 

When a company secures a contract, reports good profit, ventures into new business or encounters headwinds, the news will certainly appear on online news portal such as The Star, The Edge and for Chinese, Sin Chew & Nan Yang. 

If the headlines of an article or news catch my attention, I will read them and sometimes it will lead me to study the company and then invest in it.


Analyst reports

I have trading accounts with Public Investment Bank & Hong Leong Investment Bank. However, I do not login to view all the reports because I only login when I plan to trade.

I read those analyst reports from i3investor, thanks to all the people that share them there. 

Analyst reports are a very important and useful tool for me. There are many information that retail investors like us have no access into. So, we need to depend on professional analysts who attend the company's AGM, investor briefing session or interview the management.

Regarding the target price derived by analysts, just take it as a reference and come out with your own target price. 

Of course different people have different opinion, and no one can predict the future with 100% accuracy. For Bumi Armada as example, someone gives it a target price of 10sen, while some value it at 56sen. That's a huge difference.

Now that Armada is at 26sen, who do you want to follow?


Quarterly Financial Reports

A listed company must release financial report every 3 months, we can get a lot of information from it.

Besides the revenue & profit, we can have a glimpse at its latest balance sheet & cash flow. The management will also explain the performance of the quarterly results and give a prospect of its business.

When a company has a good financial quarter, sometimes it catches my attention to further study it, IF I happen to bump into it as I only read 10-20 of those quarterly reports every 3 months.

I think this is a very common way for me to identify a stock to buy.

Before 2013, I only looked at the revenue and profit, EPS, ROE & PE ratio while making a decision.

After that, I include the balance sheet and cash flow, although not in a very detail fashion. I don't have accounting background, and have no one to ask except Mr Google when I have doubts.

I don't read annual reports unless from my invested companies or companies I plan to study. 

























There is another way that can help me to find a good stock which I haven't use yet, which is subscribing to fundamental-based "Sifus" or other experienced investors.

I know that it might be a very good way to earn quick bucks from doing this. Many newbies and speculators pay the fee, and will surely buy when a stock is recommended as "buy call". This might push up the share price and quick profit can be made just like that.

Subscribing to such service can increase my chance of catching a stock with good potential, as I mention earlier that I'm quite passive in stock market and can't screen through all those listed companies and read all the announcement by myself.

At the moment, I still haven't join such groups. I'm still all alone.


How do I filter those stocks to decide whether to invest in them or not?

There are no strict rules now like I used to have in the past. Last time I set criteria for EPS growth, PE ratio, ROE, D/E ratio, DY etc. I usually don't go deeper into ROIC, FCF, PEG ratio & EV as I'm not a true value investor.

Let me show a few real examples of how I bought a stock in the past, if I still remember them correctly.


Latitude Tree
I first noticed Latitude after it released a very good quarterly results in Nov 2013. Then I studied its previous quarterly reports, annual reports and company website. I checked its previous announcement from Bursa Malaysia website. There was no analyst cover and not many news on this company. I found out from Bursa announcement that it was in the process of acquiring the remaining shares of its very profitable Vietnam operation. I projected the future earning and it's a no-brainer. 


Inari
If my memory serves me right, I first knew about Inari from a news article in Jun 2013. At that time, Inari was still a small little-known company and had proposed to acquire much bigger Amertron of the Philippines. It certainly caught my attention and the same process started. I checked its previous quarterly & annual reports, previous Bursa announcement, searched for online news and visited the company website. 

I remember that before I bought Inari shares at around 70sen (22sen now after adjustment), its share price has just rallied from 30-40sen to 70sen in a short period of time. Most investors commented that since it had already gone up 100%, it was very risky to buy at that time. I bought it anyway. Sometimes we have to ignore the noise of forummers and believe in our own judgement. Inari proves to be a big success for me. 


KESM
I came across an article or news shared by someone in i3investor about KESM in Jan 2016. It looked good to me and I decided to study it further. I saw that there was significant jump in its latest 2 quarters and by simple forward PE estimation, it was deemed undervalued for me. At that time its share price was falling from RM6 and I got it at RM4.80 and then around RM3.90 when it dropped further, with average price of RM4.42. 

It's lucky for me that its financial performance were good and share price kept increasing to over RM22. I sold some at RM20 and the rest at only RM8+. 


Geshen
I can't remember exactly how I came to know this company, which was a very cold and unknown company. From my record, I bought its shares on Mac 2015. I think may be from its previous quarterly result announcement in Feb 2015 which showed a significant jump in its net profit. It's not a very exciting result but I found out that it has just disposed its two loss-making subsidiaries and planned to acquire a growing profit-making peer. I felt that it would start a new page of growth and bought its shares. It was a great investment for me.


YOCB
This was just a coincidence. I was studying a company with a name of Yokohama in Aug 2013. When I searched for it in Bursa website, I saw another company alongside it with a strange name of "YOCB" which attracted my attention. That's how I started to study this company out of curiosity. I bought it because of its low PE ratio and good dividend. It was not a bad investment for me though I might have sold it too early.


Tambun
This is easy. I bought my first property from Tambun Indah and I certainly knew it well. As I was more focused in property investment at that time between 2008 and 2013, I knew a lot of other property companies and their projects.

At that time Tambun bought a vast landbank cheaply at Bandar Tasek Mutiara, which is located at Seberang Perai Selatan of Penang. We know that the nearby Batu Kawan is the next big thing. New projects were launched aggressively and each of them was rapidly sold out. So, it's also a no-brainer during such a property boom. 


Huayang 
Not every property stocks I bought at that time made money. Of all my completed buy-sell transaction up to today, the largest loss was Huayang, followed by Tropicana, both are property stocks. Huayang needs no introduction to investors at that time. Its revenue & profit was growing steadily, gave away mouth-watering dividends and multiple bonus issues. 

I felt like I missed the boat and always dreamed of owning its shares. Finally I became its shareholder in Sep 2014 at RM2.32, the price level which later proved to be at the peak. Even though subsequent quarterly results were good even with EPS of 11sen for 5 consecutive quarters, its share price just didn't go up but continued to drop instead. If we give a PE of 10x the share price should be at least RM4. Finally I cut loss at RM1.83 after 1 year and 4 months. Property was in the negative trend and we could not beat the trend.


PPHB
I found out this stock after it released its FY19Q1 results in May19. The result was nothing spectacular, just that the market gave it a low PE of around 5x. After studying it like usual, there seemed to be slow growth in this company and I believed that its products have more demand nowadays. I bought in May19 and only in the end of 2019, the stocks price started to jump.


I would say that most of the time I find a company to invest through its quarterly financial report, while PE ratio and growth prospect are the main things I look at to decide whether to invest in it, although the debt ratio & simple cash flow still play a part.

So, how should you filter or select a company to invest in? The answer is read more, and do your own homework.


Tuesday, 26 May 2020

Are You A Contrarian or Trend Investor?


"Be greedy when others are fearful, be fearful when others are greedy"

This is a famous quote by Warren Buffet. He can't be wrong, right?

Mr Fong SiLing (Cold Eye), apparently, also adopted this strategy. He mentioned again and again in his articles that the best way to profit from stock market investing is to practice contrarian investing (反向投资)

Based on his 40 years of experience and success, he can't be wrong as well.


Contrarian Investing: Going Against The Grain • Novel Investor


Recently he openly wrote that it is a good time to collect oil & gas stocks now. Oil price is at rock bottom, and so are many O&G stock prices. Everyone seems to be pessimistic about O&G now.

We know that eventually oil price will recover. O&G stocks price will recover as well, if they can survive the storm.

How long will it take for crude oil price to recover then? Can it be within 1 year, or 2-3 years? No one knows. 

Brent crude oil price has been in the downtrend since falling from above USD100 per barrel in mid 2014. It rebounded in 2016 from USD30 to reach USD80 in 2018. Then it fell below USD30 this year.

We know that it will go back to above USD60 per barrel again. It's just a matter of time.

By collecting good O&G stocks, you know that you are almost sure win, and may win big. However, how long are you willing to wait?

Are you willing to wait for 2-3 years? 

Some investors have no problem with that, and surely some do not have the patience.

       Armada: Downtrend for 6 years and counting


Besides O&G sector, there are other sectors which are also languishing in bear zone such as plantation, property, logistics etc.

Is it the time to collect stocks in those sectors as well? Now everyone is "fearful" in them, should we act now?

Stock market investing is like predicting the future earning of a company. For me, if you think that the recovery is close, then may be it's time to buy.

How close is "close"? Everyone has their own definition for that.

Property sector was hot in the early 2010s. New development projects were like mushrooms after rain and all were fully taken up. Property price went up like hell. A lot of non-property players diversified to join this property boom.

As a result, many property stocks at that time double or triple in price. 

The turning point was around 2015, when there was an oversupply of properties in the market, and the property price were unaffordable to many.

From that point of time, property sales dropped, company's profit dropped and the share price inevitably followed.


MKH: Property & Plantation
       MKH: Property + Plantation Play


Up to today, I still don't see any recovery hope for property stocks in the next 12 months. Covid-19 just makes the situation worse.

Nevertheless, after Covid-19's concern is over, would it be the time for property sector to turnaround amid low interest environment? 

I don't know when will this happen but my point is, buying property stocks in year 2016, 2017, 2018 or 2019 when most people were "fearful" in property sector is a contrarian move, but is it a good move?

I have a few property stocks before, and I have sold all of them except Matrix which I decided to keep.

The reason is simple, I foresee Matrix can continue to break new high in sales and profits even though the overall property market is going down hill.

To me Matrix is a well-managed company. It makes good sales, its unbilled sales go up and it gives good dividends too.

True enough, Matrix's sales and net profit increase year after year since listing in 2013. However, its share price has been quite stagnant in the last 4-5 years before Covid-19 dragged it down in Mac20.

It didn't drop like other property stocks though, but it didn't go up. So, its PE ratio is getting lower and lower at around 6x.

The reason is, Matrix is not in the positive "trend".

This brings us to "Trend Investing".

From my observation, trend investing is a good way to earn money in stock market, especially if you can identify the trend earlier than most people do.

So it means that doing homework does matter, not like rushing in when everyone already did so.

Currently it is the trend of gloves and PPE related stocks. If you are smart and alert, you might have bought and accumulated gloves stocks in Jan/Feb this year when Covid-19 started to spread globally, even though the jump in stock price only occurred in April.

Up to today I still haven't got any shares of glove stocks, mainly because I was slow to react, and most of the good glove stocks are "expensive" to me.

If you buy early in the trend, you just ride on it and make handsome profit. However, if you buy near the end of the trend, you might end up losing money.

The trend can last for few months to few years.

Last time the property trend lasted about 3 years from 2012-2015. If I'm not wrong, plantation stocks were also hotly debated at that time.

After that in 2014, the tremendous weakening of Ringgit against USD from RM3.20 to RM4.40 kick started the uptrend of export-orientated stocks.

Furniture, injection moulding, semiconductor and other export stocks were having a real good time.


       POHUAT: Furniture export stock 


This trend also lasted around 3 years until 2017 when MYR strengthened to below RM4.00. 

Last year there seems to be a brief box-packaging trend. Combination of several favourable conditions such as higher demand, lower raw material cost and promotion by some investors and analysts might have initiated and sustained the trend.

This trend lasted for about a year before being cut short by Covid-19.

How about the trend of technology stocks? Smartphones, 5G, IoT, cloud computing, driverless cars etc are the main trend of the world so I feel that it is always in the trend.

Even though we read that semiconductor industry has up and down cycle, or negatively affected by geopolitical issues, I actually don't feel any significant "out-of-trend" issue for the past 10 years.

When a tech company goes down hill, there will be another tech company on the up at the same time.

The important thing is to make sure that the tech company is always at the latest trend of technology. If not, it will be eliminated sooner or later.


       INARI: Uptrend from 2013 until 2018


Contrarian and trend investing seem to be two different kinds of investment strategies. Both can make money and lose money as well.

If you buy too early in contrarian investing, you lose time, and time is money.

If you buy too late in trend investing, you can be trapped and lose money.

No matter which kind of investors you are, it's all about the timing.

Those successful investors excel in the in & out timing, either using fundamental, technical, trend, contrarian or whatever methods.

We know that life is extremely tough for Airasia & GENM now. We also know that both of them will recover. 

Are you greedy now when others are fearful?
 

Tuesday, 17 November 2015

Inari: More Aggressive Expansion

Inari Ametron FY16Q1 Financial Result

INARI (RM mil) FY16Q1 FY15Q4 FY15Q3 FY15Q2 FY15Q1
Revenue 274.9 225.0 228.3 227.9 221.9
Gross Profit 57.7 56.5 47.7 49.4 43.4
Gross% 21.0 25.1 20.9 21.7 19.6
PBT 43.9 39.8 38.0 40.0 33.9
PBT% 16.0 17.7 16.6 17.6 15.3
PATAMI 45.5 40.4 38.1 40.3 33.8






Total Equity 604.1 537.2 511.5 352.9 313.4
Total Assets 953.9 835.2 720.1 583.5 544.3
Trade Receivables 236.9 187.4 136.8 128.1 143.4
Inventories 178.1 145.2 139.9 134.0 135.8
Cash 282.3 296.7 260.4 141.9 89.5






Total Liabilities 349.8 299.9 210.2 230.6 230.9
Trade Payables 215.9 171.3 92.2 107.3 107.9
ST Borrowings 45.2 45.3 42.1 44.8 46.8
LT Borrowings 31.5 22.0 21.9 14.9 15.1






Net Cash Flow -19.4 218.0 181.9 65.0 14.0
Operation 35.3 176.2 110.6 88.3 23.7
Depreciation 11.6 32.5 22.4 14.3 6.7
Investment -52.8 -89.0 -52.7 -44.9 -34.4
PPE purchase 52.8 62.4 24.8 18.4 8.5
Financing -1.9 130.8 124.1 21.5 24.7






Dividend paid 15.3 49.3 49.3 21.0 10.1






EPS 6.24 5.57 5.69 6.59 6.00
NAS 0.83 0.74 0.71 0.58 0.56
Net D/E Ratio Net cash Net cash Net cash Net cash Net cash



Inari posted another record-breaking quarterly result with its highest ever quarterly revenue, PBT & PATAMI in FY16Q1.

The management mentioned that favourable forex mainly contributed to this "widely expected" financial result.

In FY16Q1, Inari registered a net forex gain RM3.33mil.

We know that Inari's rise is very closely linked to its largest customer Avago.

Recently Avago acquired Broadcom Corp, a communications semiconductor company, and sold its optical modules business to Foxconn, which is an electronic & optoelectronic manufacturer similar to Inari.

How will these development possibly affect Inari?

Will Inari lose its existing contracts or get more contracts?

I have no reliable insider info and I'm not an expert in this industry. So I really don't know.




What I think is that IF Inari's management foresees potential lower demand for its service, they should slow down or withhold their expansion plan.

However, from analysts reports after Inari's latest analyst briefing, Inari has tabled an aggressive capex of RM100mil for FY16 which is even higher than previous record high of RM62mil in FY15.

From this amount, RM42mil is set aside for machinery, RM15mil for automation, RM8mil for R&D and RM35mil for P13B expansion.

It even showcased the conceptual design of its new Batu Kawan plant which is planned to accommodate 2 news businesses should they materialize, according to HLIB.

What kind of new businesses?

Currently it is still expanding its P13A new facility in Bayan Lepas.

Total RF testers has reached 609 in Oct15 compared to 522 last year. It is expected to reach 800 by Oct 2016.

Management guided that contribution from the new P13 plant will be flat in FY16 Q1 & Q2 but is expected to increase significantly from Q3 onwards.

In my view, it looks like Inari's management is bullish over at least maintaining existing contracts, if not securing more new contracts from Avago as there will be more outsourcing from Avago groups of companies.

No matter what, I think Inari will continue to do well financially in FY16.

Its RF chips are not only used in Samsung and Apple smartphones, but also in those China brands.

I will continue to hold its shares and follow the company's development.

Parallel to its increasing profits, Inari announced its highest ever quarterly dividend of 2.8sen.

Besides, it also proposed its first ever bonus issue with 1 bonus share for every 4 existing shares held. 

Maximum new shares issued will be 206.1mil if all warrants and ESOS are exercised before ex-date.

Everything looks good to me at the moment. Hopefully we can hear some good news from Inari in 2016.


Div (sen) FY16 FY15 FY14 FY13 FY12
1st 2.3 (0.5) 1.8 (0.4) 1.1 (0.4) 0.8 0.6
2nd
1.8 (0.5) 1.1 (0.4) 0.9 0.6
3rd
2.1 1.2 (0.8) 0.9 0.8
4th
2.3 1.8 1.0 (0.9) 0.8


Sunday, 23 August 2015

Inari: "Unexciting" Record-Breaking Feat

Inari FY15Q4 Financial Result

INARI FY15Q4 FY15Q3 FY15Q2 FY15Q1 FY14Q4
Revenue 225.0 228.3 227.9 221.9 223.9
Gross Profit 56.5 47.7 49.4 43.4 52.0
Gross% 25.1 20.9 21.7 19.6 23.2
PBT 39.8 38.0 40.0 33.9 31.4
PBT% 17.7 16.6 17.6 15.3 14.0
PAT 40.4 38.1 40.3 33.8 30.8






Total Equity 537.2 511.5 352.9 313.4 260.2
Total Assets 835.2 720.1 583.5 544.3 487.5
Trade Receivables 187.4 136.8 128.1 143.4 137.3
Inventories 145.2 139.9 134.0 135.8 137.8
Cash 296.7 260.4 141.9 89.5 65.3






Total Liabilities 299.9 210.2 230.6 230.9 226.9
Trade Payables 171.3 92.2 107.3 107.9 120.0
ST Borrowings 45.3 42.1 44.8 46.8 36.4
LT Borrowings 22.0 21.9 14.9 15.1 18.6






Net Cash Flow 218.0 181.9 65.0 14.0 20.9
Operation 176.2 110.6 88.3 23.7 41.2
Investment -89.0 -52.7 -44.9 -34.4 -43.4
Financing 130.8 124.1 21.5 24.7 23.0






EPS 5.57 5.69 6.59 6.00 6.23
NAS 0.74 0.71 0.58 0.56 0.53
Net D/E Ratio Net cash Net cash Net cash Net cash Net cash


In this final quarter of FY15, Inari broke its record again with highest ever quarterly revenue and PATAMI.

Compared YoY, revenue and PATAMI increase 13.9% and 40.2% respectively.

Compared QoQ, revenue and PATAMI increase 11.7% and 6.0% respectively.

For the whole FY15, revenue and PATAMI increase 17.6% and 53.7% to RM933.1mil & RM152.5mil respectively compared to FY14..

If disaster does not strike, its revenue in FY16 will surely breach a billion mark.

However, due to huge amount of warrant conversion, current quarter's EPS drops slightly to 5.57sen compared to 5.69 in preceding quarter of FY15Q3.

While everyone is expecting Inari to gain from weakening RM, there is actually a RM2.4mil net forex loss in this quarter.

Anyway, weak RM against USD will be beneficial to Inari.

Balance sheet and cash flow remain healthy as usual, with plenty of cash reserved for further capacity expansion.


Inari RM mil FY15 FY14 FY13 FY12 FY11
Revenue 933.1 793.7 241.1 180.8 119.6
Revenue growth % 17.6 229.2 33.3 51.2
Gross Profit 197.1 158.4 66.4 36.0 25.8
Gross % 21.1 20.0 27.5 19.9 21.6
PBT 151.7 107.2 43.3 20.3 20.5
PBT% 16.3 13.5 17.9 11.2 17.1
PAT 152.5 101.3 42.0 19.3 18.8
PAT growth % 50.5 141.2 117.6 2.7






EPS 23.82 21.42 12.32 6.06 11.21
ROE 28.4 38.8 26.2 23.3 41.4


Inari's new facilities P13 in Bayan Lepas has started early phase of production in FY15Q4 and contributed modestly to its revenue and gross profit.

It is expected to contribute more significantly in FY16 when new capacities are ramped up in stages.

Final or 4th interim dividend of 2.3sen was declared, making it 8.9sen total in FY15, 30% higher than FY14's dividend of 6.8sen.

This represent a payout ratio of almost 40%.

Div (sen) FY15 FY14 FY13 FY12
1st 1.8 (0.4) 1.1 (0.4) 0.8 0.6
2nd 1.8 (0.5) 1.1 (0.4) 0.9 0.6
3rd 2.1 1.2 (0.8) 0.9 0.8
4th 2.3 1.8 1.0 (0.9) 0.8

With latest ordinary shares of 729.6mil, Inari's EPS for FY15 stands at 21sen.

At share price of RM3.03, its actual PE is 14.4x, with dividend yield of 2.9%.




I think Inari still has room to grow. Its FY15 capex of RM62.4mil is its highest ever which is 50% more than previous 2 years.

However, this does not mean that its share price will continue to grow especially in current bearish market.

Many investors may face a dilemma of whether to sell now and buy back at cheaper price later, as KLCI is widely expected to fall further.

For me, I am unlikely to sell all or even a major portion of my shares in Inari but if I don't have enough cash, I might sell some to lock in some profit.