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Nestle Nigeria Q4 2020 Review: Tightened Consumer Pockets Amidst Trepid Macros

Nestlé Nigeria Celebrates 6th Batch Of Technical Training Program Graduates

Nestlé Nigeria Celebrates 6th Batch Of Technical Training Program Graduates

…Flattish expected volumes in ’21f trigger 14.9% price target reduction

We have cut our price target on Neste Nigeria (Nestle) to NGN1,570.6/share, down by around -15% and also downgraded our recommendation to Neutral.

For 2021f, we anticipate a sustained tightened operating environment for Nestle. We estimate a 3.0% y/y growth in turnover to NGN295.6bn (previously NGN304.8bn) and EPS growth of 9.2% y/y (previously 22.4%).

Our revised forecasts reflect our expectation that volume growth in ’21f will be marginal as consumer pockets reel from the impact of a forced adjustment in spending on reduced real income and persistent inflation (headline inflation of 16.47% in Jan ’21).

We expect prices to be stable in response to competitive pressures. We recall that Nestle raised prices in 2020, which was inclusive of the VAT increase (to 7.5% vs. 5% previously). Based on our channel checks, the company raised prices on leading brands – Milo, Nescafe, Maggi and Golden Morn.

READ ALSO: Nestlé Launches Bio-based Lids And Scoops Made From Renewable Resource

Also, we expect the impact of higher commodity prices, food inflation (20.57% in Jan ’21) and naira devaluation (4.3% ytd) will drive CoGS higher (+3.9% y/y, slightly ahead of forecast turnover growth of 3.0% y/y). We also forecast opex to be higher in ’21f, on higher admin expenses (due to a gradual return to the office) and marketing expenses (increased on-site activations/ promotions).

Nonetheless, we expect EBIT & EBITDA to be resilient, increasing by 1.0% y/y and 1.6% y/y to NGN65.0bn and NGN73.4bn respectively. We estimate interest expense at NGN3.10bn (-30.0% y/y), as we project a lower fx revaluation loss in ’21f.

Notably, there is a two-year interest payment moratorium on the new USD79.5m (total drawable amount of USD200m) intercompany loan received from Nestle S.A (parent). Consequently, we expect PBT to grow 3.8% y/y to NGN62.9bn (previously NGN70.01bn) while we have revised our PAT forecast down to NGN42.8bn (+9.2% y/y, prior estimate of N49.01bn).

Year-to-date, Nestle has lost -8.6% to NGN1,375.0, underperforming the ASI by -1.8%. Nestle’s ’21f EV/EBITDA of 14.60x is not far from the average for global peers (15.90x), but its ’21f P/E multiple of 25.46x is ahead of peers’ average of 17.93x.

FX devaluation loss impacted EPS in Q4 ’20; final dividend beat expectations

Nestle delivered an EPS of N7.00 (-37.3% y/y) in Q4 ’20, implying a FY ’20 EPS of NGN47.29 (-17.9% y/y). This was behind our estimate of NGN50.51 (variance of -6.4%) and driven by a higher-than-anticipated CoGS and finance cost.

Nestle has proposed a final dividend of NGN35.50 which is ahead of our forecast of NGN25.51/share but lower than the final dividend of NGN45.00/share in FY ’19. This final dividend implies a dividend yield of 2.45% (vs. 3.10% in FY ’19). Qualification date is 21 May ’21; payment date is 23 June ’21.

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