JULIUS BERGER NIGERIA PLC: One-Off Incomes Buoy Return To Profitability

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Julius Berger Announces Board Approval of Diversification Opportunity
  • PAT outperforms estimate albeit underlying earnings remain weak
  • Board declares the FY’17 dividend of ₦0.25/share (FY’16: Nil)
  • Cautious outlook on earnings amidst persistent operations downscaling
  • FY’18 PAT estimate revised lower to ₦2.8 billion (Previous: ₦3.5 billion)
  • TP relatively unchanged on improved cash position, lower risk-free rate

PAT outperforms estimate albeit underlying earnings remain weak

Coming from a loss of ₦2.4 billion in the prior year, JBERGER reported PAT of ₦2.6 billion (Vetiva: ₦0.6 billion) for FY’17, translating to an EPS of ₦3.61. In line with our estimate, the Board of Directors declared a dividend of ₦0.25 per share. Despite the bottom-line outperformance, underlying earnings for the full year period remain relatively weak as PAT was largely supported by extraordinary income from profit on the sale of fixed assets. Particularly, weighed by slow traction in the construction sector, FY’17 revenue remained flat y/y at ₦141.9 billion – missing our ₦148.7 billion estimates. However, amidst the impact of persistent inflationary pressure on operating expense, operating income declined 48% y/y to ₦8.7 billion – albeit better than our ₦7.8 billion estimates. Similarly, on the back of higher liquidity need (dependence on overdrafts) as well as elevated interest rate environment, Net financing expense rose 24% y/y to ₦6.8 billion. On a positive note, however, FX losses declined 77% y/y to ₦3.3 billion supported by relative currency stability in 2017. Also, worthy of note is the improvement in JBERGER’s cash position, driven by improved receivables (receipt from customers totaled ₦111 billion) in Q4’17 – resulting in a positive cash flow from operations for the first time since Q1’16.

Cautious outlook on JBERGER, FY’18 estimates revised lower

Whilst we maintain our positive outlook for the construction sector on the back of increased FG spending, we are more cautious on JBERGER given
recent indications that the company is scaling back its operations. We note that fixed assets have declined from ₦67 billion in FY’14 to ₦42 billion in
FY’17 and headcount have been trimmed from 17,829 to 8,625 over the same period. As such, we lower our FY’18 topline estimate to ₦146 billion from ₦164 billion, translating to a mild 3% y/y growth. Maintaining our cost run rate, we cut our FY’18 EBIT estimate to ₦9.1 billion (Previous: ₦10.6
billion). Also, we revise our net finance cost forecast lower to ₦4.9 billion (Previous: ₦5.6 billion) as we foresee reduced the need for overdraft and lower interest rate expectation in the coming quarters following improved receivable earlier highlighted. Overall, our FY’18 PAT forecast is revised to ₦2.8 billion (Previous: ₦3.5 billion) but our target price is relatively unchanged ₦27.90 at (Previous: ₦27.72) largely on the back of strong improvement in cash position and lower risk-free rate assumption.