COMPANY UPDATE
|
Berjaya Auto: Maintain Buy
|
A
play on weaker yen Shariah-compliant
|
- BAuto
is a direct beneficiary of a weaker JPY with 60-65% of COGS
denoted in that currency.
- Having
imputed a weaker JPY/MYR, our FY15/16/17 forecast is lifted by
11%/16%/17%.
- Reiterate
BUY with higher TP of MYR4.35 (+24%), pegged to higher CY15 PER
target of 13x (from 12x) given its superior growth (37% 3-year
earnings CAGR) and low PEG of 0.4x.
|
|
Technicals
|
Some
profit-taking is setting in
The FBMKLCI inched down 1.81 points to 1,853.34 yesterday
and the FBMEMAS and FBM100 lost 4.79 points and 4.62 points
respectively. In terms of market breadth, the gainer-to-loser
ratio was 424-to-447 while 288 counters were unchanged.
1.86b shares were traded, valued at MYR1.90b.
Today's trading idea is a Short-Term BUY on SKP Resources with a
target price MYR0.765, MYR0.0.87 and MYR1.07.
Click here for full report »
|
Other Local News
|
MMHE:
Bags O&G contracts worth MYR350m. Malaysia
Marine and Heavy Engineering Holdings (MMHE) has secured two
contracts worth nearly MYR350m for two exploration and production
projects offshore Peninsular Malaysia. The first contract is for the
fabrication of well head platform and its jacket, the connecting
bridge, and heavier jacket for the central processing platform for
the North Malay Basin Bergading Complex. (Source: The Star)
Kinsteel: Kinsteel and Perwaja face delay in releasing audited
accounts. Loss-making Kinsteel and its associate company Perwaja
Holdings risk having their shares suspended from trading on Bursa
Malaysia should the companies fail to meet a deadline to issue their
audited financial statements. (Source: The Star)
QL Resources: Extends takeover offer for Lay Hong.
QL Resource's takeover bid of Lay Hong at MYR3.50 per share may be
proving to be a slightly uphill task if its extension of the closing
date from tomorrow 5pm on November 26 is any indication. QL did not
state the reason for the extension in its filing with the exchange.
(Source: The Edge Financial Daily)
Axiata: Celcom partners SK Planet in e-commerce venture. Celcom
Axiata and South Korea�s top e-commerce player, SK
Planet, have formed a joint venture company to pursue e-commerce
opportunities in Malaysia. The joint venture, Celcom Planet, aims to
be a market leader in Malaysia's e-commerce industry, which is
expected to grow rapidly as shoppers look for competitive prices and
a wider variety of products. (Source: The New Straits Times)
|
Outside Malaysia
|
U.S:
Factories spur growth in October as world markets cool. The
Institute for Supply Management's factory index increased to 59 in
October, matching August as the highest since March 2011, after 56.6
the prior month, the group's report showed. Readings above 50
indicate expansion. A gauge of production was the strongest in a
decade. (Source: Bloomberg)
U.S: Borrowing needs at lowest since 2007 as economy strengthens.
The U.S. Treasury Department said its borrowing from October through
December will be the lowest for the period in seven years as the
economy gains momentum, boosting tax receipts. The Treasury plans to
issue USD 232b in net marketable debt in the final three months of
this year, about USD 45 billion more than projected three months ago
and the lowest since 2007, it said in Washington. Next quarter, the
Treasury plans to borrow USD 209b, the department said. (Source:
Bloomberg)
E.U: Manufacturing barely grew last month as factory output in
France and Italy shrank. A final reading of a Purchasing
Managers' Index for the industry stood at 50.6 in October,
London-based Markit Economics said. While that's up from a 14-month
low of 50.3 in September, it's below a 50.7 estimate released on Oct.
23 and barely above the mark of 50 signaling expansion. The recovery
in the 18-nation region came to a halt in the second quarter as its
three largest economies failed to grow, and European Central Bank
President Mario Draghi has warned of a deflationary spiral of falling
prices and postponed spending. (Source: Bloomberg)
U.K: Manufacturing growth unexpectedly accelerated to the fastest
pace in three months in October as buoyant domestic demand offset
weakening sales to the embattled euro region. Markit Economics said
its Purchasing Managers' Index climbed to 53.2 from 51.5 in
September. A reading above 50 indicates expansion. (Source:
Bloomberg)
China: Services industry fell to a nine-month low in October,
joining manufacturing in signaling a broadening economic slowdown.
The government's non-manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index fell to
53.8 last month from 54 in September. The official manufacturing PMI
released Nov. 1 was at 50.8 in October compared with September's
51.1. (Source: Bloomberg)
Vietnam: Credit rating was raised to three levels below investment
grade by Fitch Ratings, which said the country's macroeconomic
stability has improved. The company raised its rating on Vietnam's
long-term foreign and local currency debt to BB- from B+, and revised
the outlook to stable from positive, it said in a statement. Standard
& Poor's already rates Vietnam at BB-, while Moody's Investors
Service raised its assessment in July to B1, four steps below
investment grade. (Source: Bloomberg)
|
|
|
|
Key Indices
|
Value
|
YTD
(%)
|
Daily
(%)
|
KLCI
|
1,853.30
|
-0.7
|
-0.1
|
JCI
|
5,085.50
|
19
|
-0.1
|
STI
|
3,290.80
|
3.9
|
0.5
|
SET
|
1,579.20
|
21.6
|
-0.3
|
HSI
|
23,916.00
|
2.6
|
-0.3
|
KOSPI
|
1,953.00
|
-2.9
|
-0.6
|
TWSE
|
9,004.90
|
4.6
|
0.3
|
|
|
|
|
DJIA
|
17,366.20
|
4.8
|
-0.1
|
S&P
|
2,017.80
|
9.2
|
0
|
FTSE
|
6,488.00
|
-3.9
|
-0.9
|
|
|
|
|
MYR/USD
|
3.319
|
1.3
|
0.6
|
CPO (1mth)
|
2,315.00
|
-11.9
|
0.9
|
Crude Oil (1mth)
|
78.8
|
-20
|
-2.2
|
Gold
|
1,171.60
|
-2.5
|
-0.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOP STOCK PICKS
|
|
|
|
Buy rated large caps
|
|
Price
|
Target
|
Tenaga
|
|
13.5
|
16.00
|
Axiata
|
|
7.08
|
7.60
|
Sime Darby
|
|
9.66
|
10.20
|
Gamuda
|
|
5.17
|
6.00
|
UMW O&G
|
|
3.27
|
5.15
|
AFG
|
|
4.78
|
5.50
|
Perdana Petroleum
|
|
1.6
|
2.48
|
Hock Seng Lee
|
|
1.95
|
2.25
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.