Posted Date: May 2, 2017
MARC has affirmed its
ratings of MARC-1IS/AA-IS on UEM Sunrise Berhad’s
(UEM Sunrise) two Islamic Commercial Paper and Islamic Medium-Term Notes
programmes (ICP/IMTN-1 and ICP/IMTN-2). The ICP/IMTN-1 and ICP/IMTN-2 each has
a nominal value of RM2.0 billion with a sublimit of RM500.0 million on the ICP programmes.
The outlook on the ratings is stable.
Majority-owned by UEM Group
Berhad (UEM Group), UEM Sunrise has a longstanding track record in property
development with sizeable land bank in Iskandar Johor, the Klang Valley and
Tapah, Perak. The long-term rating on UEM Sunrise incorporates a one-notch
rating uplift for parental support from UEM Group, a government-related entity
with diversified businesses and strong financial profile. The support
assessment considers UEM Sunrise as a strategic subsidiary based on its
position as the property arm of its parent.
In 2016, UEM Sunrise
launched three projects domestically — two in Iskandar Puteri and one in an
existing township development in Bangi — with a total gross development value
(GDV) of RM558.4 million. The response for these projects has been encouraging
with RM283.5 million in sales recorded as at end of February 2017. UEM Sunrise
has shifted its domestic focus to the mid-range landed and affordable housing
segments to offset the weaker demand for its high-end units in the residential
sector; the group has also strengthened its marketing efforts to reduce its
property inventories during the year. The efforts have resulted in an increase
in the take-up rate for Almas, a mixed development launched in 2013 in Iskandar
Puteri with a launch GDV of RM558.0 million, to 89% from 38% a year earlier.
The remaining GDV of the
group’s ongoing projects stood at RM28.3 billion, of which about 76% is in
Iskandar Puteri. Given the geographical concentration of its projects and land
bank, the group may face challenges amid weakening demand and competing
developments in the area. Despite the weakening prospects of the domestic
property market, UEM Sunrise’s contracted sales from domestic projects stood at
RM1.4 billion at end-2016, which provides earnings visibility over the medium
term. The earnings visibility is further supported by unrecognised revenue for
its Australian projects of RM2.7 billion as at end-December 2016.
UEM Sunrise has registered
a 99% take-up rate for its maiden Australian project Aurora Melbourne Central
(Aurora), a RM2.4 billion high-rise residential development in Melbourne that
was launched in 2014; and an 89% take-up rate for The Conservatory, a high-end
residential project in the city with a GDV of RM961 million launched in 2015.
Developed under the build-and-sell concept, Aurora is expected to be completed
in stages starting from end-2018, while The Conservatory is expected to be
fully completed by end-2018. Nonetheless, the large-scale nature of its
build-and-sell foreign projects and its sizeable domestic projects have weighed
on UEM Sunrise’s cash flow generation. At end-2016, UEM Sunrise recorded
negative cash flow from operations (CFO) of RM724 million. MARC expects cash
flows to improve over the medium term as its build-and-sell projects are
completed. In the near term, cash flows are expected to be supported by sales
of the group’s overseas and local land parcels of about RM549 million. In March
2017, the group disposed 4.9 acres in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada, for
CAD113 million (RM372 million). The group’s other land sales in 2017 include
several parcels of lands in Iskandar, Johor, for a combined value of about
RM177 million.
In 2016, group revenue
increased slightly by 5.2% y-o-y to RM1,841.5 million; however, pre-tax profit
declined by 37% y-o-y to RM217.6 million. The decline in profitability was
partly due to higher provision for liquidated ascertained damages and partly
due to weaker performance of its joint venture projects. Group debt servicing
ability remains moderate with EBITDA finance coverage of 3.2 times in 2016
(2015: 4.4 times), with the decline attributable to the increase in borrowings.
As at end-2016, group borrowings rose to RM3.7 billion (end-2015: RM2.8 billion)
with the increase utilised largely for the acquisition of the site for its St.
Kilda development in Australia and the remaining 38% equity stake in its
Solaris 3 development. As a result of the increase, its debt-to-equity (DE)
rose to 0.52 times while net DE rose to 0.41 times (2015: 0.38 times; 0.25
times). The group liquidity position remains strong with cash balances of
RM788.5 million.
The stable rating outlook
incorporates MARC’s expectations that UEM Sunrise’s standalone credit profile
would remain commensurate with its current rating band. The standalone rating
could face downward pressure if the group’s debt coverage metrics weaken on the
back of depressed earnings or higher-than-expected increase in borrowings. The
rating and outlook could also be revised if parental support from UEM Group is
assessed as weakening and/or if any material change affects the status or
credit profile of the parent.
Taufiq Kamal, +603-2082
2251/ taufiq@marc.com.my
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