Press Metal Encounters Stable Aluminium Price Outlook, Market Perform Maintained

Press Metal Berhad’s (PMETAL) FY23 results met expectations. Its FY23 core profit fell  13% due to a weaker ASP. However, we believe aluminium prices  will hold up given supply constraints globally.

Kenanga Investment Bank (Kenanga) said today (Feb 29) they have cut their FY24F  net profit forecast by 4%, reduce our TP by 2% to RM4.90 (from  RM5.00) and maintain their MARKET PERFORM rating. 

PMETAL’s FY23 core profit of RM1.25b met expectations – It declared a 4th interim NDPS of 1.75 (ex-date: 13 Mar; payment date: 29 Mar),  tallying FY23 NDPS to 7.0 sen, which is a tad higher than our FY23  NDPS assumption of 6.1 sen. 

YoY. Its FY23 revenue contracted by 12% owing to the weakening of  ASP as average LME aluminium spot price fell 17% to USD2,255/MT  on average as opposed to USD2,702/MT last year.

Similarly, its core  profit also declined by 13% to RM1.25b.

Meanwhile, the spot prices of  input alumina fell by 9%.

On the other hand, its share of associate  incomes rose 3% due to the full commissioning of PT Bintan’s entire  2m MT capacity per annum in 2QFY23, partly mitigated by a weaker ASP. 

QoQ. Its 4QFY23 revenue rose 3% thanks to higher ASP as the  average LME aluminium spot price improved slightly by 2% to  USD2,195/MT from USD2,155/MT. Correspondently, its core profit  grew 4%.

Outlook – Kenaga acknowledged that contrary to expectations, China’s  reopening has not significantly boosted the demand for aluminium. While the Chinese government has introduced various measures to  stabilise the property market, a meaningful recovery is still not quite on  the horizon.

Similarly, the roll-out of construction and infrastructure  projects in China has not been as robust as anticipated. However, there  are signs of a pickup in the solar sector, EVs and transmission  infrastructure in China.

Meanwhile, on the supply side, more stringent “green” requirements,  especially in China, will see the permanent shutdown of smelters  powered by fossil fuels (especially coal), further tightening the global  aluminium supply.

Also, the Western countries will continue to avoid  Russian aluminium that makes up c.6% of world aluminium production.  All these factors should keep aluminium prices stable.

Forecasts – Kenanga reduced their FY24F net profit forecast by 7% to reflect: (i) lower aluminium price assumptions of USD2,350/MT (from  USD2,450/MT) with USD/MYR at 4.40 (from 4.20). They also introduce their FY25F forecasts with earnings projected to grow at 15% on the  back of aluminium price assumption of USD2,400/MT with USD/MYR  of 4.40. 

Valuations – Kenanga reduced their DCF-derived TP to RM4.90 from RM5.00 as they roll over their valuation base year to FY25F from FY24F with an  unchanged WACC of 8.7% and TG of 2%. Kenanga’s TP reflect a 5%  premium to its DCF valuation of RM4.67, by virtue of its 4-star ESG  rating as appraised by them.

Investment case – Kenanga continues to like PMETAL for its: (i) structural cost  advantage over international peers given its access to low-cost hydro power secured under four long-term PPA contracts ending between  2034 and 2040, (ii) strongly secured alumina supply with stakes in two  alumina miners, i.e., Japan Alumina Associate (40%) and PT Bintan  (25%) which supply 80% of its requirements, and (iii) green investment  appeal as a clean energy source producer. 

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