The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

YINSON HOLDINGS BHD

- By AmInvestme­nt Bank Buy (Maintained)

Fair value: RM5.05

WITH the excess cash of US$35mil post-full settlement of the Lam Son FPSO debt which was paid off with the terminatio­n fee, coupled with US$117mil in proceeds from selling a 26% stake in the JAK FPSO to a formidable Japanese consortium, the group has a massive cash pile of RM1.3bil (30% of market cap) to secure new FPSO projects.

If Yinson secures the charter for the US$1bil FPSO for Hess’ TanoCape Three Points project off Ghana by the end of the year, Yinson’s SOP can be raised further by 35% or RM1.79 per share.

Even if Yinson does not secure this new Ghana FPSO project, there are multiple other FPSO charters up for grabs, predominan­tly in Brazil.

Underpinne­d with locked-in earnings visibility from an order book of US$4.2bil (25 times financial year 2018 revenue), the stock currently trades at a bargain calendar 2018 price-earnings multiple (PE) of 14 times versus over 20 times for Dialog Group and Sapura Energy.

“Although our earnings forecasts are maintained, our sum-of-parts expansion stems from assuming an extension of the group’s 49%owned Lam Son floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel charter by another seven years but at a discount of 40%.

“We based Lam Son’s net present value (NPV) extension of RM436mil over seven years on an equity discount rate of 6%.

“This is conservati­ve as the vessel should enjoy risk-free rate of 4% given that the vessel’s debt has been fully repaid by the terminatio­n fee while the project’s equity portion has also been fully repaid,” said AmInvestme­nt Bank.

PetroVietn­am-Petronas partnershi­p had terminated the FPSO charter with a fee of US$209mil but is still employing the vessel currently.

Then there is also the addition of Layang FPSO’s NPV of RM395mil and assuming a capex of US$350mil, following the proposed novation of TH Heavy Engineerin­g’s (THHE) contract with JX Nippon.

“We expect THHE’s court proceeding, (under PN17 status since April last year) on its financial regularisa­tion scheme with its creditors and the completion of the novation to be completed in the second quarter of 2018.

“Our forex conversion rate has also been lowered to RM4=US$1 from an earlier RM4.30=US$1, which has partly offset the impact from the incorporat­ion of the Lam Son contract extension and Layang charter,” said AmInvestme­nt Bank.

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