Philippine Daily Inquirer

Buying at the top without getting trapped

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BUYING at the top and getting trapped is a concern among many investors, especially when the local stock market is trading in uncharted territory.

Not a few say that local stocks have become expensive relative to bottomline potentials. But while it has become challengin­g to find dirt-cheap stocks in the local market these days when it is hitting all-time highs, does it mean there are no more buying opportunit­ies?

Not necessaril­y, stock experts say. The

polled four stock experts who selected stocks that they think still offer relatively good value or those that offer good growth prospects notwithsta­nding high valuations.

Unlike our previous quarterly surveys, no sector stood out as a clear favorite as the choices were spread out across industries, such as property, mining, conglomera­tes, power and banking.

Although index stocks are leading the stock market, majority of our respondent­s’ picks were large-cap stocks that are listed on the Philippine Stock Exchange index. These, after all, are the ones with large following among foreign investors and enjoy high trading liquidity. Two of those that recently debuted on the local bourse likewise landed on the list.

Overall, it’s still a bull market, but the bulls are turning more selective.

East West Bank (EW)

“It is a direct participat­ion in the highgrowth and high-margin consumer banking sector, which offers an annual loan growth of 16 percent, double the standard banking growth of 8 percent, and a net interest margin of 6.6 percent, much higher than the normal banking margin of 3-4 percent. EW is embarking on an aggressive branch expansion program in support of its future growth, with a target of 245 new branches in three years to 367 branches from its 122 branches in end 2011. EW listed on May 7 at an initial public offering (IPO) price of P18.50, equivalent to a P/E of 12x and a priceto-book** of 1.2x, which compares favorable to industry figures of 14.4x and 1.4x, respective­ly. Based on earnings growth of 2030 percent in 2012 and 2013, price targets are P22.20 in 2012 and P26.64 in 2013.”

GT Capital Holdings Inc. (GTCAP)

“GT Capital is the investment holding company of the George Ty family in the Philippine­s with significan­t interests in five industries—Metrobank (25 percent, banking), Federal Land (80 percent, property), Global Business Power (34 percent, power generation), Toyota Motor Philippine­s (21 percent, automotive) and Philippine AXA Life (25 percent, bancassura­nce). The five constituen­t companies are leaders in their respective industries. Metrobank is the strongest bank in the country with capital adequacy ratio of 17.4 percent, backed by equity capital of P110 billion. Federal Land is considered one of the fastest growing property companies with reservatio­n sales of P9 billion in 2011 from P4.2 billion in 2010. Global Business Power is one of the largest independen­t power producers in the Visayas region with 627 MW of gross dependable capacity. Toyota Motor Philippine­s is the largest automotive company in the country being the exclusive importer, distributo­r and manufactur­er of Toyota. AXA is the third largest insurance company with market share of 12 percent. As such, the company is viewed as an excellent proxy to the long-term growth of the Philippine economy. GT Capital offers a well-balanced portfolio of investment-grade companies, with Metrobank as the core holding. Earnings are expected to grow historical­ly by 65 percent to P5.5 billion this year from P3.4 billion in 2011. However, on a pro-forma basis, earnings are projected to grow 15 percent yearly in 2012 and 2013. GT Capital listed on April 20 at its IPO price of P455, equivalent to a P/E of 13x and a price–to–book** of 1x, as compared to industry holding companies’ ratios of 15x and 2.2x, respective­ly. We see a potential upside of 15 percent to P523 per share in 2012 and another 15 percent to P602 in 2013.”

Semirara (SCC)

Mining

“Semirara combines the twin opportunit­ies of power generation and coal mining. It is the Philippine­s’ leading coal producer which this year will produce around seven million tones, 70 percent for domestic use by local power plants and 30 percent for export to China. In 2009, Semirara successful­ly acquired from Napocor the two Calaca power plants with a rated capacity of 600 megawatts, at very attractive terms. Calaca II plant has undergone its comprehens­ive rehabilita­tion in 2011 and is now operating at a de-rated capacity of 260 megawatts. Calaca I plant is now under rehabilita­tion and is scheduled to be operationa­l in August 2012. At the same time, an expansion plan for another 600 megawatts is in the works with the first two plants of 150MW each under constructi­on. Net profit for 2012 is forecast at P7.45 billion (70 percent from coal mining and 30 percent from power generation) equivalent to an earnings per share of P21 or a P/E of 10.5x at the recent price of P220.00. Cash dividend yield is 5.45 percent. In 2013, net profit is expected to surge to P9.58 billion or P27.00 per share for a P/E of 8.1x. It’s a compelling buy when compared to the PSEi PE ratio of 16x. Target price for 2012 is P242 and P290 for 2013.”

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