Presentación de PowerPoint
Transcription
Presentación de PowerPoint
Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Investment Highlights Page 2 Key value drivers • Long-term concession investments in attractive locations in Mexico • Established regulatory framework • Track record of consistent passenger growth • Balanced mix of international and domestic traffic • Successful, market leading commercial business strategy • Strong cash flow profile and solid balance sheet • Robust corporate governance and board of directors with experienced management Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters 50 year airport concessions from November 1998 in attractive locations in Mexico Page 3 Geographical presence Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Cancún: Close to major U.S. destinations Page 4 Illustrative flight times from various destinations Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Private airports / airport groups listed on global stock exchanges Page 5 ASUR and GAP are the only Latin American Airport Groups listed on NYSE Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Ownership overview Page 6 FCHP & ADO Strategic Matters Regulated + Non Regulated Revenues Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Dual Till System Financial Information Established regulatory framework with a track record of rate setting precedents Page 7 Note: 2011 Revenues per PAX, expressed In nominal pesos as of Dec 2011; passenger traffic excludes transit and general aviation passengers Visibility of capital expenditure requirements through 2013 Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters MDP investment commitments Page 8 9,902M invested 1999-2011 (expressed in June 2012 Million Pesos) 1,318 1,209 1,015 677 496 269 2000 1 2001 855 2002 1,038 1,047 1,109 1,012 699 626 170 2003 242 2 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 • Visibility on capital expenditure requirements, as maximum rate negotiated along with Master Development Plan (MDP) is a function of programmed capex • Key projects completed: • Key future projects: 1999: Government capex backlog Terminal building expansion in Huatulco, Mérida, Oaxaca, Veracruz and Villahermosa 2005: 9/11 security standards 2006-2007:Terminal 3 and second runway in Cancun Relocation of the General Aviation Apron in Cancun Passenger flow separation in Cancun Runway expansion in Huatulco Taxiway expansion in Veracruz 1 Committed investments from May 1999 to Dec 2000 2 242 million pesos have been paid each year (anticipated) – Terminal 3 & Second Runway – Cancún Airport Note: Committed investments according to Master Development Plan, expressed in million pesos as of June 2012 based on the Mexican construction price index in accordance with the terms of the Master Development Plan; ;2012 & 2013 Estimated ASUR’s airports are among the most frequented in Mexico Strategic Matters Mexican Airports by PAX (thousand PAX) Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Airport Company Overview 2011 All of Mexico 1 1 Page 9 Int PAX Dom PAX Total PAX Total PAX 06-11 CAGR 10,083 7,457 17,540 4.90% 7,152 13,055 20,208 -0.30% 1,784 9,988 11,773 0.00% 28,904 53,155 82,058 2.20% 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Pax (‘000s) 2010 2011 Mexico City 24,131 Cancún 12,439 Guadalajara 6,954 Monterrey 5,380 Tijuana 3,650 Los Cabos 2,746 Puerto Vallarta 2,735 Toluca 2,271 Mérida 1,136 Hermosillo 1,138 Culiacán 1,060 Veracruz 834 Guanajuato 854 Villahermosa 729 Chihuahua 828 Mazatlán 756 Ciudad Juárez 634 Acapulco 737 Zihuatanejo 497 Huatulco 386 26,369 13,023 7,202 5,583 3,501 2,807 2,536 1,689 1,226 1,201 1,071 867 854 851 782 722 673 596 481 460 Var % 11 vs. 10 9.3% 4.7% 3.6% 3.8% -4.1% 2.2% -7.3% -25.6% 7.9% 5.5% 1.0% 4.0% 0.0% 16.8% -5.6% -4.4% 6.2% -19.1% -3.2% 19.2% According to the Communications and Transport Ministry’s website Source: Company financials, AICM website: Note: Selected airport sample includes ASUR, GAP, OMA and OHL concessions and the Mexico City airport; PAX traffic excludes transit and general aviation PAX Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Revenue and passenger breakdown Page 10 2011 Revenue per PAX: Ps.220 2011 Revenues Ps.3,859M by business Non-aeronautical 35% Commercial 31% by airport Regulated 69% Other 11.3% Villahermosa 3.6% Merida 5.8% Cancun 79.3% Aeronautical 65% 2011 PAX 17.5M by type by airport Other 13.8% Veracruz 4.9% Domestic 43% Merida 7.0% International Cancun 74.2% 57% Source: Company filings; Note: Non-aeronautical revenues are derived from leasing of space in airports to airlines, restaurants, retailers and other commercial tenants and access fees collected from third parties providing complementary services (such as catering, handling, and ground transport). Commercial revenues are all non-aeronautical and include revenues related to retail (duty free & duty paid), food & beverages, advertising, banking & foreign exchange, car rental, car parking, ground transport, teleservices and others. Revenues from Construction Services are not included. PAX traffic excludes transit and general aviation. Company Overview Page 11 International Cancun Airport 5.6 6.2 7.4 7.8 8.5 8.0 8.3 9.4 9.8 10.6 11.4 11.2 11.0 12.2 13.9 13.3 13.8 10.1 8.6 5.0 3.1 2.6 3.0 2.8 3.4 3.9 3.5 4.3 3.6 4.4 4.0 4.1 4.8 5.1 5.9 5.4 6.2 5.9 7.0 6.8 6.6 6.4 7.7 7.6 7.1 10.0 8.7 8.1 9.3 10.1 9.8 9.1 8.8 12.6 8.0 11.3 12.4 13.0 13.4 14.6 Domestic 16.2 17.8 15.5 16.7 17.5 1990 – 2011 CAGR: 5.6% 11.2 8.2 9.7 7.9 7.7 5.5 6.4 7.7 (1.8) (2.2) 10.9 14.0 (4.1) 3.4 17.8 9.3 (12.5) 7.6 Source: ASA from 1990-1998. ASUR management thereafter Note: Transit and general aviation excluded 4.9 CAGR ’90–’11 (INT’L): CAGR ’90–’11 (DOM): CAGR ’90–’11 (Cancun): 9M12 9M11 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 8.4 2001 9.0 (5.9) 3.8 13.3 4.3 2000 1999 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 10.7 19.4 5.4 1998 YOY Growth (%) 1991 3.0 3.4 4.3 4.3 4.9 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.4 4.7 4.7 4.6 4.6 5.1 5.3 5.2 5.8 7.2 7.7 6.7 6.9 7.5 1990 Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters ASUR traffic evolution 9.3 6.7% 4.4% 7.2% ASUR has a balanced mix of domestic and international traffic Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Passenger traffic by Origin – Destination (million PAX) Page 12 Region % Change % of total 11 vs. 10 2011 1 CAGR 99-11 Avg. GDP 99-10 43.9 3.6 2.4 (0.1) 35.3 3.5 2.1 1.3 10.2 7.6 5.7 1.8 1.5 1.7 10.9 9.8 15.8 2.5 0.3 0.5 0.6 17.5 3.5 1.4 3.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 8.1 4.9 100 4.3 3.7 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 Mexico 5.0 5.0 4.9 4.8 5.3 5.6 5.5 5.9 7.4 8.1 7.0 7.2 7.7 6.2 USA 4.1 4.6 4.5 4.4 4.9 5.9 5.6 5.3 6.0 6.5 5.9 6.2 6.2 Europe 0.7 0.9 0.9 0.8 1.0 1.3 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.0 1.2 Canada 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.8 0.8 1.0 1.3 1.3 Latin America 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.4 Asia & Others 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 ASUR 99 10.6 11.4 11.3 10.9 12.2 13.9 13.4 13.6 16.1 17.8 15.5 16.7 17.5 1 Note: % of total refers to 2011 figure Note: Excludes transit and general aviation; Source for real GDP growth estimates: International Monetary Fund – average annual real GDP growth from 1999-2010 Historically, traffic has recovered and grown after exogenous events Company Overview Page 13 Sep. '08: Financial Crisis 18 May '09: AH1N1 18.8M Oct. '05: Hurricane Wilma 16 Jul. '05: Hurricane Emily 14 Note: Excludes transit and general aviation passengers Passenger traffic during last 12-months at each specific date (million PAX) 12 Sep. '01: 9/11 10.4M 8.4M 10 8 6 4 2 0 mar-00 ago-00 ene-01 jun-01 nov-01 abr-02 sep-02 feb-03 jul-03 dic-03 may-04 oct-04 mar-05 ago-05 ene-06 jun-06 nov-06 abr-07 sep-07 feb-08 jul-08 dic-08 may-09 oct-09 mar-10 ago-10 ene-11 jun-11 nov-11 abr-12 sep-12 Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters 20 Domestic EVENT RECOVERY AFTER 13 months Sep ‘01: 9/11 16 months Oct ‘05: H. Wilma 26 months May ‘09: H1N1 International Total Type of PAX Historical Max. (%) Aug 12 vs. Hist. Max Domestic International TOTAL Sep’12 Sep ’12 Sep ’12 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% Available Airplanes in Mexico 2014 Industry Estimates: 304 available airplanes 72 300 40 Available Airplanes Operational Commercial Information Revenues 0 224 200 150 -40 -80 100 -120 (155) 50 jun-12 feb-12 oct-11 jun-11 feb-11 oct-10 feb-10 jun-10 oct-09 jun-09 feb-09 INTERJET VOLARIS AEROMEXICO VIVAAEROBUS AEROMAR MAGNICHARTERS GLOBAL AIR Subtotal Available airplanes Lost airplanes - Suspended Airlines New airplanes - Existing airlines jun-08 jun-12 New Airplanes 11 17 94 7 14 5 4 35 36 109 18 16 8 2 24 19 15 11 2 3 (2) (50)% 72 47% 152 224 b) Suspended Airlines jun-08 jun-12 Lost Airplanes MEXICANA ALMA AEROCALIFORNIA AVOLAR ALADIA AVIACSA NOVA AIR 78 15 22 8 3 26 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (78) (15) (22) (8) (3) (26) (3) Subtotal 155 0 (155) -160 -200 jun-08 0 Source: www.airfleets.net www.aerotransport.org a) Existing Airlines 80 250 Regulation Company Overview Page 14 307 Lost vs. New Airplanes Financial Information 350 oct-08 Strategic Matters After 4 years, Mexico hasn’t recovered the level of Airplanes Available Var. % 218% 112% 16% 157% 14% 60% Nominal CAGR 2000 – 2011: 22.1% (Mexican CPI CAGR 2000-2010: 4.4%) 50.0 Selected Int 1 20.0 10.0 ASUR GAP OMA 0.0 21.2 30.0 17.0 2.8 3.4 31.5 40.0 34.9 34.8 34.9 4.9 55.9 44.1 60.0 46.3 50.6 49.3 57.9 60.6 61.3 70.0 45.9 48.6 10 60.1 80.0 63.8 64.4 66.2 72.4 74.6 (Ps. / passenger in Mexican pesos as of date reported) vs. peers (US$/PAX) 8.1 10.1 7.5 12.5 Regulation Company Overview Page 15 Commercial revenues per passenger per quarter evolution 2011 commercial revenue per PAX Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Successful commercial strategy 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 12 1 International average 2010 includes figures for Fraport, TAV Airports, Copenhagen Airports, Vienna Airport, Aeroports do Paris and Zurich Airport; Note: OMA commercial revenues include parking, advertising, leasing, retail stores, car rental, food & beverage, communications, financial services, ground transportation and time-sharing; GAP commercial revenues include parking, leasing, retail stores, food & beverage, car rentals, time-share, duty free, advertising, communications, financial services and ground transportation; Fraport commercial revenues include real estate, retail, parking, energy supply, advertising and rents; TAV Airports commercial revenues include catering and duty free; Copenhagen Airports commercial revenues include shopping centers, car parking, rents, hotel operations and other services; Vienna Airport commercial revenues include parking, rentals, advertising, shopping and gastronomy; Aeroports do Paris commercial revenues include retail stores, duty free, rentals, car parking, industrial services, shops, bars, restaurants, leasing and rentals; Zurich Airport commercial revenues include retail stores, duty free,advertising, car rentals, ground transportation, financial services, food & beverage, rentals and leasing; Converted to US$ at 2011 average FX of Ps.12.35/US$, 1.39 EUR/US$ and 0.92 US$/CHF where applicable; Note: Commercial revenue per passenger recorded in 3Q’05 reflects a one time payment from Dufry Mexico of Ps.39.5mm; Commercial revenue recorded in 4Q’06 reflects a one time payment of Ps.19.1mm from Aldeasa for a new concession contract at Terminal 3 in Cancun International. Passenger traffic excludes transit and general aviation; Commercial revenue per passenger CAGR based on full year 2000 and full year 2011 figures Total Revenues CAGR 1999 – 2011: 12.9% Not including Revenues from Construction Services Aeronautical Non-Aeronautical Construction CAGR ’06–’11: 13.5% 3000 2500 4,573 4,235 2000 1500 714 Operational Commercial Information Revenues Regulation Company Overview Page 16 EBITDA & EBITDA Margin (Ps. Mm) 1999 – 2011 Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Track record of consistent revenue growth and profitability 1,317 1,707 61.3% 1,985 1,967 2,104 62.7% 62.8% 1000 58.8% 741 3,169 3,131 2,786 1,976 2,064 897 1,159 1,164 1,241 171 1,467 989 607 239 989 1,001 1,155 1,211 1,067 1,089 895 2000 2001 2002 2003 2005 2006 61% Growth rates: ’99 – ’11 CAGR (%) 2,102 2,043 2,283 1,891 2007 60.2% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2010 EBITDA margin calculated without Revenues from Construction Services for comparability with previous periods 2,498 Total revenues EBITDA Net income 2004 63% 57% Mexican CPI 1999 65% 59% Passenger traffic 1,481 1,457 1,588 64.2% 0 1,361 69% 67% 500 651 311 176 137 759 495 2,239 2,477 2008 2009 2010 2011 Figures for 2010 & 2011 reflect adoption of MIFRS-17 Note: From 1999 to 2007 figures in nominal Mexican pesos adjusted for inflation as of Dec. 31st of each year 4.3% 12.9% 14.6% 21.9% 4.8% Source for Mexican CPI: IMF; Note: CAGRs calculated in Mexican peso terms; Revenues from Construction Services not included; passenger figures exclude passengers in transit or general aviation Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters ASUR has positively differentiated itself… Page 17 ACI named Cancun the best airport in Latin America and 3rd worldwide in its range in 2011 Revenue per PAX in 2011 CAGR in Revenues 2006 – 2011 (%) 11.5% 261 244 220 237 8.7% 209 193 5.9% The first column for each airport group excludes Revenues from Construction Services; the second column includes these revenues. CAGR in PAX Traffic 2006 – 2011 (%) CAGR in EBITDA 2006 – 2011 (%) 13.5% 4.9% 2.2% -0.3% 0.0% Mexico Aggregate 5.8% 7.2% Operating leverage as passenger traffic recovers Strategic Matters Revenues have grown at a faster rate than total costs and PAX traffic Page 18 • Growth rates: ’06 – ’11 CAGR (%) EBITDA margins have increased despite major exogenous events such as the H1N1 outbreak, significant increase in crude oil prices and the global financial crisis Passenger traffic Revenues EBITDA Net Income 4.9% 11.5% 13.5% 24.7% Cost of services Administrative services Total costs Mexican inflation (CPI) Mexican GDP growth 2011 operating cost breakdown (%) Revenue and cost per PAX comparison (Ps./PAX) Concession fee Note: growth rates in Mexican peso terms; Mexican inflation growth rate calculated as the % change in CPI indexed to 2006; total costs include concession fee, technical assistance, administrative services, costs of services and D&A; passenger traffic excludes transit and general aviation passengers 1Note: revenue per passenger figures does not include construction revenue Administrative Revenues 41 7 152 42 6 157 52 7 161 47 8 167 37 6 161 45 6 167 46 7 175 53 7 172 37 5 173 39 6 175 50 6 175 60 8 193 39 6 203 58 8 201 53 8 198 57 10 205 39 8 207 52 9 210 49 10 208 59 12 212 44 8 217 50 9 218 54 10 217 59 11 229 44 8 234 49 10 234 D&A Technical assistance 10% 10% 7% 22% 51% Cost of Services Costs of services Administrative services 7.1% 11.5% 4.6% 4.4% 2.2% 1Q'06 2Q'06 3Q'06 4Q'06 1Q'07 2Q'07 3Q'07 4Q'07 1Q'08 2Q'08 3Q'08 4Q'08 1Q'09 2Q'09 3Q'09 4Q'09 1Q'10 2Q'10 3Q'10 4Q'10 1Q'11 2Q'11 3Q'11 4Q'11 1Q'12 2Q'12 Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Highlights 3Q’10: Does not reflect the Ps.128.0 million increase in the reserve for doubtful accounts resulting from the bankruptcy announced by Grupo Mexicana de Aviación Dividends evolution 1999 - 2011 (Ps. thousands) 1 2006 Ps. 6.28 Ps. 3.60 per share 1,080 Ps. 3.00 per share 900 750 Ps. 2.50 per share per share 1,884 Ps. 2.00 per share 600 Ps. 0.75 per share 225 205 Ps. 0.68 per share 186 Ps. 0.62 per share 168 Ps. 0.56 per share 444 0 2011 150 Ps. 0.50 per share 2010 Ps. 1.48 per share 2009 Net income Retained earnings Dividends paid 0 2008 1,321 1,049 2007 1,290 1,042 1,719 (Ps. million) 229 Regulation Company Overview Page 19 Net Income, retained earnings and dividends evolution EBITDA – CAPEX Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Profitability indicators 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 1 Note: Figures in nominal Mexican pesos for the respective year; for illustrative purposes, dividend in each year in the chart above relates to the dividend paid in nominal pesos in the year thereafter, i.e. dividend shown in year (x) in the chart above is actually the dividend paid in year (x+1) according to ASUR financial statements; 2 Note: 2010 & 2011 figures reflect the adoption of INIF 17 3 Note: 2011 dividend approved by the Annual General Shareholders’ Meeting and paid in May 17th, 2012 Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters Robust corporate governance and board of directors Board of Audit Operations Nom & Comp Acq. & Contracts Directors Committee Committee Committee Committee High Corporate Governance Standards Fernando Chico Pardo X X X José Antonio Pérez Antón CEO of Grupo ADO X X X Roberto Servitje Sendra1 Chairman of Grupo Bimbo X Ricardo Guajardo Touche1 Former president of BBVA Bancomer X X Francisco Garza Zambrano1 President of CEMEX North America X X Guillermo Ortiz Martinez1 X X Founder and president of Promecap Former Governor of Mexico Central Bank for 12 years 1 Rasmus Christiansen X Luis Chico Pardo X Aurelio Pérez Alonso X CEO of Copenhagen Airports International A/S Regulation Former economist at the Bank of Mexico Deputy Chief Executive Officer of Grupo ADO Company Overview • Page 20 X X 1 Five out of nine board members are independent X X X X • Sarbanes-Oxley compliant • Four committees led by board members • Audit committee comprised of 3 independent members of the board of directors Strategic Matters Experienced management team Long Serving Management Fernando Chico Pardo President Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information with company since 2005 Page 21 Adolfo Castro Rivas Agustín Arellano R. with company since 2000 with company since 2010 (experience in the industry for 35 years) Claudio Góngora Morales Manuel Gutiérrez Sola with company since 1999 with company since 2000 Carlos Trueba Coll Héctor Navarrete Muñoz with company since 1998 with company since 1999 Chief Executive and Financial Officer Head of Investor Relations General Counsel General Director of Cancún Airport Chief Infrastructure Officer Chief Commercial Officer General Director of Regional Airports Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters What’s Next? Page 22 Short & Long Term Objectives • Further develop our commercial business • Improve our passenger volumes • World Class service – ASQ Program • Improve capital structure • Monitor new business opportunities Company Overview Regulation Operational Commercial Information Revenues Financial Information Strategic Matters ASUR: International Presence in Puerto Rico Page 23 Aerosatar: Limited liability company owned by ASUR (50%) & Highstar (50%) LMM • Luis Munoz Marin International Airport, in San Juan Puerto Rico (8.5M PAX / yr) • July 24th: Aerostar signed a lease agreement with the Puerto Rico Ports Authority: ‐ Term of 40 years ‐ Upfront payment of $615M USD (to be funded by a mixture of debt financing incurred by Aerostar and equity contributions by each of ASUR and Highstar Capital) ‐ Regardless of the PAX traffic, Airlines serving LMM will collectively make aggregate payments of $62M USD / yr for the first five years; years 6-40 the payment will be increased annually by the U.S. CPI ‐ Revenue-sharing payments to PRPA: fixed at $2.5M USD first five years; 5% of gross airport revenues (years 6-30); 10% of gross airport revenues (years 31-40) ‐ Capital Improvement projects: $34M USD • Next Steps: Application for a Operating Certificate by FAA