SKAGEN Kon-Tiki
Transcription
SKAGEN Kon-Tiki
SKAGEN Kon-Tiki Status Report – March 2015 The art of common sense Highlights – March 2015 • SKAGEN Kon-Tiki rose 1.0% while the MSCI Emerging Markets index increased 2.1% in March measured in SEK. Most of the difference is due to a strong month for Chinese equities (+6% in EUR), to which we have significantly less exposure than the index. We are carefully monitoring our holdings there as lower growth expectations for China and uncertainties around reform implementation could produce near-term volatility in Chinese equities. • In the Kon-Tiki portfolio, Great Wall Motor continues to be the top contributor and released fairly good February figures with further growth from three new high end models. Samsung Electronics also contributed nicely as its most recent limited introduction of the S6 phone garnered praise from the technology community. The largest negative contributor was Vale, which was under pressure from continued macro headwinds in Brazil and the lower iron ore price. State Bank of India also had a weak month underperforming the Indian bank index ahead of the upcoming partial sale of the government stake which has caused selling pressure to build up. • We added to our position in Sabanci following a recent meeting with the company, which confirmed our investment case. We also took advantage of weakness in the Brazilian market and increased our positions in bank Banrisul and retailer CBD. • China (Shanghai) (+19%) and Nigeria (+13%), following the first successful presidential bid by a non-incumbent, were among the top performing markets. At the other end of the spectrum, Brazil (-8%) and Turkey (-3%) were among the bottom performers measured in EUR. • EM valuations relative to DM are currently at a c.30% discount with the potential for selected companies to achieve re-ratings after four years of EM underperforming DM. • The fund’s portfolio is currently valued at P/E 2015e of 8.2x and P/B of 1.1x compared with 12.0x and 1.6x for the Emerging Markets index. 2 Results, March 2015 SEK, net of fees A SKAGEN Kon-Tiki A EM Index SKAGEN Kon Tiki A MSCI EM Index Excess return March 1,0% 2,1% 1Q 8,7% 12,7% YTD 8,7% 12,7% 1 Year 20,1% 33,9% 3 years 8,5% 9,6% 5 years 5,2% 5,5% 10 Years 13,9% 10,9% Since inception* 15,7% 9,3% -1,1% -4,0% -4,0% -13,9% -1,0% -0,3% 3,1% 6,5% Note: All returns beyond 12 months are annualised (geometric return) * Inception date: 5 April 2002 3 SKAGEN Kon-Tiki has beaten the index in 11/13 calendar years Percent SKAGEN Kon-Tiki A* (EUR) MSCI EM Index (EUR) 92 76 73 64 54 30 35 19 18 17 29 27 27 26 11 16 11 11 15 5 3 -7 -13 -16 -26 -30 -48 -51 2002 2003 2004 2005 Note: All figures in EUR, net of fees * Inception date: 5 April 2002 4 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 YTD Emerging markets, March 2015 (in EUR) Percent China (local) Nigeria Hungary South Korea Phillippines China (International) Indonesia MSCI EM Index Poland Egypt MSCI World Index USA Malaysia Russia SKAGEN Kon-Tiki A Chile Mexico Czech Kenya Slovenia Thailand South Africa Croatia India Ghana Turkey Vietnam Brazil 5 19 13 9 6 6 6 6 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 -1 -1 -1 -1 -3 -3 -3 -8 Emerging markets, YTD 2015 (in EUR) Percent China (local) Russia Phillippines Hungary South Korea India China (International) Thailand Kenya MSCI World Index MSCI EM Index Indonesia USA Vietnam South Africa Chile Malaysia SKAGEN Kon-Tiki A Mexico Czech Egypt Poland Pakistan Turkey Nigeria Brazil Ghana 6 31 26 26 24 19 17 16 16 16 15 15 14 14 14 14 12 11 11 11 10 9 9 7 -4 -4 -4 -7 Cumulative net flows (USDbn) As of Mar 31, 2015 7 EM versus DM Composite PMIs As of March, 2015 Expansion Contraction 8 P/E Multiples EM vs DM 12-month trailing, Jan’95 – Mar’15 Emerging Markets P/E Developed Markets P/E 45 40 35 30 25 Hist. Avg 21 20 Hist. Avg 15 14 10 5 0 Source: Bloomberg, SKAGEN research. 9 P/B for EM at a discount to DM Last, Jan’95 - Mar’15 Emerging Markets P/B Developed Markets P/B 4,5 4 3,5 3 Hist. Avg 2,5 2,4 2 Hist. Avg 1,5 1,5 1 0,5 0 Source: Bloomberg, SKAGEN research. 10 Main contributors MTD 2015 Largest positive contributors Company Largest detractors NOK Millions Company NOK Millions Great Wall Motor 397 ##### Vale -157 Samsung Electronics 396 ##### State Bank of India -142 Bharti Airtel 280 ##### Banrisul -131 Hyundai Motor 211 ##### Marfrig Global Foods -105 X5 Retail Group 131 ##### Tullow Oil -102 Naspers 116 ##### Hindalco -75 AP Moeller - Maersk 92 ##### Cosan -72 GCL-Poly Energy Holdings 68 ##### Aveng -57 KIWOOM Securities 64 ##### Tech Mahindra -54 ABB 56 ##### Mahindra & Mahindra -52 Value Creation MTD (NOK MM): NB: Contribution to absolute return 11 1456 Main contributors QTD 2015 Largest positive contributors Company Largest detractors NOK Millions Company NOK Millions Great Wall Motor 752 8E+08 Hyundai Motor -346 Samsung Electronics 498 5E+08 Banrisul -269 Bharti Airtel 360 4E+08 Marfrig Global Foods -238 AP Moeller - Maersk 311 3E+08 Vale -233 Naspers 255 3E+08 Sabanci -172 Lenovo Group 189 2E+08 State Bank of India -142 KIWOOM Securities 188 2E+08 Tullow Oil -124 UPL 164 2E+08 Empresas ICA -84 X5 Retail Group 162 2E+08 Cosan -83 Shiseido 159 2E+08 Aveng -80 Value Creation QTD (NOK MM): NB: Contribution to absolute return 12 3103 Holdings increased and decreased, March 2015 Key buys in March CBD We continued buying into the Brazilian food and non-food retail operator, which we think has good growth momentum and is attractively valued at 0.3x Price/Sales and 5.0x EV/EBITDA for 2015. Sabanci Recent weakness in the stock price presents an opportunity to increase our position in the Turkish conglomerate. The shares are cheaply valued at book value for a 15% RoE target, which is within reach. Banrisul We added to our position as the stock headed lower on macro headwinds in Brazil. Valuation for this well-capitalised bank is attractive at below book value for a stock with a 7% yield. Key sells in March OCI NV (out) We exited the position as the stock reached our price target. UIE (out) We exited the position as the stock reached our price target. Bharti Airtel The stock price approached our target and we reduced the position. Great Wall Motor The stock price approached our target and we reduced the position. Kiwoom Securities The stock price approached our target and we reduced the position. Casino We switched out of Casino shares into CBD at a more attractive valuation. 13 Most important changes YTD 2015 Holdings increased Holdings reduced Q1 Q1 Petroleo Brasileiro Cia Brasileira Hitachi Sabanci Banrisul Vale Euronav Hindalco Knightsbridge Shipping Cosan Golar LNG 14 (New) (New) Heineken OCI Rocket Internet UIE Afren Great Wall Motor Bharti Airtel DIA Casino Guichard Perrachon Kiwoom Securities AP Moeller - Maersk Familymart Tech Mahindra Sistema Samsung Electronics Massmart Apollo Tyres Exxaro Resources Yingli Green Energy Harbin Electric Lenovo Group Mahindra & Mahindra Kuribayashi Steamship Avance Gas Holding UPM-Kymmene (Out) (Out) (Out) (Out) (Out) Largest holdings SKAGEN Kon-Tiki, end of March 2015 Holding Price size, % P/E P/E P/BV Div. yield Price Upside 2014e 2015e last 14e % target % Samsung Electronics 8,4 1 104 000 7,1 6,7 1,0 1,8 1 500 000 36 Hyundai Motor 7,3 111 000 3,9 3,6 0,5 2,7 250 000 125 Great Wall Motor 4,9 54,8 16,5 11,2 4,3 1,8 60 9 State Bank of India 3,7 267 10,7 8,1 1,2 1,5 450 69 Mahindra & Mahindra 3,4 1 188 14,0 11,9 3,0 1,3 1 500 26 Bharti Airtel 2,9 393 24,6 19,7 2,6 0,5 450 14 ABB 2,9 183 22,0 15,3 3,4 2,7 205 12 Sabanci Holding 2,7 9,18 9,0 7,7 1,0 1,1 14 53 AP Moller-Maersk 2,5 14 540 11,2 10,0 1,2 2,1 15 500 7 Naspers 2,4 1 859 53,1 37,2 9,8 0,3 2 100 13 Lenovo 2,2 11,3 17,4 12,6 3,9 2,9 14 24 Richter Gedeon 1,9 3 840 29,0 14,0 1,3 1,5 5 000 30 Weighted top 12 45,3 9,2 7,8 1,2 1,8 44 Weighted top 35 72,4 10,5 8,2 1,1 2,1 46 Emerging market index 13,1 12,0 1,6 2,6 Top 35 @ price target 16,3 12,6 1,8 1,4 Note: Valuation estimates are based on SKAGEN Kon-Tiki’s independent analysis and may vary from consensus estimates. 15 SKAGEN Kon-Tiki is valued at a meaningful discount to EM despite a higher weight in ‘expensive’ sectors and low weight in ‘cheap’ sectors 14 13,3 12,1 12 10,5 10 8,2 8 6 4 2 1,5 1,2 0 P/E +1y P/E +2y Kon-Tiki P/BV MSCI EM Index Note: Valuation estimates are based on SKAGEN Kon-Tiki’s independent analysis and may vary from consensus estimates. 16 P/BV for SKAGEN Kon-Tiki versus emerging markets 4 P/BV SKAGEN Kon-Tiki 3,5 P/BV MSCI EM Index 3 2,5 2 1,5 1 0,5 0 As of February, 2015. 17 P/E SKAGEN Kon-Tiki versus emerging markets 18,0 16,0 P/E SKAGEN Kon-Tiki P/E MSCI EM Index 14,0 12,0 10,0 8,0 6,0 4,0 2,0 - As of February, 2015. 18 SKAGEN Kon-Tiki sector and geographical distribution Sector distribution Fund Geographical distribution Index 3 Energy 7 7 Frontier Markets 21 Consumer discretionary 4 1 9 Japan 12 Consumer staples 8 4 2 Health Core EU 16 Banking & Finance 28 North America 12 IT 19 6 Telecom The Nordics 5 0 3 0 2 0 9 0 7 7 South America 0 14 3 4 0 Due to rounding, figures may not always total 100 19 15 16 EMEA 16 Industrials Cash 69 5 Raw materials Utilities 50 Asia ex Japan 8 Cash 4 0 Key earnings releases and corporate news, March 2015 Hyundai Motor (7.3% weight): Great Wall Motor (4.9% weight): 20 Improved governance on the horizon? Summary: Positive news on corporate governance has surfaced recently. First, South Korea’s National Pension Service said it will oppose the reappointment of two external board members at Kia Motors Corp. and Hyundai Mobis Co. because they failed to fulfil their fiduciary duties over a land deal last year. The external directors had delegated their voting rights to representative directors at Kia and Mobis without appropriately discussing the need for the land or how the companies would fund the deal, the pension fund said in an e-mailed statement. The companies denied this. Second, Dutch APG Asset Management proposed at the AGM to set up a corporate governance committee to improve decision making. The committee should report its activities annually and the company should appoint a director who looks into governance issues for shareholders, APG said. Co-CEO said “We are actively studying ways to improve shareholder value” and “We will work to implement the proposal.” Implications for Investment Case: It could be that the disastrous property purchase last year triggered so much anger among external shareholders that management has finally had to pay attention. Losing face and being attacked even by domestic investors is humiliating for a company like Hyundai. The dividend payout hike, share buyback and now, possibly, an independent corporate governance committee are definitely steps in the right direction. FY14 in line with expectations and confirms launch of H8 in April Summary: FY14 net profit of RMB 8.05bn was in line with pre-released numbers from end January and marks a 2% YoY decline. Operating profit of RMB 9.64bn was above pre-release of RMB 9.25bn and is down 3% YoY with sales of RMB 62.6bn, up 10% YoY. 4Q14 net profit rose 13% YoY. Furthermore, the company confirmed the relaunch of its urban higher end SUV, Haval H8, which will go on sale nationwide in conjunction with the Shanghai Auto Show 20-29 April. The H9 was called back twice in 2014 due to a knocking noise in the transmission when running at high speed. The problem is now resolved with the help of ZF Friedrichshafen AG, and the company states that the H9 has also been upgraded in many other respects. Implications for Investment Case: Result is in line so neutral, but re-launch of H8 is positive if correct. Although this will not be a volume seller (likely 2-3k per month or 2-3% of total shipment as the newly introduced H9 rural high end SUV which sold 4,885 units in January and February combined), it proves that it is able to expand its product portfolio to compete with foreign JV brands. Note that this is a vehicle which in size is equal to the BMW X5 which starts from RMB 853k in China. Price-wise, it is comparable to much smaller Honda CRV, Hyundai Tucson and VW Tiguan. Key earnings releases and corporate news, March 2015 (cont.) Solar sector exposure (2.6% weight): X5 Retail Group (1.0% weight): 21 China solar sector; aggressive 2015 installation target Summary: China’s National Energy Administration (NEA) announced solar target for 2015 to be 17.8 GW, ahead of 15 GW from draft plans from January. Installations for 2014 was 11GW missing its initial target of 14 GW. The 2015 target thus marks an increase of 62% versus actual 2014 installation. Key provisions include: 1) China will encourage projects below 20MW, 2) China will dedicate specialised projects to high emission areas such as Hebei, Ningxia, Qinghai and Gansu provinces, 3) Similar to 2014, restrictions have been placed on the modification of investment terms ahead of commercial operation, 4) Unplanned projects from 2014 are cancelled, and to ensure provinces meet their target this year, 2015 targets may be re-provisioned by the end of April to areas which are ready for new installations and 5) Detailed targets were set by provinces. Implications for Investment Case: Positive. Supportive policies in China should be beneficial to solar sector, with China representing +25% of global installation in 2014. If targets are met, China alone would fuel global installation by 15% in 2015. As for 2013 and 2014, installation might be back-end loaded, as provinces need to come up with local development plans by end-April and roll out will also be dependent on equipment prices. Our exposure to the sector is GCL-Poly Energy (1.0% weight), OCI Co (0.9% weight), REC Silicon (0.4% weight) and Yingi Green Energy (0.3% weight). 4Q14 results show continuing margin expansion Summary: X5 reported 4Q14 sales of RUB 181.6m, up 21% YoY and LFL sales up 11.6% YoY. Gross margin as well as EBITDA margin improved 10bps YoY to 24.6% and 7.4%, respectively. Earnings were RUB 4.9bn, up 13% YoY adjusted for a RUB 2.7bn impairment charge on land and buildings. Operating cash flow fell 40% YoY to RUB 13.6bn on declining days payables and increased inventories. Implications for Investment Case: The margin expansion is a positive and key to our investment case, as X5 continues its operational turnaround. The near-term focus will be on food inflation in Russia, which reached 23% in February and the impact on food spending. Declining wages will make shoppers more cautious about food purchases and might turn them towards smaller shops and discount stores to control spending. This should benefit X5, which derives 68% of sales from discount stores. At 0.2x price/sales 2015e, the shares are attractively priced compared to competitor Magnit at 1.1x and EM median at 0.6x. The largest companies in SKAGEN Kon-Tiki Samsung Electronics is one of the world's largest producers of consumer electronics, with over 155,000 employees. The company is global #1 in mobile phones and smartphones, the world's largest in TV and a global #1 in memory chips. Samsung also produces appliances, cameras, printers, PCs and air-conditioning units. Hyundai Motor is the world's 4th largest car maker, including its 39% stake in Kia Motor. Sold 4.7m cars in 2013 and has a c. 5% global market share. Focus on smaller/less expensive cars. Strong position in several countries and in emerging markets such as India and China. Great Wall Motor is a Chinese car manufacturer with sales of over 752,000 units in 2013, up 24% YoY. It has a market share of more than 3.5% in China. Volume is divided between SUVs, sedans and pick-ups, where it is market leader. The cars are certified in the EU and Great Wall exports to 120 markets. It has its own engine and transmission production. Largest bank in India with 17% market share (c. 25% including 5 associate banks). Also presence in life insurance, asset management and investment banking. 15,000 branches, 32,000 ATMs, 130 million customers and over 220,000 employees. Largest Indian overseas bank with 190 offices in 34 countries. Mahindra & Mahindra is the largest manufacturer of utility vehicles in India (50% market share) and tractors (40% market share). It has several listed subsidiaries including Tech Mahindra and M&M financial services (largest financier of UVs and tractors in India). 22 The largest companies in SKAGEN Kon-Tiki (continued) Bharti Airtel is India’s largest private integrated telecom company, and it is a leading global player (#4) with operations in 20 countries across Asia and Africa. They had around 287m customers across their operations at the end of June 2014. They separated out towers in part owned unit (passive infrastructure). Bharti family and SingTel own 30% each. ABB is a leader in power and automation technologies that enable utility and industrial customers to improve performance while lowering environmental impact. The group operates in around 100 countries and employs 146,000 people. Approximately 50% of sales stem from emerging markets and this share is rapidly increasing. Turkey’s leading and financial conglomerate in sectors including financial services, energy, cement, retail and industrials. The company has 10 companies currently listed on the Istanbul Stock Exchange and operates in 18 countries across Europe, the Middle East, Asia, North Africa and North and South America. Controlled by the Sabanci family. AP Møller-Maersk is a Danish conglomerate with four core businesses which include Maersk Line (container shipping), APM Terminals (global terminal network in 68 countries), Maersk Oil and Maersk Drilling. The company is going through a process of streamlining the business by terminating non-core and underperforming assets. South-African listed media and internet holding company incorporated in 1915. They have a strong Pay-TV business in South-Africa and Sub-Saharan African countries and a fast growing internet division focused on commerce, communities, content, communication and games. They hold a 34% stake in Chinese Tencent and 29% of Russian Mail.ru. 23 Additional information 24 Market Cap as % of nominal GDP: EM vs US 25 Weekly net flows to EM as % of AUM*, by region (as of Mar 31, 2015) *Note: AUM at each week’s start; over past 4 weeks. Source: EPFR, Samsung Securities. 26 Cumulative performance in USD Dec ’12 - Mar ’15 140 130 120 110 100 90 80 Dec-12 Mar-13 Jun-13 Sep-13 Dec-13 Emerging Markets Source: Bloomberg, SKAGEN research. 27 Mar-14 Jun-14 Sep-14 Developed Markets Dec-14 Mar-15 EM equity volatility MSCI EM Index 30-day implied volatility, as of Mar 31, 2015 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Source: Bloomberg, SKAGEN research. 28 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 For more information please visit: Our latest Market report Information about SKAGEN Kon-Tiki A on our web pages Unless otherwise stated, all performance data in this report relates to class A units and is net of fees. Historical returns are no guarantee for future returns. Future returns will depend, inter alia, on market developments, the fund manager’s skill, the fund’s risk profile and subscription and management fees. The return may become negative as a result of negative price developments. SKAGEN seeks to the best of its ability to ensure that all information given in this report is correct, however, makes reservations regarding possible errors and omissions. Statements in the report reflect the portfolio managers’ viewpoint at a given time, and this viewpoint may be changed without notice. The report should not be perceived as an offer or recommendation to buy or sell financial instruments. SKAGEN does not assume responsibility for direct or indirect loss or expenses incurred through use or understanding of the report. Employees of SKAGEN AS may be owners of securities issued by companies that are either referred to in this report or are part of the fund's portfolio. The art of common sense