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Post Info TOPIC: SPH


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SPH Corporate Earning announcement dates


Q106 Corporate Earning announcement dates is on 6 Jan 2006

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RE: SPH


Extracted from DBS Vickers.

Singapore Press Holdings Disappointing November AdEx numbers


Nielsen Media released their November advertising expenditure figures, which indicate that SPH's display advertising volume in November fell by 8.2% from last year. These figures also show that Today has been gaining a larger slice of the newspaper advertising pie at the expense of SPH.

Meanwhile, we maintain our estimates, which expect c.4% growth in newspaper revenues for SPH but investors should take note that the latest AdEx numbers indicate that SPH's operating growth outlook remains tepid. Maintain HOLD with a target price of S$4.42.

Weak November AdEx numbers. Nielsen Media released their November advertising expenditure figures, which indicate that SPH's display advertising volume in November fell by 8.2% from last year. The figures also indicate that SPH's 1Q06 display advertising (September to November) has fallen by 3.2% y-o-y. Sequentially, SPH's November display advertising volume fell by 3.3% from October's figures.


Losing market share to Today. Advertising display for Today has increased by 15% y-o-y from September to November, in contrast to the 3.2% decline in SPH's newspapers. Nielsen Media's figures also indicate that SPH has been losing market share to Today steadily over the last 5 years. Whilst SPH's market share (based on gross AdEx) of newspaper advertising in Jan 2004 was c. 92%, it has since fallen to 85% in Nov 2005. We maintain our estimates for SPH which imply a 4% growth in newspaper revenues, which we believe will come from higher ad rates and Singapore's improving economy, expected to grow above 5% in 2006. SPH holds a 40% stake in MediaCorp Press, which owns Today.

Maintain HOLD, TP S$4.42. This is based on sum-of-parts valuation, which can be broken down into S$3.05 for the core Newspaper business (12x FY07 EV/EBITDA for Newspaper earnings), S$1.09 for SPH's properties and S$0.67 for the Group's cash and investment holdings, less debt of c. S$0.39. We maintain HOLD for SPH. SPH is attractive for risk-averse investors as it offers an attractive net yield of 5.7%.

-- Edited by tfwee at 16:04, 2005-12-22

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SPH - OCBC


Extracts fm OCBC Report dated 2-Nov-05,

Favourable macro environment

Unjustified share price weakness. Recent weakness in Singapore Press Holdings’ (SPH) share price is unjustified, as the stock tumbled along with the benchmark Straits Times Index (STI). Since the peak in early October 2005, SPH has shed 8.6% vs. -5.9% for the STI. The larger decline appears to be out of step against a backdrop of favourable operating environment given recent strong 3Q05 economic data and SPH’s cyclical nature (between 1994 to 2005, SPH’s newspaper ad growth correlates 82% with Singapore’s nominal GDP growth). Recently, we also upgraded Singapore’s 2005 GDP growth target to 5% from 4.5% vs. official forecast of 3.5% to 4.5%.

Results for FY05 were in line. As a recap, SPH reported a set of in-line FY05 results. Revenue rose 3.9% to hit the S$1b mark, with net earnings falling 9.4% to S$494.7m, mainly due to exceptional losses associated with the media merger. One key feature was the drive to keep costs under control, resulting in operating earnings rising 12.7% to S$380.8m. The completion of the restructuring of the broadcast business and the cessation of Streats mean a return to SPH’s dominance in the print media business and will help refocus the growth in its core operations. This allows for more pricing power, as shown in the upcoming ad rate increases (effective 1 Nov 05 for Lianhe WanBao and Shin Min Daily: 3% weekend and 10% weekday; effective 1 Jan 06 Straits Times weekend and Sunday Times: 3%).

Upgrade to BUY on price upside. Based on our sum of the parts valuation, we reiterate SPH’s target price at S$5.15, with core operations valued at S$4.28 and non-core assets valued at 86 cents (i.e. for Paragon, Times Industrial Building, and the 14.1% holding in MobileOne). SPH at its FY05 results declared a net final dividend of 15.8 cents, i.e. net normal dividend of 8 cents and special dividend of 7.8 cents, bringing full year FY05 dividend to 22.8 cents. Ex date is 8 Dec 05. Based on the potential price upside of 14%, we thus upgrade our recommendation on SPH to a BUY from HOLD



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SPH - Goldman Sachs


Extracts fm Goldman Sachs Report dated 17-Oct-05,

Fundamentals not very supportive of yield / proxy / restructuring arguments. With P/E multiples at a 35% premium to comparable publishers, we believe that investors own SPH for some combination of macro reasons: yield, proxy to Singapore economy, sale of non-core assets.

P/E has moved from parity to 35% premium over similar US publishers 
Newspaper publishers, including SPH, historically traded at high-teen earnings multiples. Since 2003, US newspapers have derated to ~16X, while SPH has rerated to ~22X.

Competing media slow SPH.s revenue growth rate, reducing proxy status 
Given 6% nominal GDP expansion, we estimate that SPH .should. have grown advertising by 8% in FY2005, but lost 3 percentage points of growth to TV, free papers, and the Internet.

SPH's dividend yield is converging with that of the Singapore index 
Trading at more than 20X earnings, even a 100% payout ratio equates to over a 5% dividend yield. SPH may conduct more acquisitions to support growth.

Sale of non-core assets would reduce earnings power 
Except for Times Industrial, we estimate the downside in foregone earnings from selling SPH.s residual non-core assets matches or outweighs the potential upside from special dividends.

Multiple metrics all suggest full valuation
SPH is trading at 22X our 2006 and 21X 2007 forecast EPS; we model SPH growing earnings by 4% into 2007. The stock is at 4.3X 2006 book value, versus our forecast 2006 ROE of 19%. We believe fair value for SPH is S$4.4 per share based on 18X FY2006E publishing free cash flow. Our DCF value using a 9% discount rate and 15X free cash exit multiple is S$4.2 per share. Our sum-of-the-parts value is S$4.4 per share, see Exhibit 3. Our 12-month target price is S$4.4 (based on 18X FY2006E publishing free cash flow). Key risks include loss of advertising share.



-- Edited by KK at 10:59, 2005-10-18

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SPH


SINGAPORE (XFN-ASIA) - Singapore Press Holdings Ltd (SPH) extended its losses having fallen some 7 pct last week after the media company gave uninspiring outlook for the current year to August 2006, dealers said. In early afternoon trade, SPH was down 0.04 sgd or 0.87 pct at 4.58 with 2.80 mln shares traded.

On Oct 11, SPH reported that its net profit for the past year to August fell 9.4 pct to 494.69 mln sgd. SPH said it expects profits from operations for the current financial year to be comparable with those for the year just ended. "The outlook from the company was not inspiring," Macquarie said in a research note, adding that it expects SPH's net profit to drop to 388 mln sgd in the year to August 2006 before recovering to 421.2 mln in the next fiscal year. Macquarie said it is also disappointed that SPH is not looking at immediately divesting its Paragon shopping mall, whose valuations seem to be fully priced into SPH's stock price. Macquarie has a "neutral" rating on SPH with a fair value estimate of 4. 75 sgd.

The stock is trading at over 50 pct premium to its regional peers and about 70 pct premium to the average 2006 prospective price-to-earnings ratio of the Singapore market. "With guidance now for a flat earnings growth for 2006, this premium becomes more difficult to justify," Macquarie said.

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BT, Published October 15, 2005
SPH one of Asia's top value creators

SINGAPORE Press Holdings has been ranked one of Asia's top value creators in delivering good returns to shareholders. In a study of 462 top companies in Asia ex-Japan, SPH was ranked 15th for creating shareholder value. It was one of only two Singapore-based companies in the top 20. The other was Singapore Telecom, which ranked second.

Korea's Samsung Electronics came out tops in the study, which was carried out by CFO Asia - part of the London-based The Economist Group - and Marakon Associates, a global consulting firm.

The study stripped out background influences beyond the control of management, such as interest rate changes, shifts in investor optimism and the impact of natural catastrophes. An index was then applied to companies' market capitalisation to arrive at a five-year annual average dollar amount of excess shareholder value created.

With this approach, SPH generated a five-year average annual return of 8 per cent and created excess value of US$654 million for shareholders. SPH chief executive Alan Chan said the results reaffirm the company's commitment to delivering maximum shareholder value. 'Since 1999 the company has returned about S$4 billion to shareholders in the form of dividends, capital reductions and share buy-backs,' he said.



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Fewer Singaporeans Reading Daily Newspapers - Nielsen

SINGAPORE (Dow Jones)--Newspaper readership has fallen in Singapore after one title folded and amid competition from the Internet, wireless devices and cable television, according to a Nielsen Media survey.

Overall adult readership of daily newspapers, which includes English and Chinese language publications, was 80% according to the 2005 Media Index Survey released Thursday, down four percentage points from last year's survey.

Nielsen Media blamed the fall in newspaper readership among people aged 15 and over on the demise of the Streats newspaper and rising usage of the Internet, wireless devices and cable TV for access to news and information.

Streats was published by MediaWorks, which was bought by government-owned media conglomerate MediaCorp. last year.

On top of the demise of Streats, a dearth of high profile international soccer events in 2005 resulted in a drop in the readership of New Paper, published by Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. (T39.SG), Nielsen said in a statement.

Readership of the pro-government Straits Times, the most-read daily newspaper in the city state, fell one point to 41% of adults.

Readership of all English dailies fell three points to 52% and for Chinese-language dailies it fell two points to 36%.

The proportion of adults who had used the Internet in the week prior to being surveyed rose three points to 52%, and proportion who had used it the day before being surveyed rose two points to 43%.

Viewing of cable TV rose two points to 42%.

The survey of 4,000 people is conducted throughout the year.

Comment: Ever since SPH announced the result, there seem that there is alot of negative news that affect SPH share price. I think SPH need to expand oversea in order to increase their revenue especially since their failed attempt on TV. The best is to merge with Mediacorp since they has done quite well in their oversea expansion.

-- Edited by tfwee at 19:53, 2005-10-13

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SPH - OCBC


Extracts fm OCBC Report dated 12-Oct-05,


FY05 results were decent. Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) released its FY05 results yesterday. Headline revenue rose 3.5% YoY to S$1.02b, driven by better contributions from Newspaper and Magazine segment, including those from Blu Inc. However core operating earnings performed much better, rising by 12.7% YoY to S$380m, due to better cost controls (despite sharply higher newsprint prices) resulting in margin improvements. SPH also recognised an exceptional loss of S$38.5m due to remaining charges associated with the media merger last year. The net effect of all the above was a decline in net profits of 9.4% YoY to S$494.7m. SPH declared a net final dividend of 15.8 cents, i.e. net normal dividend of 8 cents and special dividend of 7.8 cents, bringing FY05 dividend to 22.8 cents.


Outlook positive. Going forward, brighter GDP growth outlook and pick up in car buying interest should be positive for SPH. Accordingly we have forecast slightly better operating performance in FY06. However management were more cautious and guided that volatility of oil price could negatively impact its newsprint costs. In spite of the caution, in FY05 management has managed cost well even though oil prices rose by over 50% YTD.


Staying patient on Orchard Road. As for the Group’s key property investments, management revealed that Paragon’s current yield stood at 4.8% giving SPH an attractive return of 10% on equity. SPH also reiterated its patience in disposing the property and see more capital value upside from higher occupancies and spillover effect from the rejuvenation of Orchard Road.


Share price valued at S$5.15. Aside from the stable core operations, SPH’s non-core assets form a substantial part of balance sheet. Using sum-of-the-parts method (see table for further details), we value SPH’s share price at S$5.15. This gives an upside of about 5.5%. Dividends remain the key attraction for SPH and we are projecting a net dividend yield of 3.9% for FY06. We resume coverage of SPH with a HOLD rating.



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SPH - CitiGroup


Extracts fm CitiGroup Report dated 12-Oct-05,

FY05 core net earnings S$404.7m, up 17% yoy, 7% ahead of our forecast of S$377m. Net earnings including exceptionals were S$494.7m, down 9% yoy.

  • Core operation improved at a slow pace. Ad rev grew 6% yoy but bulk of the increase was attributed to magazines while that from newspapers was up only 2% yoy (up about 4.5-5% yoy excluding Streats).
  • Circulation rev was up by about 6.7% yoy due to higher cover prices. Circulation copies were down for all newspapers except for Business Times. 
  • Newsprint prices still rising but the rate of increase has moderated. We have upgraded our forecasts to reflect a slower increase in newsprint prices
  • MediaCorp TV made a smaller loss of S$0.6m in 4Q (vs S$3.2m loss in 3Q). Management of MediaCorp expects this venture to turn around this year.
  • Sales of Paragon and Times Industrial Building not imminent as mgt is holding out the properties for better prices.
  • Final div is 19.5 cents/share, bringing total div for the full year to 28.2 cents/share (before tax), higher than our forecast of 20 cents. We expect management to at least maintain this level of div payout going forward.
  • Rolling our numbers to FY06 and assuming a slower increase in newsprint prices, we are raising our price target to S$5.34 from S$5.26. Maintain Buy


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SPH


Extracts fm Lim and Tan Report dated 12-Oct-05,


SPH performed reasonably well in the final quarter and full year ended Aug ’05: operating profit (ie before exceptionals) rose 12.7% to $83.9 mln and $380.79 mln respectively.



  • The latest year’s exceptionals comprise:

    • $128 mln profit from the sale of Star Hub, and
    • $38.54 mln loss, of which $25.9 mln was incurred in the merger with MediaCorp.

  • The previous year’s exceptionals comprise:

    • $170 mln profit from the divestment of its entire 2% stake in Belgacom; and
    • $110 mln profit from the sale of Times House, offset by writeoffs relating to broadcasting assets. 

  • Net profit for the full year came to $494.69 mln vs $546.28 mln the year before. Historic PE is 15.5x. Assuming no exceptionals for the current year to Aug ’06, PE rises to about 20x based on normalized profit of about $380 mln.
  • Dividend for the year amounts to 22.8 cents net of tax, including the final of 15.8 cents net. Net yield at $4.88 is 4.7%.
  • We believe SPH’s market performance will be enhanced by sale or securitization of The Paragon, which is carried in its books at >$1 bln.
  • Maintain Long Term Buy.


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SINGAPORE (XFN-ASIA) - Singapore Press Holdings Ltd (SPH) extended its losses as market hopes it would sell its remaining real estate assets were dashed following indications from management earlier this week that it is in no hurry to sell them, dealers said. SPH was down 0.04 sgd or 0.86 pct at 4.64, off a low of 4.60, with 7.54 mln shares changing hands.

In recent months, analysts had been speculating that SPH will soon divest its Paragon shopping mall on Orchard Road, a move that would enable the media company to pay hefty dividends. But such hopes had been dashed at SPH's annual results briefing on Tuesday. "Paragon is not on the top of our list (for divestment) because we have other assets that bring in less yields," SPH chairman Lim Chin Beng said.

"Contrary to (popular) view of SPH as a restructuring opportunity, the company appeared happy sitting on, rather than immediately selling, its residual properties," Goldman Sachs, which has a "underperform" rating on SPH and fair value of 4.40 sgd, said in a note. Goldman also expressed disappointment over the 0.16 sgd per share net final and special dividend declared by the company. "Contrary to arguments that SPH is a yield story, the net dividend was lower than widely expected, equating to a prospective yield of 3.30 pct and a full year yield of 5.0 pct," it said.

Goldman said SPH's guidance that earnings in the current year to August 2006 will be comparable to the past fiscal year's was also disappointing considering that the consensus forecast is for its net profit to grow by 6 pct in the current year.

SPH's net profit in the past year to August fell 9.4 pct to 494.69 mln sgd.


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SINGAPORE (XFN-ASIA) - Singapore Press Holdings Ltd (SPH) was lower after reporting that its net profit for the year to August fell 9.4 pct year-on-year to 494.69 mln sgd, and because of market expectations of lackluster earnings in this financial year, dealers said. At 11.46 am, SPH was down 0.14 sgd or 2.87 pct at 4.74, with 6.21 mln shares traded. The Straits Times index was down 15.22 points or 0.65 pct at 2, 339.80.

SPH's full-year net profit was at the lower end of the range of 490. 80-519.0 mln sgd forecast by analysts polled by XFN-Asia. Barring any adverse economic or geopolitical developments, SPH expects its profits from operations for the current year to be comparable with those for the year just ended.

Dealers said SPH's shares were also correcting after recent gains made because investors had been anticipating a hefty final dividend. SPH declared a final ordinary dividend of 0.10 sgd per share and a special dividend of 0.078 sgd per share. The dividend turned out to be lower than most analysts had expected.

In a research note, JP Morgan advised clients to sell SPH on rallies. "Our 'neutral' rating is supported by dividend yield. We believe the key risk to this call is a sharp increase in year-on-year publishing revenue going into the year to August 2006," it said. For now, JP Morgan is assuming that SPH's net profit will ease to 365 mln sgd in the year to August 2006.

DBS Vickers expects much weaker earnings for SPH in the year to August 2006, with net profit seen falling to 349.0 mln sgd. "While SPH offers an attractive dividend yield, coupled with the possibility of special dividends, we believe the current share price fully reflects its value," DBS said, reiterating its "hold" rating for SPH and fair value of 4.79 sgd per share.

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SPH - CIMB


Extract fm CIMB Report dated 12-Oct-05,

  • FY05 results were 7% ahead of our expectation and in-line with consensus. FY05 net earnings declined 9% to S$495m, but were ahead of our expectations. Operating income and margin saw improvements despite cost pressure from newsprint chargeout price, partially driven by higher oil prices. 
  • Exceptional items proved a drag on overall performance. The expected exceptional loss in FY05 of S$39m comprised S$26m in charges associated with the media merger and S$13m from impairment of goodwill that arose from the acquisition of interests in magazine companies. Stripping off these items, net profit excluding exceptionals came in at S$533m (FY04: S$518m). 
  • Paragon is now worth around S$1.38bn. SPH currently enjoys an ROE in excess of 10% on Paragon, with net yield of 4.8%. Management seems to be holding to Paragon though they also indicated that they are open and are evaluating options available, which include REIT. 
  • Total net dividend payout is 2.8cts for FY05. Management indicated that its practise has been to distribute close to 95% of its operating profit as dividend to shareholders, and that would be a target that the Group would continue to do going forward. 
  • We have trimmed our FY06-07 estimates by 3-7%, to reflect higher landing cost for newsprint on the back of higher oil prices, a more conservative circulation growth estimate, and a lesser degree hike in newstand prices. SPH is trading at P/Es of 19.6x FY06 and 17.4x FY07. Dividend yield of 5.6% and 6.4% in FY06 and FY07 respectively provide downside hedge to the share price. 
  • We are maintaining our Outperform rating while target price is raised to S$5.40 (from S$5.30), which is pegged to the sum-of-the-parts valuation. We believe that potential catalysts include the sale of Paragon, Times Industrial Building and its stake in M1.


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RE: SPH


Extracted From UOBKH

Singapore Press Holdings

FY05: Still a Good Dividend Yield


Although FY05 net profit fell 9.4% yoy to $494.7m, it was still 11% higher than consensus of $445.5m and just a tad lower than our forecast of $512m. Excluding exceptionals of a $38.5m loss (vs $28.7m gain in FY04), net profit rose 3% to $533.2m (FY04: $517.6m)

Revenue was 3.9% higher at $1.007m, surpassing the $1b mark for the first time. Revenue was boosted by Newspaper and Magazine (+7.0%) and Property (+8.3%) segments. Broadcasting and Multimedia fell 51.6% as the broadcasting operations (SPH MediaWorks) ceased on 1 Jan 05.

SPH declared a final dividend of 10 cents/share and a special dividend of 7.8 cents net/share. Including the interim dividend of 8.75 cents, total dividend for FY05 totalled 26.55 cents, higher than our forecast of 25 cents. This gives a dividend yield of 5.4%, and could be higher if not for the run-up in share price over the last week as investors were expecting a much higher payout.

SPH also announced former deputy prime minister, Dr Tony Tan will take over from Mr Lim Chin Beng as the Chairman of the company on 2 December.


Results Review

· Operating profit gained 12.7% to 4380.8m due to the cessation of the broadcasting operations which were making some $40m loss.
· Newspaper and Magazine revenue increased 7.0% to $891.8m. Both print advertising and circulation revenue rose 6% on the back of contribution from recently-acquired Blue Inc, and higher newspaper advertising revenue.
· Property revenue rose 8.3% due mainly to the higher yield from the Paragon which has almost 100% occupancy and ROE in excess of 10%.
· Broadcasting and Multimedia revenue fell 51.6% as the broadcasting operations (SPH MediaWorks) ceased on 1 Jan 05.
· Average newsprint charge-out price rose 22.9% from US$436/tonne in FY04 to US$563/tonne in FY05. However, the pace of the price increase has moderated from 14.4% qoq on 1QFY05 to only 2.0% qoq in 4QFY05.
· Despite the higher newsprint costs (+14.4%), SPH managed to lift operating margin from 34.8% in FY04 to 37.8% in FY05. This was the result of efforts to control staff costs (lower bonus), finance costs and other operating costs (cost savings from the cessation of broadcasting operations).
· Excluding one-time gain of $128.5m from the sale of StarHub shares in 1QFY05 and $170.5 last year (from Belgacom), investment income would have been $32.5m better than last year.
· Exceptional loss of $38.5m came from merger charges ($25.9m) and the impairment of goodwill from acquisitions ($12.9m).
· Tax charge of $70m incorporated a relief of $12.9m from the utilisation of SPH MediaWorks' tax losses and capital allowance this year.
· Circulation copies for The Business Times and Lianhe WanBao improved on a yoy basis (+6.7% and +1.1% respectively), while The New Paper and Berita Harian fared the worst (-5.0% and –3.9% respectively).


Outlook


· With the better-than-expected economic outlook in the near term, SPH expects its advertising revenue to improve. It is raising ad rates by 3% for The Straits Times (Thursday to Saturday editions) and The Sunday Times effective 1 Jan 06. Ad rates for LianHe WanBao and Shin Min Daily News will also be raised by 10% for weekday and 3% for weekend editions effective 1 Nov 05.
· SPH expects newsprint prices to increase but at a more measure pace. It currently has inventory till Apr 06.
· Ad spending from the finance, property and consumer durable sectors has risen. But management do not see higher advertising budgets in light of rising oil prices and interest rate hikes.
· With the recent interest in the high-end property and Orchard Road property, SPH is comfortable with holding on to The Paragon- almost full occupancy, ROE above 10%, room for rate increase and a market valuation of $1.38b. As for Times Industrial Building, management takes a wait-and-see stance until interest from the high-end residential segment spills over to the mid-market segment. The building is currently worth about $200m.
· With a cash hoard of some $1b and a potential war chest if they sell Paragon and Times Industrial Building, SPH will have more than abundant resources for expansion. However, management prefers to adopt a conservation approach rather than to be aggressive in its expansion plans.
· We maintain our net profit forecasts for FY06 and FY07. Our target price remains at $5.00. Maintain BUY.

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Extracts fm Goldman Sachs report dated 12-Oct-05,


Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) reported fiscal (August) 2005 revenues of S$1,016 mn, up 4% yoy and in line with our forecast. Advertising revenue climbed 2% yoy organically and 6% yoy including acquisitions. Costs fell 1% yoy due to no more TV expenses; operating income rose 13% yoy and was 1% below our estimate. With a lower than expected tax rate offsetting a goodwill write-down, net profit was S$495 mn, down 9% yoy and in line with our forecast. The final dividend of S$0.16 per share was below our forecast S$0.22 per share. We retain an Underperform rating on SPH with a 12 month target price of S$4.4 based on 18X FY2006 publishing free cash flow; risks include loss of advertising share.



  • Concerns: (1) Contrary to arguments that SPH is a yield story, the net dividend was lower than widely expected, equating to a prospective yield of 3.3% and a full year yield of 5.0%. We model the FY2006 yield at 3.3%. (2) Contrary to expectations for growth, management guided for FY2006 operating profits to be 'comparable' with FY2005, versus consensus forecasts of a 6% improvement. (3) Contrary to the view of SPH as a restructuring opportunity, the company appeared happy sitting on, rather than immediately selling, its residual property assets.
  • Print advertising revenues rose 5% yoy in 4Q2005 to S$164 mn (boosted by the consolidation of magazine publisher Blu Inc.), below our forecast of S$169 mn. Display fell 2% yoy while classified rose 6% yoy. Excluding the de-consolidation of Streats, display rose 4% yoy, a deceleration from 9% yoy in 3Q2005 because 3Q2005 benefited from property stimulus measures. Circulation revenue of S$52 mn climbed 4% yoy while circulation volumes were rather flat. SPH is increasing its advertising rate card by 3% for 4 days per week effective on January 2006; we model 5% display advertising growth in FY2006.
  • 4Q2005 costs were in line with our forecasts, up 10% qoq and down 5% yoy (no more TV or Streats operating expenses) at S$166 mn. Newsprint expenses increased by around 17% yoy as prices rose (charge out cost was US$563 per tonne during the quarter); wages fell 7% yoy due to removing TV headcount (SPH ended the period with 3,443 staff, down 4% yoy). SPH appeared to book catch-up depreciation in the quarter.

Non-operating items


Investment income for the year was S$249 mn (including S$140 mn from StarHub) versus S$258 mn in FY2004 (including S$170.5 mn from Belgacom). Investment income for 4Q2005 dropped to S$13 mn, equating to a ~6% annualized return and consistent with our forecast for lower investment income in FY2006. Associate items moved from a S$3 mn loss to a S$1 mn loss qoq as MediaCorp TV's performance improved. SPH took a S$12 mn writedown in 4Q2005 on its S$33 mn investment in Blu Inc.


Dividends, cash flow, balance sheet


SPH declared a final net dividend of S$0.16 per share (S$0.08 recurring, S$0.08 special), taking its full year payment to S$0.24 per share. We believe this was below market expectations of a S$0.22 final distribution; management stated that it had taken the StarHub sale into account in setting FY2004's dividend, so that FY2005 only received a partial benefit. Operating cash flow (S$320 mn) and sales of long term investments (S$198 mn) flowed into capex (S$16 mn), property investments (S$13 mn), investments in subsidiaries and associates (S$57 mn), and dividends (S$382 mn). SPH ended the year with net cash (cash plus short term investments minus borrowings) of S$74 mn, up from a net debt position of S$98 mn a year earlier.


Management guidance


Management commented that it expects advertising revenue "to grow in tandem with the economy", consistent with its comments in prior quarters. Optically, yoy advertising growth rates should suffer by ~3% in 1Q2006 as Blu Inc. enters the base period, and benefit by ~3% from 2Q2006 as Streats drops out of the base period. 1Q2006 advertising revenue growth rates could thus appear weak. Management also commented that it expects FY2006 operating profit to be comparable with FY2005 - that is, around S$380 mn. We model an FY2006 operating profit of ~S$390 mn and we are below consensus, so we see downside risk to earnings estimates. In response to analyst questions, management implied that it is no great hurry to dispose of either the Paragon shopping mall (over 10% ROE, rentals still rising) nor the Times Industrial land bank (waiting for strength in high-end property prices to spread to the middle-market).


Forecast adjustments - net neutral impact on earnings


We have tweaked our earnings forecasts to reflect:



  • Higher Paragon revenues, since 4Q2005 exceeded our estimate.
  • Lower newsprint costs, albeit still up 11% yoy in FY2006.
  • Higher deprecation, since 4Q2005 exceeded our estimate.

Valuation


SPH is trading at 23X our FY2006 forecast EPS and 22X FY2007; at 21X FY2006 forecast EPS excluding non-media assets and 21X FY2007; at 20X FY2006 media free cash flow and 19X FY2007. SPH is at 4.5X our FY2006 book value versus a FY2006 ROE of 19%. US newspaper publishers with similar dominant market positions have derated to around 15X forecast 2006 EPS due to loss of share to online. Our DCF value using a 9% discount rate and 15X free cash exit multiple is S$4.2 per share.



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Singapore Press aims to sell mall, other assets


SINGAPORE, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Singapore Press Holdings Ltd, Southeast Asia's largest media group, said it was committed to selling non-core assets including a shopping mall on Singapore's prime retail strip, Orchard Road. SPH also reported on Tuesday a better-than-expected jump in fourth-quarter profit compared with the previous year, when earnings were hit by a restructuring charge from its sale of a loss-making television business. SPH, which holds a near-monopoly on newspaper publishing in the city-state including the 160-year-old English-language Straits Times daily, has used asset sales to help improve its earnings in recent years as advertising revenues have slowed and its TV operations incurred losses.

The company has received interest from various potential buyers for its Paragon shopping mall, valued at S$1.38 billion. It is open to all possibilities, including a real estate investment trust (REIT), the firm's chairman said. "We are still mulling various options for the Paragon mall," Chairman Lim Chin Beng told reporters. But he added the mall was not at the top of the disposal list, because the company has other non-core assets that are producing smaller returns.

The pro-government newspaper group also said former Deputy Prime Minister Tony Tan, 65, would take over from Lim, who is 73 this year, as the group's chairman in December.

The company has decided not to sell its stake in telecommunications group MobileOne , it said, adding that the entry of Telekom Malaysia as a shareholder could help M1's prospects.

SPECIAL DIVIDEND

Net profit soared to S$76.9 million in the three months to Aug. 31 from S$3.8 million in the last quarter of the previous year. The figure beat a consensus forecast of S$54.7 million by analysts in a Reuters poll. For the full year, net profit fell by 9 percent to S$494.7 million ($292.4 million), which included investment income of S$152.7 million from the sale of a stake in mobile and cable operator StarHub in the first quarter. Print advertising revenue, which accounts for 66 percent of operating revenue, rose 6.4 percent to S$664.2 million.

The company said it expected profit for the year to August 2006 to be comparable to the 2005 figure. "Advertising revenue will move in tandem with the economy," said SPH Chief Executive Alan Chan. "However, there are concerns over global economic factors such as the continued pressure on oil prices and interest rate hikes."

Singapore's central bank forecast economic growth of between 3 and 5 percent for 2006 and said the city-state's economy would expand by as much as 4.5 percent this year.

Cash-rich SPH announced a final dividend of 15.8 cents comprising a normal dividend of 8.0 cents and a special dividend of 7.8 cents. Expectations of a large dividend payout from the company have spurred a rally in SPH shares this month. The earnings report came after the market close on Tuesday. SPH stock has risen 8.4 percent since the beginning of October, beating a 2.1 percent gain in the benchmark Straits Times Index . SPH shares have risen 2.6 percent since the start of the year against a 14 percent rise in the STI over the same period.

SPH, with a market capitalisation of US$4.42 billion, trades at about 19.6 times its estimated 2006 earnings. This compares with a price-earnings ratio of 16.6 times for Australia's John Fairfax and 17.5 times for Hong Kong's SCMP Group . ($1=1.692 Singapore Dollar)



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SINGAPORE (XFN-ASIA) - Singapore Press Holdings rose to a 52-week high on prevailing expectations it will declare a hefty dividend payout when it announces its full year to August results later today, dealers said. The earnings numbers, however, are expected to be lacklustre.

Analysts polled by XFN-Asia expect SPH's year to August 2005 net profit to fall to between 490.80-519.0 mln sgd from 546.28 mln a year ago, due to weak advertising revenues.

Apart from hopes of hefty dividends, SPH is also being supported by upbeat sentiment towards property owners in Orchard Road. The likelihood of aggressive bids being received by the government for two Orchard Road commercial sites they are auctioning is seen by many analysts as a strong catalyst to push other Orchard Road property valuations higher. This bodes well for SPH's Paragon shopping mall, which analysts believe will only be divested if buyers are willing to pay a premium.

SPH was up 0.04 sgd or 0.82 pct at 4.94, with 2.74 mln shares traded.


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SINGAPORE (XFN-ASIA) - Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) extended recent gains as investors continued to buy the stock on expectations that the media company will announce a generous dividend payout when it reports its full year to August 2005 results tomorrow, dealers said.

SPH was up 0.10 sgd or 2.12 pct at 4.82 with 3.26 mln shares traded.

Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB) said it expects a 32 pct rise in final and special net dividends to 0.22 sgd per share for the year to August 2005.

SPH's present policy is to pay out 90-95 pct of net profit as dividends. "This implies a full-year payout ratio of 95 pct and would translate into a net dividend yield of 6.5 pct for the full year and 5 pct just for the finals."

UOB Kay Hian analyst Nancy Wei said she expects a final gross dividend of 16.25 cents, bringing the full-year gross dividend to 25 cents.

Kim Eng's Wong, meanwhile, said the the final dividend could be as high as 28 cents.

Despite expectations for a strong dividend payout, the analysts see SPH's year to August 2005 net profit sliding to 490.80-519.0 mln sgd from 546.28 mln a year ago, due to a slide in advertising revenue and a narrower revenue base as a result of consolidation.


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Monday October 10, 3:03 PM
Singapore Press Q4 net to rise on absence of TV costs

SINGAPORE, Oct 10 (Reuters) - Singapore Press Holdings Ltd, Southeast Asia's largest media group, is expected to report a jump in fourth-quarter profit due to the absence of restructuring charges suffered in the year-ago period, when it operated a loss-making TV business, analysts said. They say the outlook for SPH , which has a near-monopoly on newspaper publishing in the city-state, should see a moderate pick-up in advertising spending in 2006 as the economy improves, but the group continues to face competition from alternative mediums such as online advertisements.

Expectations of special dividend payouts from cash-rich SPH, however, would continue to underpin interest in the company, which has paid out more than 90 percent of its pre-exceptional net profit as dividend in the last three years.

"We are expecting very positive news flow on the dividend front. I am forecasting 28 cents gross for the final dividend, which is one of the highest out there," said Stephanie Wong, analyst at Kim Eng Research, who has a "buy" recommendation on SPH. "I don't think they will disappoint the market too much," she said, adding that the group still had several non-core assets to sell, including the Paragon shopping complex in the heart of Orchard Road, Singapore's prime retail strip.

SPH shares have climbed 4.8 percent in the past week against a 1.4 percent rise in the benchmark Straits Times Index on expectations of a special dividend payout from the group when it announces its results. The stock is up 2.6 percent since the start of the year, underperforming the STI by 8.0 percent over the same period.

The pro-government newspaper group, which recently appointed former deputy prime minister Tony Tan as chairman, will report its earnings for the June to August quarter after the market close on Tuesday. SPH -- which runs 13 newspapers, including the 160-year-old English language Straits Times daily -- is expected to report a consensus net profit of S$54.71 million ($32.33 million) for the final quarter, according to 17 analysts polled by Reuters Estimates. This compares with a S$3.8 million profit in the final quarter of 2004, which included a S$65.3 million restructuring charge which the group took for its loss-making television business that it has since exited. Profit of the full year ended August 31 is expected to come in at S$472.51 million which include investment income of S$152.7 million from the sale of its 8.9 percent stake in mobile and cable operator StarHub in the first quarter. But this was expected to fall to S$376.54 million in 2006 as investment and other income gains normalise. Excluding the one-off gains, 2005 pre-tax profit was expected to rise about 10-12 percent due to the absence of hefty operating losses from TV, analysts said.

SPH, with a market capitalisation of US$4.42 billion, trades at about 19.6 times its estimated 2006 earnings. This compares with Australia's John Fairfax 16.6 times and Hong Kong's SCMP Group 17.5 times.



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Q405 Result and FY05 Result: 11 Oct 2005.

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SPH - Goldman Sachs


Extracts fm Goldman Sachs Report dated 7-Oct-05,


SPH will report its 4Q (June to August) results on October 11. For the full year we forecast revenues of S$1,019 mn, +4% yoy; operating profits of S$384 mn, +14% yoy (less TV losses); net profits of S$494 mn, -10% yoy; and recurring net profits of S$377 mn, +9% yoy. For 4Q we forecast print advertising growth of 4% like-for-like yoy (8% including Blu Inc.), consistent with 3Q, with downside risk from a weak August. After an 8 cent interim dividend, we model a 22 cent final dividend: two thirds recurring and one third from the divestment of StarHub and the stock buy-back by MobileOne. We have an Underperform rating and a 12-month target price of S$4.4 based on 18X FY2005 forecast free cash flow. Risks include advertising trends.



  • We forecast 4% yoy organic advertising revenue growth against a relatively easy 6% growth base period in 4Q2004, and a further 4% from the consolidation of Blu Inc. We believe that the overall advertising market of ~S$1 bn per annum is growing at ~9% per annum, slightly faster than nominal GDP, but that MediaCorp's free newspaper (revenue +21% in year to March) and TV stations (revenue +18% in year to March) are capturing most of the growth. We assume that circulation revenue, property revenue, and other revenue are broadly flat qoq and yoy, for 1% yoy total revenue growth.
  • We forecast newsprint costs rising 11% qoq and 28% yoy to S$31 mn on higher charge-out prices. We model other costs as broadly flat qoq and down yoy (no more TV operating expenses), for a 5% yoy decline in total costs. We forecast investment income dropping 61% qoq (SPH booked a S$38 mn gain from its investment portfolio of S$783 mn in 3Q2005) and up 2% yoy to S$15 mn, equivalent to an annualized return of 8% on its portfolio. We assume an associate loss of S$2 mn from SPH's stake in MediaCorp TV. SPH's effective tax rate was only 13% in 4Q2004 and 22% in 3Q2005; we model 21% in 3Q2005. This produces a recurring net profit of S$75 mn, down 29% qoq and up 4% yoy.
  • The excitement surrounding SPH's dividend payments surprises us; the more SPH distributes, the less cash remains to generate investment income or to buy growth. We believe that yield analysis only makes sense for recurring payments - bond investors do not refer to principal redemption as yield. On this basis we estimate that SPH can distribute ~90% of its recurring EPS as recurring dividend, for a 4.5% recurring yield. SPH ended 2004 in a net debt position.
  • We expect SPH's net income to decline by 33% in FY2006 on a reported basis (no StarHub divestment), and to decline by 12% in FY2006 on a recurring basis (normalized level of investment income). Investment income accounted for ~25% of earnings in FY2005, equivalent to an 18% return on SPH's investment portfolio.

Valuation
SPH is trading at 19X our recurring FY2005 forecast EPS and 22X FY2006 (less investment income); at 20X FY2005 forecast EPS excluding non-media assets and 19X FY2006; at 23X FY2005 media free cash flow and 19X FY2006. SPH is at 4.5X our FY2005 book value versus a FY2005 ROE of 23%. US newspaper publishers with similar dominant market positions have derated to around 15X forecast 2006 EPS due to loss of share to online. Our DCF value using a 9% discount rate and 15X free cash exit multiple is S$4.2 per share. We model a 6.5% yield in FY2005 due to distribution of StarHub proceeds, but a recurring long-term yield of 4.5% thereafter.



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SPH


SINGAPORE (XFN-ASIA) - Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) was higher on expectations it will announce a higher dividend payout when it reports its full year to August results next Tuesday, dealers said. SPH was up 0.06 sgd or 1.29 pct at 4.70 on volume of 2.56 mln shares.

"Going by the track record of the last 3 years, more than 90 pct of its pre-exceptional net profit has been paid as dividend," Kim Eng Securities said. "Hence, if the group continues with this tradition, the final DPS (dividend per share) could be 28 cents which together with the interim DPS of 8.75 cents, translate to a high yield of 7.9 pct," it said. However, Kim Eng said it expects SPH's full-year net profit to decline 5 pct year-on-year to 519 mln sgd due to lower exceptional gains compared to a year earlier.

UOB Kay Hian estimates SPH will declare a final gross dividend per share of 16.25 cents, bringing the full year dividend per share to 25 cents.

Credit Suisse First Boston expects SPH to report a 32 pct hike in dividend to 0.22 sgd per share, representing a net dividend yield of 6.5 pct.



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SPH - Kim Eng


Extracts fm Kim Eng Report,


SPH – FY05 final results preview



  • The group will be releasing its FY Aug 05 final results next Tuesday (11Oct).
  • We expect net profit to decline 5%yoy to $519m (EPS of 32.6cts) with organic earnings growth of 12%yoy to $415m.
  • Consensus estimate for EPS was 29cts which implied a 6.5%yoy decline.
  • Newspaper advertising revenue is expected to grow a modest 2.2%yoy to $623.5m while circulation revenue could improve 6.7% to $623.5m.
  • Rental income from the Paragon is likely to increase by 9% to around $90m, thanks to higher rates for rental renewals.
  • Based on the historical track record, we are hoping for a final DPS of 28cts (assume a total dividend payout of 90%).
  • BUY the stock ahead of the results release, as the likelihood of the group announcing a clearer dividend policy is high. Coupled with the potential divestment of the prime retail mall – The Paragon, further re-rating of the stock could be imminent.
  • Our 6-month price target remains at $5.40, based on FY06 dividend yield of 5.5%.


-- Edited by KK at 13:35, 2005-10-07

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SPH


Extracts fm Lehman Report,


Investment Conclusion



  • SPH is scheduled to report FY2005 results on October 11. We reiterate our 2-Equal-weight rating ahead of the results.

Summary



  • We have reduced our FY2005 advertising revenue forecast for SPH. Upward revisions to costs is offset by higher realised investment gains, leaving recurring net profit slightly higher.
  • We look for group revenue of S$1,014 million and recurring net profit of S$387 million, EPS of S$0.24, in upcoming FY2005 results. Key risk to our forecast is higher investment gains.
  • For FY2006, we look for advertising revenue growth of 6% and flat recurring net profit, the result of the assumption of more normalised investment income.
  • SPH looks fully valued relative to its global peer group in view of decelerating earnings growth momentum and the company’s lacklustre growth prospects over the medium term.


-- Edited by KK at 16:19, 2005-10-07

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