09-07-2011, 09:24 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-07-2011, 09:51 PM by greengiraffe.)
Hi All,
I am a new member. I did the following note dated 19 June 11:
Upon further checking of published information, I am making amendments to the note that I have emailed earlier. The following changes will supersede the previous content. Sorry for the over-sighting due to lack of investigation and research on my part.
BEIJING CITY HARVESTED, HUAT AH…
Metro made a late announcement to SGX today – it reveal details of sale of Metro City Beijing, about 2 months after it first announced the intention to dispose of the retail property alongside its long term China state owned enterprise partner.
Metro will reap a pretax profit of S$87.4m and an estimated net profit of around $69.92m (assuming 20% tax). Cash proceeds from the sale will amount to S$132m. In addition, S$95m debt related to Metro City Beijing will be eliminated with the sale of the stake in the asset company. (Erratum: The amount is lower than my initial back of the envelop estimates as Metro revealed that the asset company has total debts totalling RMB1.0bn (details of which was not previously available publicly)
Based on my original estimates, total net cash per share post accounting of Gurney extension, Penang at $0.424/share will swell further to $0.753/share (Erratum: $0.615/share) upon the successful conclusion of the sale of Metro City Beijing.
HIDDEN VALUE APLENTY
The following are the revised key statistics:
NTA post above transactions (1 of which is locked in – Gurney Plaza extension sale): $1.655
Net cash per share: $0.752
Current share price: $0.915
Discount to NTA (Including Cash Hoard): 44.7%
Net of cash:
NTA: $0.902
Share price: $0.163
Discount to Core Assets (Net of Cash): 81.9%
MORE UPSIDE TO CHINA PROPERTY VALUATIONS
Property Stake(%) NLA(sqm) Occ Rate(%) Valuation(S$m)*
Metro City, Shanghai 60 39,423 98.3 241
Metro City, Beijing 50 116,846 74.5 320
GIE Tower, Guangzhou 100 28,390 95.2 91
Metro Tower, Shanghai 60 40,039 84.3 168
EC Mall, Beijing 31.7 28,974 89.1 316
Frontier Koishikawa Building, Tokyo 100 5,124 73.2 87
Completed Property Portfolio
*100% basis
Metro City Beijing was sold at a hefty 50% premium to its latest valuation as at 31 Mar 11. The implied net yield on Metro City before tax is 2.575% on the sale price. It should be noted that it is also the top under-performing assets within Metro’s China property portfolio. Logically, the better performing assets should easily fetch good premium above their respective valuations.
SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTION IN COLLATERISED DEBT
Based on Metro’s latest financial statements to 31 Mar 11, total collaterised debt will be reduced by 38% to S$156.6m and will be attributed as follows:
- 100% owned Frontier Koishikawa Building, Tokyo valued $86.7m (and pledged fixed deposit of S$33.6m) with a loan of JPY 6.0bn (S$91.5m);
- 100% owned GIE Tower, Guangzhou valued at 90.8m with a loan of HK$95.2m(S$15.4m); and
- 31.65% owned EC Mall, Beijing valued at S$100.1m with a loan of RMB 258.5m (S$49.7m).
It appears that Metro’s 60% owned Metro Tower and Metro City in Shanghai carry no gearing at all. Both assets generated a profit before tax of close to S$40m according to notes to account 34b on page 99 of Metro’s annual report 2010.
MORE SPECIAL DIVIDENDS TO NARROW THE GAP IN REAL WORTH
With a swelling cash hoard and Metro’s historical willingness to enhance shareholders’ wealth, it is highly likely that shareholders can look forward to special dividend payments. The return of excess cash to shareholders going forward will also narrow the gap between the traded market price and Metro’s true net worth. Established case studies on the SGX include Singapore Shipping Corp and Cougar Logistics, both controlled by hotelier cum shipping tycoon, Mr Ow Chio Kiat.
TRACK RECORD IN CHINA WELL ENTRENCHED
Metro’s recent sale of China property projects which started last financial year (FY3/11) should start to remove doubts over management’s capability to generate adequate returns for shareholders in the highly competitive China market. Unlike other big Singapore developers, Metro has already harvested sizable returns from its foray in China. Management’s eye for quality developments and strategic investments has delivered high quality cash returns to shareholders and will sustain a pipeline of new assets for future growth in shareholders’ wealth. If there is really a good proxy amongst Singapore based property investor/developer in China, it is none other than Metro. Just ask how far can one be wrong over an asset based company whose share price is backed solidly with cash….
FY 3/2004 – Exceptional gains of S$230.1m from securitisation of Ngee Ann City
FY 3/2005 – Invested US$50m in Shui On Land (Pre-IPO), Invested US$25m in ICT Plaza, Urumqi Xinjiang China, Up stake in Gurney Park from 39% to 48.5%
FY 3/2006 – Exceptional gains of S$118m from disposal of junior bonds and preference shares of Ngee Ann City securitisation, that was eventually listed as Macquarie Prime Reit, now renamed Starhill Global Reit. Bought US$27m bonds issued by Shui On Land (Pre-IPO)
FY3/2007 – Made gains of S$29.1m via sale of 1.7% stake in Shui On Land through IPO and retain balance 1.8% till today. Increased investment in ICT Plaza, Urumqi Xinjiang to US$33m.
FY3/2008 – Made S$31.9m via sale of associate stake in Gurney Plaza to Capitaland Group with options being entered for subsequent sale of Gurney Plaza extension at a future date. Undertake developments of 1 Financial Street, Metropolis Tower and EC Mall (all in Beijing) with HSBC Nan Fung China Real Estate (for 1 Financial Street only) and ECM (for Metropolis Tower and EC Mall)
FY3/2009 – Year of Global Financial Crisis. Sold ICT Plaza, Urumqi Xinjiang China – recouping RMB 144.6m in capital contributions and US$10.5m in shareholders loan. ICT Plaza investments yielded Metro a fixed return of 17% pa on capital contributed and 7.8% pa on shareholders loan.
FY3/2010 – Invested US$30.0m for a 10.7% stake in 3 Tesco anchored Mall projects in Anshan, Fushan, Qinghuangdao, China. Invested S$89.7m in Frontier Koishihawa Office Tower, Tokyo Japan.
FY3/2011 – Made S$55.4m net profit from sale of stake in 1 Financial Street, S$4.6m from sale of stake in Metropolis Tower, all in Beijing China. Invested S$50.3m in Top Spring (3688.HK, IPOed at HK$6.25 in Mar 2011, last done HK$5.00. Exercise option to sell associate interest in Gurney Plaza extension and G Hotel in Penang Malaysia for completion by April and May 2011 (post FY3/2011) for combined sale proceeds of around S$58.9m. Invested US$10.5m for a 10.7% stake in 3 Tesco anchored Mall projects in Xiamen, Fuzhou, Shenyang, China.
FY3/2012 – Proposed sale of 50% of Metro City Beijing for RMB 1251m vs book valuation of RMB 834m.
NB: The author has interests in Metro shares.
metro-liquid<investments.xls (Size: 20.5 KB / Downloads: 12) The following note was posted on 19 June 11
I have enclosed a detailed analysis of Metro's net liquid and long term investments analysis. Based on all available information, it came up to 0.915 - exactly its closing share price on Friday (17 June 11).
Essentially, at the current share price, investors are paying for all its net liquid and long term investments. The remaining properties that are sitting there are free and as I have pointed out, I got a feeling that the remaining assets are conservatively valued since they are of better quality than the latest asset that was sold - Metro City Beijing.
Metro Investments, Collateral Assets, Cash & Borrowings Analysis
Shares 31-Mar-11 651.6
Warrants @ 0.63 31-Mar-11 39.8
Fully Diluted Share Cap 691.4
Short term investments 31-Mar-11 67.3 0.097
Collateral assets 31-Mar-11 24.6 0.036
Pledged fixed and banks deposits 31-Mar-11 34.9 0.050
Warrant proceeds 31-Mar-11 25.1 0.036
Cash 31-Mar-11 372.9 0.539
Liquid assets 524.7 0.759
Short term borrowings (55.8) (0.081)
Long term borrowings (195.8) (0.283)
Net liquid assets 273.1 0.395
Post FY Events
Gurney Extension Sales @RM215m 43.2 0.062
Metro City Beijing - RMB688.5m 132.0 0.191
Metro City Beijing Debt Sold- RMB500m 95.0 0.137
Net Liquid Assets Post FY Events 543.3 0.786
Long Term Investments 89.3 0.129
Total liquid assets and LT Investments 632.6 0.915
[/quote]
metro-propvalue.xls (Size: 19 KB / Downloads: 7)
TCT-Huai_Hai_Mall_Acqusition_Final_23-02-11.pdf (Size: 517.34 KB / Downloads: 1) This note is posted on 6 Jul 11
China based commercial REIT, Treasury China Trust (TCT), announced that they have completed the purchase of a retail mall in Shanghai, China today. As the mall only achieved 70% occupancy last year with below market rental, TCT managed to purchase the property at a 20% discount to its conducted valuation as of the time of the announcement of the deal. The per sq m purchase price was RMB75460 vs a valuation of RMB95014 (presumably adjusted for the quality of the rental income stream - 70% occupancy with below mkt rentals)
Metro owns 60% of Metro City Shanghai and the property boast of near full occupancy after a asset enhancement program that is completed last year. Both Metro City Shanghai and TCT's Huai Hai Mall are completed around the same time. However, Huai Hai Mall has an extra 12 years in its lease that will expire in 2042 while Metro City Shanghai's lease runs out in 2029.
The following are key statistics:
Metro City, Shanghai 36 yr term from 1993, Lettable area 39,423sq m, no of tenants 110, occupancy rate 98.3, valued at S$144.6m for 60% stake as of 31 Mar 11.
Based on TCT's latest acquisition price and adjusted for remaining lease tenure, Metro City Shanghai should easily achieve a psm valuation of around RMB55169 or RMB 2.175bn, S$414.3m on a 100% basis and S$248.5m for Metro's 60% stake.
At S$248.5m, it is a cool S$100m above external valuations conducted on Metro City Shanghai as of 31 Mar 11.
I concurred that there are plenty of methodologies to value a property but I think that this is a reasonable desktop valuation.
I am a new member. I did the following note dated 19 June 11:
Upon further checking of published information, I am making amendments to the note that I have emailed earlier. The following changes will supersede the previous content. Sorry for the over-sighting due to lack of investigation and research on my part.
BEIJING CITY HARVESTED, HUAT AH…
Metro made a late announcement to SGX today – it reveal details of sale of Metro City Beijing, about 2 months after it first announced the intention to dispose of the retail property alongside its long term China state owned enterprise partner.
Metro will reap a pretax profit of S$87.4m and an estimated net profit of around $69.92m (assuming 20% tax). Cash proceeds from the sale will amount to S$132m. In addition, S$95m debt related to Metro City Beijing will be eliminated with the sale of the stake in the asset company. (Erratum: The amount is lower than my initial back of the envelop estimates as Metro revealed that the asset company has total debts totalling RMB1.0bn (details of which was not previously available publicly)
Based on my original estimates, total net cash per share post accounting of Gurney extension, Penang at $0.424/share will swell further to $0.753/share (Erratum: $0.615/share) upon the successful conclusion of the sale of Metro City Beijing.
HIDDEN VALUE APLENTY
The following are the revised key statistics:
NTA post above transactions (1 of which is locked in – Gurney Plaza extension sale): $1.655
Net cash per share: $0.752
Current share price: $0.915
Discount to NTA (Including Cash Hoard): 44.7%
Net of cash:
NTA: $0.902
Share price: $0.163
Discount to Core Assets (Net of Cash): 81.9%
MORE UPSIDE TO CHINA PROPERTY VALUATIONS
Property Stake(%) NLA(sqm) Occ Rate(%) Valuation(S$m)*
Metro City, Shanghai 60 39,423 98.3 241
Metro City, Beijing 50 116,846 74.5 320
GIE Tower, Guangzhou 100 28,390 95.2 91
Metro Tower, Shanghai 60 40,039 84.3 168
EC Mall, Beijing 31.7 28,974 89.1 316
Frontier Koishikawa Building, Tokyo 100 5,124 73.2 87
Completed Property Portfolio
*100% basis
Metro City Beijing was sold at a hefty 50% premium to its latest valuation as at 31 Mar 11. The implied net yield on Metro City before tax is 2.575% on the sale price. It should be noted that it is also the top under-performing assets within Metro’s China property portfolio. Logically, the better performing assets should easily fetch good premium above their respective valuations.
SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTION IN COLLATERISED DEBT
Based on Metro’s latest financial statements to 31 Mar 11, total collaterised debt will be reduced by 38% to S$156.6m and will be attributed as follows:
- 100% owned Frontier Koishikawa Building, Tokyo valued $86.7m (and pledged fixed deposit of S$33.6m) with a loan of JPY 6.0bn (S$91.5m);
- 100% owned GIE Tower, Guangzhou valued at 90.8m with a loan of HK$95.2m(S$15.4m); and
- 31.65% owned EC Mall, Beijing valued at S$100.1m with a loan of RMB 258.5m (S$49.7m).
It appears that Metro’s 60% owned Metro Tower and Metro City in Shanghai carry no gearing at all. Both assets generated a profit before tax of close to S$40m according to notes to account 34b on page 99 of Metro’s annual report 2010.
MORE SPECIAL DIVIDENDS TO NARROW THE GAP IN REAL WORTH
With a swelling cash hoard and Metro’s historical willingness to enhance shareholders’ wealth, it is highly likely that shareholders can look forward to special dividend payments. The return of excess cash to shareholders going forward will also narrow the gap between the traded market price and Metro’s true net worth. Established case studies on the SGX include Singapore Shipping Corp and Cougar Logistics, both controlled by hotelier cum shipping tycoon, Mr Ow Chio Kiat.
TRACK RECORD IN CHINA WELL ENTRENCHED
Metro’s recent sale of China property projects which started last financial year (FY3/11) should start to remove doubts over management’s capability to generate adequate returns for shareholders in the highly competitive China market. Unlike other big Singapore developers, Metro has already harvested sizable returns from its foray in China. Management’s eye for quality developments and strategic investments has delivered high quality cash returns to shareholders and will sustain a pipeline of new assets for future growth in shareholders’ wealth. If there is really a good proxy amongst Singapore based property investor/developer in China, it is none other than Metro. Just ask how far can one be wrong over an asset based company whose share price is backed solidly with cash….
FY 3/2004 – Exceptional gains of S$230.1m from securitisation of Ngee Ann City
FY 3/2005 – Invested US$50m in Shui On Land (Pre-IPO), Invested US$25m in ICT Plaza, Urumqi Xinjiang China, Up stake in Gurney Park from 39% to 48.5%
FY 3/2006 – Exceptional gains of S$118m from disposal of junior bonds and preference shares of Ngee Ann City securitisation, that was eventually listed as Macquarie Prime Reit, now renamed Starhill Global Reit. Bought US$27m bonds issued by Shui On Land (Pre-IPO)
FY3/2007 – Made gains of S$29.1m via sale of 1.7% stake in Shui On Land through IPO and retain balance 1.8% till today. Increased investment in ICT Plaza, Urumqi Xinjiang to US$33m.
FY3/2008 – Made S$31.9m via sale of associate stake in Gurney Plaza to Capitaland Group with options being entered for subsequent sale of Gurney Plaza extension at a future date. Undertake developments of 1 Financial Street, Metropolis Tower and EC Mall (all in Beijing) with HSBC Nan Fung China Real Estate (for 1 Financial Street only) and ECM (for Metropolis Tower and EC Mall)
FY3/2009 – Year of Global Financial Crisis. Sold ICT Plaza, Urumqi Xinjiang China – recouping RMB 144.6m in capital contributions and US$10.5m in shareholders loan. ICT Plaza investments yielded Metro a fixed return of 17% pa on capital contributed and 7.8% pa on shareholders loan.
FY3/2010 – Invested US$30.0m for a 10.7% stake in 3 Tesco anchored Mall projects in Anshan, Fushan, Qinghuangdao, China. Invested S$89.7m in Frontier Koishihawa Office Tower, Tokyo Japan.
FY3/2011 – Made S$55.4m net profit from sale of stake in 1 Financial Street, S$4.6m from sale of stake in Metropolis Tower, all in Beijing China. Invested S$50.3m in Top Spring (3688.HK, IPOed at HK$6.25 in Mar 2011, last done HK$5.00. Exercise option to sell associate interest in Gurney Plaza extension and G Hotel in Penang Malaysia for completion by April and May 2011 (post FY3/2011) for combined sale proceeds of around S$58.9m. Invested US$10.5m for a 10.7% stake in 3 Tesco anchored Mall projects in Xiamen, Fuzhou, Shenyang, China.
FY3/2012 – Proposed sale of 50% of Metro City Beijing for RMB 1251m vs book valuation of RMB 834m.
NB: The author has interests in Metro shares.
metro-liquid<investments.xls (Size: 20.5 KB / Downloads: 12) The following note was posted on 19 June 11
I have enclosed a detailed analysis of Metro's net liquid and long term investments analysis. Based on all available information, it came up to 0.915 - exactly its closing share price on Friday (17 June 11).
Essentially, at the current share price, investors are paying for all its net liquid and long term investments. The remaining properties that are sitting there are free and as I have pointed out, I got a feeling that the remaining assets are conservatively valued since they are of better quality than the latest asset that was sold - Metro City Beijing.
Metro Investments, Collateral Assets, Cash & Borrowings Analysis
Shares 31-Mar-11 651.6
Warrants @ 0.63 31-Mar-11 39.8
Fully Diluted Share Cap 691.4
Short term investments 31-Mar-11 67.3 0.097
Collateral assets 31-Mar-11 24.6 0.036
Pledged fixed and banks deposits 31-Mar-11 34.9 0.050
Warrant proceeds 31-Mar-11 25.1 0.036
Cash 31-Mar-11 372.9 0.539
Liquid assets 524.7 0.759
Short term borrowings (55.8) (0.081)
Long term borrowings (195.8) (0.283)
Net liquid assets 273.1 0.395
Post FY Events
Gurney Extension Sales @RM215m 43.2 0.062
Metro City Beijing - RMB688.5m 132.0 0.191
Metro City Beijing Debt Sold- RMB500m 95.0 0.137
Net Liquid Assets Post FY Events 543.3 0.786
Long Term Investments 89.3 0.129
Total liquid assets and LT Investments 632.6 0.915
[/quote]
metro-propvalue.xls (Size: 19 KB / Downloads: 7)
TCT-Huai_Hai_Mall_Acqusition_Final_23-02-11.pdf (Size: 517.34 KB / Downloads: 1) This note is posted on 6 Jul 11
China based commercial REIT, Treasury China Trust (TCT), announced that they have completed the purchase of a retail mall in Shanghai, China today. As the mall only achieved 70% occupancy last year with below market rental, TCT managed to purchase the property at a 20% discount to its conducted valuation as of the time of the announcement of the deal. The per sq m purchase price was RMB75460 vs a valuation of RMB95014 (presumably adjusted for the quality of the rental income stream - 70% occupancy with below mkt rentals)
Metro owns 60% of Metro City Shanghai and the property boast of near full occupancy after a asset enhancement program that is completed last year. Both Metro City Shanghai and TCT's Huai Hai Mall are completed around the same time. However, Huai Hai Mall has an extra 12 years in its lease that will expire in 2042 while Metro City Shanghai's lease runs out in 2029.
The following are key statistics:
Metro City, Shanghai 36 yr term from 1993, Lettable area 39,423sq m, no of tenants 110, occupancy rate 98.3, valued at S$144.6m for 60% stake as of 31 Mar 11.
Based on TCT's latest acquisition price and adjusted for remaining lease tenure, Metro City Shanghai should easily achieve a psm valuation of around RMB55169 or RMB 2.175bn, S$414.3m on a 100% basis and S$248.5m for Metro's 60% stake.
At S$248.5m, it is a cool S$100m above external valuations conducted on Metro City Shanghai as of 31 Mar 11.
I concurred that there are plenty of methodologies to value a property but I think that this is a reasonable desktop valuation.