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Monday, October 29, 2007

Lessons from IOI for Synergy Drive

Published October 29, 2007

MALAYSIA INSIGHT

The corporation's solid management is worthy of emulation by the new behemoth

By S JAYASANKARAN
KL CORRESPONDENT

LAST Friday, IOI Corporation - a plantations, oleochemicals and property conglomerate - became the second largest company on Bursa Malaysia (BM), the Kuala Lumpur stock exchange, with a market capitalisation of RM41.4 billion (S$18 billion).

Malayan Banking (Maybank) remains tops at RM44 billion, while IOI Corp pushed state-owned utility Tenaga National to third spot at RM40.3 billion. The rest of Malaysia's corporate grandees are familiar names: Public Bank (RM38 billion), Malaysian International Shipping Corporation (RM37.1 billion), Bumiputra-Commerce Holdings (RM36.4 billion) and Telekom Malaysia (RM35 billion).

For IOI Corp to come this far is a tremendous feat; it was nowhere near such exalted heights, say, twelve years ago.

How it did so is what a soon-to-be-created entity called Synergy Drive might want to research.

To be sure, high palm oil prices was the immediate trigger that pushed IOI Corp shares up last Friday: the benchmark crude palm oil futures contract hit RM2,776 a tonne and seems poised to test the record RM2,800 mark soon.

But more importantly, IOI is superbly managed. On almost all counts, it boasts better efficiencies and superior returns on its assets - whether in plantations, property, oleochemicals manufacturing, even hotel management. Stripped of the rhetoric, it has what securities house CLSA calls 'a solid management track record'.

The company is now the world's largest producer of oleochemicals from palm oil - courtesy of acquisitions of Dutch and Indian refineries this year and last - and made a net profit of RM1.48 billion on RM8 billion of sales for its 2007 financial year against consensus earnings forecasts of RM1.3 billion odd. And it remains a top pick for institutional investors.

Some time in November, Synergy Drive will be listed. It represents a work in progress that had its seeds in a plan presented to Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi by businessman Chua Ma Yu in 2003. His plan was simple: take six plantation firms owned by the state agency and merge them to create the world's largest listed oil palm company with 5 per cent of global palm oil supply, over 600,000 hectares of land and, conceivably, Malaysia's biggest firm in terms of value. Investment bank CIMB took Mr Chua's idea and ran with the ball, promoting the merger last year and the result next month will be Synergy Drive, which is likely to be renamed Sime Darby.

Synergy is likely to become the biggest firm in the country upon listing: its sheer size and euphoria over high palm oil prices will ensure that outcome. Indeed, preliminary estimates of Synergy's market capitalisation are anything between RM60 billion and RM70 billion. But can it stay that way?

Given the cyclical nature of the oil palm business, that is unlikely. Even so, Synergy Drive can do a whole lot more. The whole idea behind the merger plan was to increase productivity in Malaysia's palm oil industry, to increase the country's competitiveness to face challenges thrown up by new Asian investment magnets, particularly China and India.

For the longest time, the companies that make up Synergy - from Sime Darby to Golden Hope - have consistently underperformed companies like IOI Corporation. On every conceivable performance index - from yield per hectare to return on assets - the state-owned plantation companies have lost out to IOI.

If they could get even close, the results would be astonishing. Here's one statistic to chew on: Last year, IOI produced 806,627 tonnes of crude palm oil while Synergy's combined output was 2.1 million tonnes. If it does get its act together a la IOI, its production will be a whole lot higher. And Malaysia would truly have a world-class brand.



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Posted by Calvin Foo at 8:46 AM No comments:

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Mild boost only from IOI’s Indonesian venture

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20 Sept 2007

IOI Corporation Bhd’s acquisition of several Indonesia-based oil palm plantation firms for nearly US$90 million (RM315 million), would boost its bottomline by only RM3.3 million to RM10.5 million per annum over the next three years, said Aseambankers Equity Research.

“Nevertheless, we raised our FY08 and F09 earnings forecast by 4.7% and 3.1% respectively to reflect the higher average CPO price assumption for FY08 and FY09,” it said.

It forecast CPO prices to rise from RM2,250 per tonne to RM2,350 in FY08 and for FY09, it expected the price to increase from RM2,150 to RM2,200 per tonne, respectively.

Aseambankers Research said it maintained its “fully valued” call, but raised its target price to RM4.80 (previously RM4.70) based on 18 times FY09 fully-diluted earnings per share (EPS).

On Tuesday, IOI Corp said that it was acquiring several Indonesia-based oil palm plantation companies as part of the group’s strategy to grow its core palm oil business under appropriate conditions.

The company had inked an agreement to acquire a 33% stake in PT Bumitama Gunajaya Agro which has a total planted area of 35,300ha and unplanted land of 64,500ha, together with three palm oil mills.

It also signed an agreement to acquire a 67% stake in several companies with total land available for planting of 52,700ha (significantly reduced from the previously reported 128,000ha as the remaining land was unsuitable for planting after due diligence).

The acquisition will be funded by existing cash and borrowings, and targeted for completion by end-2007.

However, Aseambankers Research said that of the 68,000ha of effective interest by IOI Corp, 11,630ha had been planted of which only 4,648ha are young mature (against IOI Corp’s existing 140,000ha mature plantation; minimal).

It estimated the Indonesian venture is unlikely to make any meaningful contribution to IOI at least over the next four years.

“We understand that IOI Corp has targeted to open 10,000ha of new land per annum at US$3,000 development cost over a three year period. But judging from IOI Corp’s lack of local experience, we believe the actual planting in the initial years could be significantly lower based on experiences shared by other Malaysian planters,” it said.

Posted by Calvin Foo at 6:12 PM No comments:

IOI Corp buys oil palm firms for RM289m

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19 Sept 2007

KUALA LUMPUR: IOI Corporation Bhd (IOI Corp) is acquiring several Indonesia-based oil palm plantation companies for a total of nearly US$90 million (RM289 million) as part of the group’s strategy to grow its core palm oil business under appropriate conditions.

It had entered into agreements to acquire Singapore-based investment holding companies Lynwood Capital Resources Pte Ltd and Oakridge Investments Pte Ltd from Ivygate International Ltd and Red Canyon Enterprise Ltd, and Oleander Capital Resources Pte Ltd from Goldharvest Group Holdings Ltd, for US$62.63 million and US$20.3 million respectively.

The deal will also see IOI Corp owning 33% of PT Bumitama Gunajaya Agro (BGA), and 67% each in PT Agro Mandiri Sejahtera, PT Ketapang Sawit Lestari, PT Bumi Sawit Sejahtera, PT Kalimantan Prima Agro Mandiri, PT Berkat Nabati Sejahtera and PT Sukeses Karya Sawit. Under the agreement, IOI Corp will repay US$9.6 million on behalf of BGA, owing to Ivygate and Red Canyon.

The proposed acquisition, which will be completed in the last quarter of 2007, will be funded by existing cash reserves and borrowings.

In a statement released yesterday, it said BGA has a total planted area of about 35,300ha and unplanted land of about 64,500ha, as well as three oil mills. It also oversees a plasma scheme of about 21,800ha.

The second deal would provide a 52,700ha piece of land for planting excluding areas allocated for plasma schemes.

It said IOI Corp would provide plantation management, agronomy and related technical support services to achieve better efficiency and cost effectiveness, while the remaining shareholders would be responsible for human resource and regulatory matters, which included the procurement of issuance of relevant land titles.

It said expanding the plantation business in the country had became more difficult due to scarcity of plantation land, adding that Indonesia’s proximity to the country was ideal for the group’s plantation expansion overseas.
Posted by Calvin Foo at 12:58 PM No comments:

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Values boom in parts of corridor

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17 July 2006

In Pusat Bandar Puchong, the prices of double-storey terraced houses have appreciated substantially since the project kicked off in 1994. The smallest 18’ x 65’ units which were priced at RM117,000 have appreciated to RM220,000 today while the 20’ x 70’ units are changing hands for RM300,000 from the launch price of RM150,000.

Land value, especially those surrounding Putrajaya, was reported to have appreciated from RM1.50 psf before the development of Putrajaya to RM50 psf now.

According to Putrajaya Holdings Sdn Bhd chief executive officer Azlan Abdul Karim, Putrajaya and Cyberjaya offered the most growth potential. Putrajaya in particular, has invested in excellent infrastructure, amenities and architecture. This will pay off in the future as the city matures.

“In terms of concept planning, Putrajaya is a showcase city and the architectural and planning efforts made throughout the city ensures that it will be a tourist attraction to rival international cities in years to come,” Azlan told StarBiz.

IOI Properties Bhd director Datuk David Tan said with the growing affluence of the population in the corridor, the types and prices of properties being developed here have reached the levels of those in established neighbourhoods in Petaling Jaya and Kuala Lumpur.

“With these, developers are compelled to meet expectations on quality of workmanship and customer service,” he added.

IOI is one of the property companies that had made it big in Puchong in the 1990s through its 930-acre Bandar Puchong Jaya followed by the 930-acre Bandar Puteri Puchong. Tan said the company still believed in the corridor’s potential and had lined up a new township on 550 acres at the entrance to Cyberjaya.

“This new township has been carefully planned taking into consideration the needs of house buyers. We have gained valuable feedback from our buyers and have new concepts and ideas on housing and environmental designs that will fulfil their more discerning expectations,” he added.

IOI’s future launches in Bandar Puteri Puchong would include higher end bungalows and corporate offices fronting the Damansara Puchong Expressway.

This is a big improvement from its early days as a pioneer developer in Puchong where the initial phases comprised modestly priced terrace houses “to attract buyers to the region.” To enhance the image of the once-remote region, the company ploughed in much investment in infrastructure, including the district police station and quarters, community hall, main roads, flyovers and the IOI Mall. As the company's success grew, its subsequent developments catered for a much wider catchment market.

Another early developer in Puchong, SP Setia Bhd also went on to become a big success in the property business.

Despite having moved on to the western growth corridor as its two flagship developments, Setia Alam and Setia Eco Park, are in Shah Alam, group managing director and chief executive officer Tan Sri Liew Kee Sin said the company was thankful for the opportunity to develop Pusat Bandar Puchong as it turned out to be a signature showcase of an SP Setia development.

“The mature township on 700 acres has all the hallmarks of innovative designs, quality workmanship, extensive landscaping and well-planned masterplan.

“Over the 10 years of developing Pusat Bandar Puchong, we have reinforced our reputation as a quality developer. Pusat Bandar Puchong is today regarded as one of the greenest and most well maintained townships in the vicinity.”

Posted by Calvin Foo at 11:55 AM No comments:

Friday, September 7, 2007

Forbes Asia: Pumping Palm Oil

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On The Cover/Top Stories
Pumping Palm Oil
Ioannis Gatsiounis 06.18.07


IOI's Lee Shin Cheng is a master at squeezing every drop from his vast plantations. The craze for biofuels is driving up prices, but caution is the watchword at this Malaysian company.

It's very good to be the world's largest palm oil producer--especially when a giant economy such as Europe's decides it must combat global warming and your product is signed up for the fight. Palm oil has long been used in food and cosmetics, but if they want to turn it into biodiesel for cars and buses, that's fine, too. So palm oil prices are soaring, and so are profits at Malaysia's IOI Corp. The share price is also on a tear, by the way.

But IOI, started in 1969 as a distributor of industrial gas, didn't get to be a $2.5 billion company by jumping on bandwagons. Four years after palm oil became a biofuel of choice for trendy European drivers going green, IOI hasn't added one acre to its plantations. It doesn't rule out making an acquisition to boost its land holdings, though. "If the price is reasonable, we're always open to it," says IOI Group Executive Chairman Lee Shin Cheng, not sounding like a man in hurry. "When the time comes, we'll be there."

And IOI has only recently gotten a license to build a biodiesel plant in Johor, on the Singapore border, that would produce 200,000 tons a year--hardly a huge amount. It says it may also invest in a second palm oil refinery in the Netherlands. "We're not going be an early bird in biodiesel, just like we weren't with oleochemicals [chemicals derived from fats and oils] and other areas," he says.

Lee's caution may be smart, for already the biodiesel craze is losing steam. The European Union kicked it off in 2003, when it mandated that by 2010, 5.75% of the fuel used for transportation be renewable, rising to 20% by 2020. A victory for the environment quickly turned into a defeat. The order set off an immediate rush to set up new plantations by clearing swaths of Southeast Asian rain forest and draining and burning peat bogs. That unleashed enormous clouds of pollution. The burning peat bogs were responsible for carbon emissions equaling 8% of the world's total, according to a four-year study by Wetlands International and two other Dutch groups. Now the Netherlands has suspended its subsidies for palm oil fuel, and some environmental groups are backing away from it. The country has begun developing a program to certify which biofuels come from sources that are environmentally sound.

Lee doesn't put much stock in the environmental findings, saying they've been cooked up by people pushing other plants, such as rapeseed, corn and soybean, whose oil also can be used for biofuel. But IOI doesn't figure to be affected much by the environmental rethink, anyway. If palm oil prices settle down as biodiesel demand rises less quickly, that's okay with IOI and its strategy of steady, long-term growth. In any event, it prefers to buy established plantations, or brownfields, rather than vacant plots, or greenfields that were recently cleared.

Even without dealing for more land, IOI's business has been booming. Three-month-forward prices for crude palm-oil are hitting alltime highs, rising by a third this year, to $760 a metric ton, after jumping 44% last year. That's propelled IOI's earnings by 67%, to $298 million, for the nine months ended Mar. 31, over the same period a year earlier. Revenue for the period was up 44%, to $1.86 billion. The stock is trading at around $8 a share on the Bursa Malaysia, up from just 45 cents in early 2001. Its performance put it on FORBES' Fab 50 list of the best of Asia-Pacific's large listed companies last year.

Recently IOI hasn't needed to buy land to boost production. It's long been known as one of the best-managed and most efficient producers in Malaysia, famous for squeezing every last drop of palm oil out of its 415,000 acres on 79 estates around the country. The average yield in Malaysia is 1.6 tons an acre, according to the country's Palm Oil Board. IOI, says Lee, is averaging 2.4 and will reach 2.8 in five years. The secret? "Proper planting and fertilizing, and making sure each palm bunch is collected," says Lee, who is 68. "I still walk through the fields to make sure each tree is producing the way it should." That may be an exaggeration, but Michael Greenall, an analyst who follows the palm oil industry for BNP Paribas, says there's something to it. He attributes the productivity to "hands-on management" and the high-yielding trees that IOI planted 10 to 15 years ago. Also, he says, IOI "maintained sound agronomic practices, even after the ringgit" was devalued in the late 1990s.

Whatever IOI can make, the world will take, because palm oil is used in everything from makeup to soap. "Most people don't realize it but from the moment you wake up, you're involved with palm oil," says Lee. He pauses in front of a window in his Putrajaya offices, outside Kuala Lumpur, displaying a Kit Kat bar, a vitamin bottle and a Coffee-Mate packet, processed products that use palm oil. The U.S. consumes some 200,000 tons of palm oil a year--contributing to Malaysia's status as the number two exporter of food ingredients to the U.S. last year, according to an Associated Press tally of U.S. International Trade Commission data--while 3.5 million tons of palm oil, mostly from Indonesia and Malaysia, are sent to Europe. Palm oil produces 70% of IOI Group revenue (most of the rest comes from property development and manufacturing), and IOI accounts for 11% of the world's palm oil exports.

The man atop this palm oil juggernaut grew up northeast of Kuala Lumpur on a rubber plantation, where his father ran a small Chinese food shop. He left school when he was 11 to help support his family, selling ice cream on a bicycle for four years before returning to finish high school. He interviewed with one palm oil plantation for a supervisory job, but wasn't hired because he didn't speak English--important then because Europeans still ran most of the plantations. (Some 20 years later he took over that company; he won't name it.) Instead, at 22 he became a field supervisor at another palm oil company. That is when he says he started to develop his hands-on managerial style and home in on what it took to maximize yields. In those days palm oil was used in detergent as well as for cooking.

By 1982 Lee was in control of a small company and used it to buy a listed gas outfit, Industrial Oxygen Inc. Two years later he set out to create the palm oil industry's blue-chip player. In 1995 he changed the name to IOI and today he and his family--he's married and has six children--own 40%. That's helped make him Malaysia's fourth-richest person; FORBES ASIA puts his net worth at $3.9 billion. His two sons and four daughters all work in the business, with his eldest son, 40-year-old Lee Yeow Chor, serving as an executive director. Is the younger Lee being groomed to take over someday? His father says yes, though retirement isn't on his mind. He says he's still "very strong" and has no idea when he might want to step down.

These days IOI is diversifying into specialty fats and oils and oleochemicals based on palm oil, leaving it less vulnerable to price fluctuations in crude palm oil. It bought two Malaysian companies, Pan Century Edible Oils and Pan Century Oleochemicals, for $120 million in January. The purchases lifted the group's refining capacity by half, to 3 metric tons a year, and made it the world's largest producer of vegetable oil-based fatty acid, with a roughly 10% market share.

But as well positioned as IOI is, challenges loom as the industry's landscape changes. For one thing, the center of gravity is shifting toward Indonesia. Rivals such as Kumpulan Guthrie, Kuala Lumpur Kepong and PPB Oil Palms have made a mad dash into Indonesia to boost their land banks--at a time when land for new plantations in Malaysia, where all of IOI's plantations are located, is scarce. Both countries have a similar number of planted acres, but Indonesia has millions of additional acres cleared for planting, and some analysts predict that it will surpass Malaysia this year.

What's more, IOI's title as the largest palm oil producer is about to be taken away. In January a government-backed company called Synergy Drive agreed to buy Sime Darby, Golden Hope Plantations and Kumpulan Guthrie, creating the biggest palm producer once the deal is finalized, probably in October.

But palm oil is a commodity, so it doesn't much matter whether a rival is bigger. And even without the demand for biodiesel, palm oil prices would keep rising. One factor is a drought on the islands of Sumatra and Kalimantan. Another is an expected switch to palm oil by more consumers as demand for other edible oils outpaces the supply. For now, at least, Lee appears to hold this industry in the palm of his hand.

Posted by Calvin Foo at 11:27 AM No comments:

Asia's Fab 50 Companies - IOI Corp

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IOI Corp
09.06.07, 6:00 PM ET Industry: Food Drink & Tobacco
Malaysia Country: Malaysia

Size Valuation Performance
Market Value $8.9 bil Forward P/E 17 5 yr avg ROC 1 10%
Sales $2.5 bil Price to Sales 3.3 EPS Growth Est 2 27%

Dividend Yield 1.3%

Malaysia's largest producer of palm oil, a hot commodity in biodiesel circles. Most of the oil is still used in foods and cosmetics—an invisible but highly profitable ingredient. Posted record profits in latest fiscal year. Chairman Lee Shin Cheng isn't planting more acreage, even though palm oil prices have soared in the last two years. (Most new fields involve destruction of rainforest.) Instead, he is increasing yield and investing in downstream projects. Building a biodiesel plant in Johor, on the Singapore border, and buying refining capacity.
Posted by Calvin Foo at 11:24 AM No comments:

IOI makes Forbes Fabulous 50 again

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7 Sept 2007

Indian companies lead this year’s list

SINGAPORE: IOI Corp Bhd made it to the third annual Forbes Asia Fabulous 50 List for the second year in a row, again becoming the sole Malaysian company to get on the list thus far.

Forbes noted that IOI Corp, Malaysia's largest palm oil producer, posted sales of US$2.518bil and had a market value of US$8.857bil.

The Fabulous 50 List, which appears in the Sept 17 issue of Forbes Asia, covers only companies with revenues or market capitalisation of at least US$5bil, and a five-year record of operating profits and return on equity. Other criteria include long-term profitability, sales and earnings growth, stock price appreciation and projected earnings.

Indian companies led this year's list with 12, followed by Taiwan with 10 and seven companies from China.

“Four of India's information technology outsourcing companies made the cut including the biggest, Tata Consultancy Services that writes software for leading American firms.

“Most of the Indian firms on the list, however, did not have to leave home to find success. With a relatively young population of 1.1 billion, India has its own huge market,” Forbes said in a statement yesterday.

The same could be said of China too as all seven companies featured this year also relied on customers within its border.

As for Taiwan, most of the companies represented are from the island's low-profile technology industry and included Hon Hai Precision Industry, Acer, Compal Electronics and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing.

Forbes said companies on the list were also supplementing organic growth with acquisitions, such as India's Tata Steel, Doosan Infracore of South Korea and Acer.

Several new entries in this year's list included Hong Kong carrier Cathay Pacific Airways, Australian construction firm Leighton Holdings, Japanese computer games maker Nintendo and Singaporean firms Neptune Orient Lines and SembCorp Industries.

Posted by Calvin Foo at 11:23 AM No comments:
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