GS: FLEX: lack of upside hurts credibility, but #s were still ok; pressure = oppty
52-Week Range US$19-11 YTD Price Change -5.00% Market Cap US$7.4bn EPS Growth Estimate 15%
Due to high expectations, FLEX disappointed with in-line Jun-Q & barely in- line guidance; emotions aside, we think #s were still solid & yield a good buy oppty on likely pressure, particularly under $13. We had concerns about expectations but thought they'd deliver on Jun-Q to offset conservative guidance. Though we were wrong on Jun-Q, we maint our 64c CY04E & 90c CY05E. Our 05E seems conservative y-y: 11% rev growth, gross mgn +30bp & 30bp SG&A leverage; closure of the NT deal should add 10c to 05, though it's prudent to expect up to 5c dilution from potential financing (conservative CY05 range would be 90c-$1.00). We recognize many will cont to question handheld exposure & reliability of this level of earnings; we think risk to our est is a tech downturn, not FLEX-specific. Simply put, for investors that want a modest valuation, high beta stock, in expectations of a tech rally later this year, we think EMS is a good place to look, & FLEX (IL/N) is a very good candidate on post-earnings pressure. Below we comment on EMS & macro implications.
RECOMMENDATION: WE SEE 25% UPSIDE FROM $13
We use some traditional valuation metrics and a proprietary ROIC-based valuation. At $13 on traditional metrics, P/E on our 90c CY05E is 14.4x -- slightly below 16x peer avg. Including the NT deal & a potential financing, CY05 should be at least 95c; P/E at $13 would be 13.7x. Price-to-tangible book of 4.27x is above 2.4x peer median, but 1.65x price-to-book and 0.5x price-to-LTM revs are roughly in line with peers. An 18x P/E on our 90c CY05E or the $1.00 potential with NT would yield a $16-$18 stock in the medium term, or 25%-35% upside. Our proprietary valuation methodology shows 20+% upside medium term, based on our current ests incl charges. Given potential upside of ests and mix of valuation metrics, we see 25+% potential upside from $13 with limited downside risk. We repeat that shares are compelling for investors who believe tech is generally oversold and the market is poised for a seasonal tech rally later this year; in the last 2 years FLEX has outperformed peers from July-Dec.
IMPLICATIONS: INVENTORY +8% ADJ; EXPECT EMS PRESSURE (1) MACRO: Mgmt seems confused; they acknowledge recent flood of tech warnings, hence their conservative guidance, but they do not see any cooling in their business. Inventory will no doubt be a source of debate: reported inventory was +17% q-q but mgmt noted that half of the increase was due to new business; this implies a 8-9% increase as the proper macro data point. This is a little higher than the 5% increase we/mgmt would have expected (after all, FLEX has been flat for 2 qtrs) so we do not think it is a bad inventory number that should overly concern investors. As noted below, we believe handsets were one source of minor excess inventory.
(2) HANDSETS/CONSUMER: Handset revs were strong, led largely by top customer Sony Ericsson (up 40% q-q); this implies all other handset customers were actually down 6% q-q (other top customers include MOT, ALA, SI, & NOK). We believe handsets were a modest source of excess finished goods inventory.
(3) MIXED COMM INFRASTRUCTURE: FLEX is not a particularly large telecom supplier by EMS standards. Telecom infrastructure (predominantly wireless) was down 3% q-q; their biggest customer is ERICY, at ~5% of total revs, followed by some exposure to MOT, NOK, and SI among others. In the context of a strong Mar-Q (+10% q-q), lukewarm Jun-Q results fit recent datapoints. Datacom was +18% q-q, but again, datacom is only 8% of total revs and customers are generally smaller names, such as Extreme and Quantum.
(4) COMPUTING: Segment revs were down just 2%, we believe attributable to lethargy in end markets we've seen, and seasonal weakness for their largest segment customer, HPQ (~9% of total revs, mostly ink-jet printers), as they prepare build for Sep-Q back-to-school & year end seasonal improvement.
(5) NEGATIVE FOR EMS STOCKS; + FOR OUTSOURCING: Disappointment will no doubt pressure the EMS group a few % on Tuesday, but we think that's an overreaction to pretty solid results. FLEX also affirmed a very healthy outsourcing environment, robust pipeline of new business, improved margins, and their view that the industry is nowhere near peak margins; we roughly agree with the trends but disagree on magnitude, but we also note FLEX credibility doesn't help this argument near term.
WHAT TO WATCH: (1) KEY CUSTOMERS: HPQ news (~9% of revs, mostly ink-jet printers) & DELL (about 6% of revs) report in Aug. Other top customers to watch for news flow include: Sony-Ericsson (15% of revs, already reported good 2Q numbers), Siemens (~8% of revs) and MOT, ERICY, and ALA (each 4- 5% of revs, reporting in the next week).
(2) HANDSETS: Sony Ericsson share and industry inventories are impt, at least for handset sentiment on FLEX.
(3) CASH: Optg C/F of $166m and FCF of $100m were good numbers in the qtr and worthy of continued watch as it indicates how big a potential financing might be.
(4) NEW DEALS: Mgmt mentioned the final stages of 2 new deals in the "several hundred million revs" category; if these require some up front cash (which we suspect), it further increases likelihood of a financing (perhaps debt or convert, since their equity level is unappealing).
SUMMARY OF F1Q05 (JUN) RESULTS VS OUR ESTS VS MAR-Q GS est. As Reported MAR-Q -------------------------------------------------------- Revenue $3.88B $3.88B $3.77B Gross Margin 6.2% 6.4% 6.3% Cash EPS $0.14 $0.14 $0.13 Inventory turns 11.3x 12.1x DSOs 44 44 Cash Cycle 19 17 -------------------------------------------------------- Source: Goldman Sachs Research estimates and company reports. SEGMENT BREAKDOWN JUN-Q Q-Q % of rev $ change ------------------------------------------------------ Ind, Med & Other 9% +3% Comm. Infrastructure 16% -3% Handhelds 37% +9% Consumer 9% +3% IT Infrastructure 8% +18% Comp & Office 21% -2% ------------------------------------------------------ Source: Goldman Sachs Research estimates and company reports.
I, Stephen Savas, hereby certify that all of the views exp |