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Joelton
    07-Nov-2022 09:12  
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Wilmar International
 
Between Nov 1 and 3, Wilmar International : F34 +1.02%&rsquo s chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) Kuok Khoon Hong increased his deemed interest in the stock.
 
HPRY Holdings, which Kuok is deemed interest in, acquired 650,000 shares of Wilmar on Nov 1, then another 36,700 shares on Nov 2, and 485,300 shares on Nov 3, with all transactions booked at S$3.88 per share.
 
The total consideration of the three acquisitions was S$4,547,360 and increased Kuok&rsquo s total interest in Wilmar International from 12.94 per cent to 12.96 per cent.
 
Following the Oct 28 close, Wilmar International provided a financial summary, reporting its third consecutive record quarter result in 2022, with core net profit for the third quarter of 2022 surging 38 per cent from Q3 2021.
 
Wilmar International&rsquo s record results were driven by good performance across all core segments.
 
This brought the group&rsquo s core net profit to US$1.95 billion for the first nine months of 2022, up 49 per cent from a year ago.
 
Wilmar International operates an integrated agribusiness model that encompasses the entire value chain of the agricultural commodity business.
 
In the face of the commodity market volatility this year, Kuok noted in August that the integrated and diversified business model of Wilmar International, as well as its cautious approach to risk management when agri-commodities were at or near historical highs had enabled the group to deliver record results this year.
 
Kuok oversees the management of the group with a particular focus on new business development.
 
He maintains extensive experience in the industry and has been involved in the grains, edible oils, and oilseeds businesses since 1973.
 
 
Joelton
    07-Nov-2022 09:11  
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Wilmar chairman increases stake at S$3.88 following Q3 update 
 
FOR the five trading sessions that spanned Oct 28 to 3 Nov, the Straits Times Index (STI) gained 2.9 per cent, with the Hang Seng Index gaining 0.4 per cent and the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI declining 2.0 per cent.
 
Overall, institutions were net buyers of Singapore stocks for the five sessions ending Nov 3, with S$290 million of net inflows. This brought the 2022 year-to-Nov-3 net institutional inflows to just over S$750 million.
 
UOB : U11 +1.36%, DBS : D05 +0.79%, OCBC Bank : O39 +0.75%, Sembcorp Marine : S51 0% and Singtel : Z74 +0.4% led the net institutional inflows for the five sessions. Meanwhile, CapitaLand Investment : 9CI +5.59%, Suntec Reit : T82U +1.56%, Singapore Exchange : S68 -0.12%, Sats : S58 -0.74% and Jardine Matheson Holdings : J36 -0.27% led the net institutional outflows for the five sessions.
 
Share buybacks
 
There were 17 primary-listed stocks conducting share buybacks over the five sessions ending Nov 3, with a total consideration of S$12.7 million, a similar pace to the consideration totals for the past two weeks.
 
Sembcorp Industries : U96 +3.7% led the five-session buyback consideration tally, buying back 2.2 million shares at an average price of S$2.99 per share.
 
Sembcorp Industries has bought back 0.27 per cent of its issued shares (excluding treasury shares) on the current mandate, as of Nov 3.
 
Director and substantial shareholder transactions
 
The five trading sessions saw close to 70 changes to director interests and substantial shareholdings filed for more than 30 primary-listed stocks. This included 11 company director acquisitions with no disposals filed, while substantial shareholders filed seven acquisitions and two disposals. 
 
 
Joelton
    02-Nov-2022 09:01  
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Wilmar Q3 results draw mixed reactions from brokerages
 
AGRIBUSINESS giant Wilmar&rsquo s latest set of financial results has drawn mixed reactions from brokerages with RHB Research raising its target price on the stock to S$5.40 from S$4.95, and Maybank Securities lowering its target to S$4.27 from S$4.47.
 
Their moves were based on opposing views on Wilmar : F34 0%&rsquo s ability to replicate its strong Q3 FY2022 performance. 
 
In a report on Tuesday (Nov 1), RHB analysts noted that Wilmar&rsquo s Q3 results exceeded RHB&rsquo s projections to come in at 102-104 per cent. 
 
The research house has therefore raised its earnings estimates for FY2022 to FY2024 by 8-14 per cent, inclusive of a 2 per cent ESG (environmental, social and governance) premium. 
 
It continues to rate Wilmar at &ldquo buy&rdquo on the belief that the stock &ldquo remains severely undervalued&rdquo , with a forecast price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of 7.9 for FY2023. 
 
Looking ahead, the team expects Wilmar&rsquo s margins to remain &ldquo relatively robust&rdquo &ndash especially when the company begins reaping the full impact of its average selling price increases amid lower commodity prices.
 
In particular, RHB likes Wilmar for its combined stake in Yihai Kerry and Adani Wilmar, which is &ldquo almost double the value of (Wilmar&rsquo s) own market capitalisation&rdquo , in their view. Yihai Kerry is the group&rsquo s Chinese edible oil and grain subsidiary, and Adani Wilmar is its Indian food subsidiary.
 
Meanwhile, Maybank Securities&rsquo research team expressed doubt on Wilmar&rsquo s ability to replicate its strong Q3 results. 
 
The brokerage cut its target price to S$4.27 from S$4.47, but maintained its &ldquo hold&rdquo call on Wilmar in a report issued on Monday. 
 
While the team raised its earnings per share estimate for FY2022 by 14 per cent in light of Wilmar&rsquo s financial performance, it lowered projected earnings for FY2023 to FY2024 by 7-16 per cent.
 
It also questioned whether Wilmar&rsquo s higher Q3 margins &ndash the highest since two years ago &ndash were &ldquo one-off&rdquo , since profits were driven by better associate contributions and a lower effective tax rate. 
 
Additionally, Maybank&rsquo s analysts foresee slower economic growth as well as prolonged Covid-19 restrictions in China, where a significant portion of Wilmar&rsquo s operations are based. 
 
&ldquo With the potential for further lockdowns and a global recessionary scenario, it is hard to call an inflection point on Chinese demand, in our view,&rdquo they said. 
 
Coupled with global recessionary risks, Maybank believes this will post a threat to Wilmar&rsquo s margin and volume expansion in future. 
 
CGS-CIMB expressed similar sentiments in its Oct 28 report, projecting a lower core net profit of US$400 million for Q4 FY2022. 
 
While it acknowledged that Wilmar&rsquo s latest set of Q3 results were better than expected, the research house attributes this performance to a lower effective tax rate and higher associate contributions. 
 
&ldquo The group&rsquo s nine-month FY2022 net profit is only 3.5 per cent shy of its FY2021&rsquo s core net profit of US$1.84 billion and has exceeded all its past year&rsquo s core net profit before FY2021. Over the past 10 years (excluding 2016), nine-month core net profit had made up 70 per cent of its full-year core net profit on average,&rdquo noted its analysts. 
 
The research house nonetheless maintains &ldquo add&rdquo on the stock with an unchanged target price of S$4.68. It continues to like Wilmar for its &ldquo attractive&rdquo FY2022 P/E valuation multiple of 7.5 times, with a dividend yield of 6 per cent. 
 

 
TA_Expert
    30-Oct-2022 17:35  
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How can Wilmar share price at such a depressed state? Against fundamentals.
 
 
Joelton
    29-Oct-2022 17:00  
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Wilmar posts 34.7% rise in Q3 profit to US$766.2 million
AGRIBUSINESS giant Wilmar International : F34 -0.55% on Friday (Oct 28) posted a net profit of US$766.2 million, up 34.7 per cent from a year ago, for the third quarter ended Sep 30.
 
Revenue increased 10.2 per cent to US$18.9 billion on the back of better sales across the group&rsquo s feed and industrial products, and food products businesses.
 
The feed and industrial products segment saw an 8.5 per cent rise in sales volume, mainly driven by a 12.7 per cent increase in sales for oilseeds and grains, and 12.1 per cent increase in sales for sugar.
 
The food products segment posted 3.2 per cent growth in sales volume, dragged down by a 2.8 per cent dip in consumer products sales. Wilmar nevertheless called the results &ldquo satisfactory&rdquo , and noted that prices of consumer products were adjusted upwards while raw material costs started to decline.
 
The group also had a higher share of results from joint ventures and associates, and lower effective tax rate during the quarter.
 
Net profit for the nine months ended September was US$1.9 billion, up 46.3 per cent from a year ago.
 
Operating cash flow jumped 68.2 per cent in Q3 to US$3.5 billion, taking into account the recent decline in commodity prices and hence lower net working capital requirements.
 
Wilmar said that while global operating conditions remained challenging, the group is confident of its &ldquo integrated and diversified business model and sound risk management policies&rdquo .
 
 
spursfan
    28-Oct-2022 17:29  
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Wilmar International Limited (&ldquo Wilmar&rdquo or the &ldquo Company&rdquo )
For the period ended 30 September 2022
Executive Summary 

Key highlights of Wilmar Group results for the period ended 30 September 2022:
  3Q2022 3Q2021   9M2022 9M2021  
  US$' 000 US$' 000 Change US$' 000 US$' 000 Change
             
Revenue  18,877,223 17,134,963  10.2% 55,011,005  46,669,380  17.9%
Net Profit 766,175   568,729  34.7%   1,931,152    1,319,642  46.3%
Core Net Profit 796,734    576,437  38.2%   1,952,175    1,308,654  49.2%
EBITDA 1,291,519   1,139,580  13.3%   3,641,366    3,023,674  20.4%
             
Sales volume (' 000MT)            
Food Products            
- Consumer Products   2,169    2,231  -2.8%   6,440    6,334  1.7%
- Medium Pack and Bulk    5,537    5,237  5.7%   15,091    14,450  4.4%
    7,706    7,468  3.2%   21,531    20,784  3.6%
Feed and Industrial Products            
- Tropical Oils   6,061    5,875  3.2%   16,009    16,844  -5.0%
- Oilseeds and Grains   5,628    4,992  12.7%   15,245    14,066  8.4%
- Sugar   3,042    2,714  12.1%   8,251    8,847  -6.7%
    14,731    13,581  8.5%   39,505    39,757  -0.6%
             
Operating cash flows before working capital changes 963,139 984,943 -2.2% 2,480,029 2,790,874 -11.1%
             
Cash flows from operating activities   3,470,925    2,063,954 68.2% 3,196,810    670,719  376.6%
             
        30.09.2022 31.12.2021  
Net debt       17,033,050 17,237,705 -1.2%
Equity attributable to owners of the
Company
      19,359,293 19,923,875 -2.8%

https://links.sgx.com/1.0.0/corporate-announcements/SH7QU9FYQQEDO9TV/735780_WIL_3Q2022_Executive_Summary_28.10.2022.pdf
 

 
actan99
    28-Oct-2022 15:35  
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Ok lah, at least no more drop big liao,  forming a base ?

Today results how ? lol 
 
 
FATABA
    26-Oct-2022 10:22  
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Fri result so today maybe hv prata koso

tongphlp      ( Date: 26-Oct-2022 07:34) Posted:

even prata also gone....

FATABA      ( Date: 25-Oct-2022 11:15) Posted:

Wilmar going below 3.50 w over 2.6M shares ...so far
W the poor Chinese mkt condition ....more political and tightening of ALL control under ONE man ( emporer) ....market condition in HK and China will be very tough for anyone
really need to DYODD>  


 
 
tongphlp
    26-Oct-2022 07:34  
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even prata also gone....

FATABA      ( Date: 25-Oct-2022 11:15) Posted:

Wilmar going below 3.50 w over 2.6M shares ...so far
W the poor Chinese mkt condition ....more political and tightening of ALL control under ONE man ( emporer) ....market condition in HK and China will be very tough for anyone
really need to DYODD>  

FATABA      ( Date: 07-Sep-2022 09:36) Posted:

Wilmar back to the 3+ series . 
high volume after 30min ...5M shares traded
Dyod


 
 
FATABA
    25-Oct-2022 11:15  
Contact    Quote!
Wilmar going below 3.50 w over 2.6M shares ...so far
W the poor Chinese mkt condition ....more political and tightening of ALL control under ONE man ( emporer) ....market condition in HK and China will be very tough for anyone
really need to DYODD>  

FATABA      ( Date: 07-Sep-2022 09:36) Posted:

Wilmar back to the 3+ series . 
high volume after 30min ...5M shares traded
Dyodd

FATABA      ( Date: 05-Sep-2022 09:12) Posted:

Wow even he sell off at 4.06 ....cant be he need $$
Hm


 

 
pasttime
    22-Oct-2022 07:05  
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fundamental is good and improving. droping price is more due to money flow then fundamentals.
interest rate increased will end when there is enough demand for their treasury auctions. money needed for expiring bond and new demand for their plan spending.
 
 
Tigerzbeer
    22-Oct-2022 01:30  
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Just beware of report The EdgeSingapore. This article seem like manipulated to let insider unload their positions to retail investor....Bastard!angry
 
 
Joelton
    21-Oct-2022 09:13  
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CGS-CIMB maintains &lsquo add&rsquo on Wilmar, cuts target price as valuations weaken
 
ANALYSTS at CGS-CIMB have maintained their &ldquo add&rdquo rating on Wilmar International : F34 +0.56% despite a cut in target price &ndash from S$5.69 to S$4.68 &ndash as the valuations of its listed subsidiaries weaken. 
 
In an Oct 19 report, CGS-CIMB noted that the food processing and investment holding company saw a 15 per cent decline in share prices to S$3.52 year to date. 
 
The revised target price therefore reflects the latest valuation of Wilmar&rsquo s listed subsidiaries, it said, which includes its Chinese edible oil and grain subsidiary Yihai Kerry at 40 yuan per share, Indian food subsidiary Adani Wilmar at 655 rupees per share, and Indian sugar refining subsidiary Shree Renuka at 62 rupees per share. The target price is also closer to the company&rsquo s book value of S$4.39 as at Jun 30, 2022, implying a price-to-book value (P/BV) of around 1.1 times. 
 
This came even with strong earnings in the first half of FY2022, said CGS-CIMB &ndash likely due to rising interest rates, which could negatively impact its earnings, and a strong US dollar, which might affect earnings that are derived from China and South-east Asia. 
 
The research house added that although it believes that Wilmar&rsquo s long-term business prospects will remain strong, with investments in new facilities expanding the group&rsquo s earnings base, market sentiment might be weak because of concerns about inflationary pressures and geopolitical tensions.
 
If anything, CGS-CIMB expects Wilmar to hit record earnings in FY2022, with a core net profit of US$600 million to US$650 million for Q3. This is in line with the previous quarter&rsquo s net profit of US$652 million and an increase from Q3 FY2021&rsquo s net profit of US$576 million.
 
&ldquo The third quarter has traditionally been its best earnings quarter, driven by festive demand and seasonally higher palm oil output,&rdquo it explained. 
 
CGS-CIMB also raised Wilmar&rsquo s earnings per share forecast by 14 per cent, citing the company&rsquo s potentially &ldquo better than expected&rdquo profit margin, particularly for its tropical oil segment and food product segments.
 
For instance, Wilmar saw higher export volumes in its tropical oil segment as Indonesia lifted its restrictions on palm oil export, resulting in better economies of scale and downstream margins for the company. The company&rsquo s food products segment is likely to show a sequential improvement in earnings from declining raw material costs too, it said. 
 
The analysts highlighted that Wilmar currently offers &ldquo deep value&rdquo , trading at 7.8 times its price-to-earnings ratio and 0.8 times its P/BV, with a dividend yield of 5.8 per cent. This is 1.5 standard deviation points below its 12-month historical mean. 
 
&ldquo We estimate that in the worst case scenario where Wilmar&rsquo s share price falls to its previous P/BV low in 2020, the downside to its share price is 6 per cent to S$3.29,&rdquo it said. 
 
Additionally, CGS-CIMB believes that the company&rsquo s share price could rerate closer to one to 1.3 times its P/BV, should fears of inflation and geopolitical tensions abate through the delivery of stronger earnings. The potential upside to its share price would then range from 25 to 62 per cent at S$4.40 to S$5.70, respectively. 
 
&ldquo We believe the market has more than priced in (their) concerns,&rdquo it said.
 
&ldquo We are positive on the group&rsquo s medium-term earnings prospects due to its capacity expansion plans, ventures into central kitchens in China and strong environmental, social and governance practices.&rdquo
 
 
tongphlp
    14-Sep-2022 16:42  
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one word - HOPELESS!

Joelton      ( Date: 14-Sep-2022 09:12) Posted:

Wilmar remains RHB' s top plantation picks in ' neutral' sector
 
In their report, the analysts are keeping their CPO average selling price (ASP) assumption at RM5,100 per tonne for 2022.
 
RHB Group Research analyst Hoe Lee Leng, as well as the research teams from Singapore and Indonesia, are keeping their &ldquo neutral&rdquo recommendation on the plantation sector as crude palm oil (CPO) prices remain under pressure.
 
The price pressures are due to the rising stock levels in Malaysia due to the policy reversal in Indonesia.
 
&ldquo These levels should decrease once Indonesia&rsquo s stock levels normalise, and once the disappointing peak output caused by Malaysia&rsquo s labour shortage kicks in,&rdquo says the team led by Hoe. &ldquo The 2QFY2022 reporting season saw most planters booking results that were in line, after four consecutive quarters of beating forecasts,&rdquo the team adds.
 
In Malaysia, the labour shortage, which has continued to hamper harvesting activities, is expected to continue into the 3Q2022, since only a trickle of workers have come in so far. More workers are expected to enter the country in September and October, the team notes.
 
In Indonesia, plantations with younger estates have seen y-o-y increases in the 2QFY2022, while older estates have registered y-o-y declines.
 
That said, output in Indonesian plantations have recovered sequentially across the board, averaging a growth of around 26% q-o-q for the companies under RHB&rsquo s coverage.
 
&ldquo As usual, the Association of Indonesian Palm Oil Producers&rsquo (GAPKI) official 2Q22 CPO output trends differed &ndash with a 15.5% y-o-y drop and a 7.6% q-o-q decline, bringing 1H2022 fresh fruit bunches (FFB) growth to -4.1% y-o-y,&rdquo the team writes.
 
Despite the upcoming peak season, planters in Malaysia are said to be more conservative in its guidance for the 2H2022 given the ongoing labour shortage.
 
As it is, most players are expecting flattish-to-slight FFB output growth.
 
Meanwhile, in Indonesia, planters in the country are expecting to see higher output growth in the 2H2022 on the back of black bunch counts done and the rate of q-o-q growth in the 2Q2022. In the FY2022, Indonesian planters are expecting FFB output to grow by single digits despite the year-to-date (ytd) decline in the 1H2022.
 
To this end, the analysts are anticipating a &ldquo less aggressive&rdquo forward-selling stance for the 2H2022 on the back of the recent decline in prices. These planters, write the analysts, are nervous about price volatility and the direction of prices. Ytd, prices are now at RM5,800 ($1,798.33) per tonne, they point out.
 
Margins are also expected to improve for planters in Indonesia with downstream operations. This is as the Indonesian government has extended the tax levy holiday to end-October from end-August. With this, their counterparts in Malaysia should see lower downstream margins in the 2H2022 given the resumption of the competitive advantage Indonesia has with this change.
 
In August, Malaysia&rsquo s palm oil output rose 9.7% m-o-m, while exports fell 1.9%, resulting in inventory rising to 2.09 million tonnes (+18.2% m-o-m).
 
&ldquo Stock levels in Malaysia could remain high until Indonesia&rsquo s tax-free holiday ends (at end-October), which means exports from Malaysia could only improve towards the year-end,&rdquo the analysts write. &ldquo This, together with potential disappointments in output in Malaysia due to the prevailing labour shortages, could mean stock levels may only drop towards the year-end.&rdquo
 
In addition to their &ldquo neutral&rdquo call, the analysts are keeping their CPO average selling price (ASP) assumption at RM5,100 per tonne for 2022.
 
Among the plantation names under their coverage, SGX-listed Wilmar remains one of the analysts&rsquo top picks. They have kept &ldquo buy&rdquo on Wilmar with a target price of $4.95.

 
 
tongphlp
    14-Sep-2022 09:21  
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read b/w the lines - remain one of the top picks..
diplomatic way of putting it...
which one? bottom most one? last one? why? not many choices...
 

Joelton      ( Date: 14-Sep-2022 09:12) Posted:

Wilmar remains RHB' s top plantation picks in ' neutral' sector
 
In their report, the analysts are keeping their CPO average selling price (ASP) assumption at RM5,100 per tonne for 2022.
 
RHB Group Research analyst Hoe Lee Leng, as well as the research teams from Singapore and Indonesia, are keeping their &ldquo neutral&rdquo recommendation on the plantation sector as crude palm oil (CPO) prices remain under pressure.
 
The price pressures are due to the rising stock levels in Malaysia due to the policy reversal in Indonesia.
 
&ldquo These levels should decrease once Indonesia&rsquo s stock levels normalise, and once the disappointing peak output caused by Malaysia&rsquo s labour shortage kicks in,&rdquo says the team led by Hoe. &ldquo The 2QFY2022 reporting season saw most planters booking results that were in line, after four consecutive quarters of beating forecasts,&rdquo the team adds.
 
In Malaysia, the labour shortage, which has continued to hamper harvesting activities, is expected to continue into the 3Q2022, since only a trickle of workers have come in so far. More workers are expected to enter the country in September and October, the team notes.
 
In Indonesia, plantations with younger estates have seen y-o-y increases in the 2QFY2022, while older estates have registered y-o-y declines.
 
That said, output in Indonesian plantations have recovered sequentially across the board, averaging a growth of around 26% q-o-q for the companies under RHB&rsquo s coverage.
 
&ldquo As usual, the Association of Indonesian Palm Oil Producers&rsquo (GAPKI) official 2Q22 CPO output trends differed &ndash with a 15.5% y-o-y drop and a 7.6% q-o-q decline, bringing 1H2022 fresh fruit bunches (FFB) growth to -4.1% y-o-y,&rdquo the team writes.
 
Despite the upcoming peak season, planters in Malaysia are said to be more conservative in its guidance for the 2H2022 given the ongoing labour shortage.
 
As it is, most players are expecting flattish-to-slight FFB output growth.
 
Meanwhile, in Indonesia, planters in the country are expecting to see higher output growth in the 2H2022 on the back of black bunch counts done and the rate of q-o-q growth in the 2Q2022. In the FY2022, Indonesian planters are expecting FFB output to grow by single digits despite the year-to-date (ytd) decline in the 1H2022.
 
To this end, the analysts are anticipating a &ldquo less aggressive&rdquo forward-selling stance for the 2H2022 on the back of the recent decline in prices. These planters, write the analysts, are nervous about price volatility and the direction of prices. Ytd, prices are now at RM5,800 ($1,798.33) per tonne, they point out.
 
Margins are also expected to improve for planters in Indonesia with downstream operations. This is as the Indonesian government has extended the tax levy holiday to end-October from end-August. With this, their counterparts in Malaysia should see lower downstream margins in the 2H2022 given the resumption of the competitive advantage Indonesia has with this change.
 
In August, Malaysia&rsquo s palm oil output rose 9.7% m-o-m, while exports fell 1.9%, resulting in inventory rising to 2.09 million tonnes (+18.2% m-o-m).
 
&ldquo Stock levels in Malaysia could remain high until Indonesia&rsquo s tax-free holiday ends (at end-October), which means exports from Malaysia could only improve towards the year-end,&rdquo the analysts write. &ldquo This, together with potential disappointments in output in Malaysia due to the prevailing labour shortages, could mean stock levels may only drop towards the year-end.&rdquo
 
In addition to their &ldquo neutral&rdquo call, the analysts are keeping their CPO average selling price (ASP) assumption at RM5,100 per tonne for 2022.
 
Among the plantation names under their coverage, SGX-listed Wilmar remains one of the analysts&rsquo top picks. They have kept &ldquo buy&rdquo on Wilmar with a target price of $4.95.

 

 
Joelton
    14-Sep-2022 09:12  
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Wilmar remains RHB' s top plantation picks in ' neutral' sector
 
In their report, the analysts are keeping their CPO average selling price (ASP) assumption at RM5,100 per tonne for 2022.
 
RHB Group Research analyst Hoe Lee Leng, as well as the research teams from Singapore and Indonesia, are keeping their &ldquo neutral&rdquo recommendation on the plantation sector as crude palm oil (CPO) prices remain under pressure.
 
The price pressures are due to the rising stock levels in Malaysia due to the policy reversal in Indonesia.
 
&ldquo These levels should decrease once Indonesia&rsquo s stock levels normalise, and once the disappointing peak output caused by Malaysia&rsquo s labour shortage kicks in,&rdquo says the team led by Hoe. &ldquo The 2QFY2022 reporting season saw most planters booking results that were in line, after four consecutive quarters of beating forecasts,&rdquo the team adds.
 
In Malaysia, the labour shortage, which has continued to hamper harvesting activities, is expected to continue into the 3Q2022, since only a trickle of workers have come in so far. More workers are expected to enter the country in September and October, the team notes.
 
In Indonesia, plantations with younger estates have seen y-o-y increases in the 2QFY2022, while older estates have registered y-o-y declines.
 
That said, output in Indonesian plantations have recovered sequentially across the board, averaging a growth of around 26% q-o-q for the companies under RHB&rsquo s coverage.
 
&ldquo As usual, the Association of Indonesian Palm Oil Producers&rsquo (GAPKI) official 2Q22 CPO output trends differed &ndash with a 15.5% y-o-y drop and a 7.6% q-o-q decline, bringing 1H2022 fresh fruit bunches (FFB) growth to -4.1% y-o-y,&rdquo the team writes.
 
Despite the upcoming peak season, planters in Malaysia are said to be more conservative in its guidance for the 2H2022 given the ongoing labour shortage.
 
As it is, most players are expecting flattish-to-slight FFB output growth.
 
Meanwhile, in Indonesia, planters in the country are expecting to see higher output growth in the 2H2022 on the back of black bunch counts done and the rate of q-o-q growth in the 2Q2022. In the FY2022, Indonesian planters are expecting FFB output to grow by single digits despite the year-to-date (ytd) decline in the 1H2022.
 
To this end, the analysts are anticipating a &ldquo less aggressive&rdquo forward-selling stance for the 2H2022 on the back of the recent decline in prices. These planters, write the analysts, are nervous about price volatility and the direction of prices. Ytd, prices are now at RM5,800 ($1,798.33) per tonne, they point out.
 
Margins are also expected to improve for planters in Indonesia with downstream operations. This is as the Indonesian government has extended the tax levy holiday to end-October from end-August. With this, their counterparts in Malaysia should see lower downstream margins in the 2H2022 given the resumption of the competitive advantage Indonesia has with this change.
 
In August, Malaysia&rsquo s palm oil output rose 9.7% m-o-m, while exports fell 1.9%, resulting in inventory rising to 2.09 million tonnes (+18.2% m-o-m).
 
&ldquo Stock levels in Malaysia could remain high until Indonesia&rsquo s tax-free holiday ends (at end-October), which means exports from Malaysia could only improve towards the year-end,&rdquo the analysts write. &ldquo This, together with potential disappointments in output in Malaysia due to the prevailing labour shortages, could mean stock levels may only drop towards the year-end.&rdquo
 
In addition to their &ldquo neutral&rdquo call, the analysts are keeping their CPO average selling price (ASP) assumption at RM5,100 per tonne for 2022.
 
Among the plantation names under their coverage, SGX-listed Wilmar remains one of the analysts&rsquo top picks. They have kept &ldquo buy&rdquo on Wilmar with a target price of $4.95.
 
 
tongphlp
    07-Sep-2022 10:28  
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SBB for show only...this is a goner...

FATABA      ( Date: 07-Sep-2022 09:36) Posted:

Wilmar back to the 3+ series . 
high volume after 30min ...5M shares traded
Dyodd

FATABA      ( Date: 05-Sep-2022 09:12) Posted:

Wow even he sell off at 4.06 ....cant be he need $$
Hm


 
 
FATABA
    07-Sep-2022 09:36  
Contact    Quote!
Wilmar back to the 3+ series . 
high volume after 30min ...5M shares traded
Dyodd

FATABA      ( Date: 05-Sep-2022 09:12) Posted:

Wow even he sell off at 4.06 ....cant be he need $$
Hmm

Joelton      ( Date: 05-Sep-2022 09:07) Posted:

Wilmar International
 
On Aug 29, Wilmar International : F34 -0.74% non-executive director Kuok Khoon Hua disposed of 220,000 shares via a market transaction at S$4.06 per share. The consideration of the acquisition totalled S$894,683 and marginally reduced his total interest in Asia&rsquo s leading agribusiness group from 0.965 per cent to 0.962 per cent.
 
Kuok filed similar sized market transactions, which were acquisitions, back in 2018. In that year, he acquired 225,000 shares at S$3.04 per share on Jun 28, and 222,000 shares at S$3.08 per share, on Jun 25.
 
Kuok was first appointed to the board of Wilmar in July 2016. He is the chairman of Kerry Holdings, the main investment holding company of the Kuok Group in Hong Kong.
 
He is also an executive director of Kerry Logistics Network and a non-executive director of Kerry Properties, both of which are companies listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, and an independent director of Sea, listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
 
Back on Aug 4, Wilmar reported a record US$1.16 billion net profit for H1 2022, on the back of an improved performance across all key business segments as well as higher contributions from its associates and joint ventures.


 
 
actan99
    06-Sep-2022 16:10  
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Paper hand lah they all.    Scared to hold lol. 

  this is warren buffet stock,  even they also scared to hold sell first  lol 

tongphlp      ( Date: 06-Sep-2022 15:27) Posted:

Gone case...

actan99      ( Date: 05-Sep-2022 22:26) Posted:

Huh I tot they do share back just last 1 or 2 weeks ago ? 


 
 
tongphlp
    06-Sep-2022 15:27  
Contact    Quote!
Gone case...

actan99      ( Date: 05-Sep-2022 22:26) Posted:

Huh I tot they do share back just last 1 or 2 weeks ago ? 

FATABA      ( Date: 05-Sep-2022 09:12) Posted:

Wow even he sell off at 4.06 ....cant be he need $$
Hm


 
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