Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Rowsley

Rowsley: An independent investment writer ‘Summer – Sometimes regarded as the resident guru on property investments’ gives his view take on possible profit from Johor projects on NextInsight. Note that Rowsley has a market cap of $385 m. Its NAV is 4.19c a share. In the 9m12, net loss was $1.2 m, vs net loss of $3.3m yoy. With the little info given, ‘Summer’ thought it's interesting to see how Rowsley's figures look like, assuming that the deal to (1) acquire RSP Architects and (2) purchase and develop Vantage Bay's site in Johor Bahru are successful. Rowsley plans to develop 10m sq ft of GFA (hotels, condos, hospitals, shops) on a piece of land in JB not far away from the Causeway, facing the straits and Singapore. It is near to the new MRT station in JB that will be linked to Singapore. Assuming that this space is all used to build condo units for sale (being the most conservative assumption since medical and retail spaces would be much more valuable), this is the possible maths: > Land cost psf of GFA = RM$90 psf (arrived at from S$358m divided by 10m sq ft multiplied by 0.4 exchange rate) > Other costs = RM$510 psf (assumption based on 99-yr condos of a reasonable standard at Medini being launched at $600-700 psf; so cost of M$510 psf is reasonable) > Sale price = RM$1,200 psf (based on average sales price of Brunsfield's Danga Bay project of RM$1,100 psf, and Setia 88's condo at JB of RM$1,200-1,400 psf, etc. Think Rowsley's product should be priced higher as the Singapore name would command a premium, but RM$1,200 psf is assumed for prudence) > Gross profit = 10,000,000 X (RM$1,200-$510-$90) = RM$6 billion. Divided by 6.841b shares post the warrants issue (which is essentially a rights issue since the warrants must be exercised in 6 months), the gross profit per share is thus RM0.88 or S$0.35. Note that this of course, is a very crude way of calculating, but it does give us an idea that the project could be quite profitable. Of course, the Vantage Bay medical city development would span several rrs, and not all parts of it will be for sale. Because of the warrants issue, the ex-rights (to the warrants) price of Rowsley would be 25.3c, assuming Friday's close of 40c. This 25.3c is then compared to the gross profit of 35c from the Vantage Bay project and, on this alone, the maths does not look too bad. Many other speculative counters do not have similar positive projections. In addition, Rowsley will not just be a developer stock but one that can be grouped under "medical" should it retain the hospital, thereby commanding a higher valuation. RSP Architects would also form another component of its NAV. There are also possibilities of further injection of businesses into Rowsley, since Peter Lim is also working on Motorsports City in Gerbang Nusajaya. As an interesting example, if one were to go through CATs ads last Saturday, one would come across ads for a condo called Astaka. Not many people know it yet, but it will have the tallest residential building in Msia/SG. And it will be built in JB City, which is Zone A of Iskandar. It will be 300m high and tower over the tallest buildings in Singapore (ie, Republic Plaza, at 280m) and rise higher than Marina Bay Sands (207m). Already, whole floors of the towers are snapped up by buyers. That an iconic tower like this is planned for Iskandar is perhaps a sign that the music is getting a bit louder just outside our backyard. Could Rowsley be one of the tunes?

No comments:

Post a Comment