Showing posts with label Food Empire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Empire. Show all posts

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Higher margins due to lower coffee price for Food Empire?

Report from Bloomberg today...

Coffee Crushed as Slumping Real Spurs Brazil Sales

The weakest Brazilian real in four years is accelerating coffee shipments from the biggest growing nation, adding to a glut that is cutting costs for Starbucks Corp. (SBUX) and Kraft Foods Group Inc.

First-half shipments were 20 percent higher than a year earlier at 13.385 million bags, or 803,000 metric tons, the Brazilian Trade Ministry said July 1. The real’s 9.4 percent retreat in the second quarter, the most among 24 major emerging-market currencies, increased revenue from dollar-denominated coffee sales and encouraged exporters to tap stockpiles that are the biggest since 2007.

Brazil is increasing competition among coffee sellers as farmers unload beans to clear storage space for the next harvest, judging that losses will be limited by translating dollar revenues into weaker reals. With global output exceeding demand for a fourth year, accelerating sales will drive prices down 11 percent to $1.08 a pound by Dec. 31, according to the median of 18 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

“The lower real will most certainly help exports, making Brazil a much more aggressive seller,” said Rasmus Wolthers, a trader at Wolthers & Associates, a brokerage in Santos, Brazil. “There’s a lot of coffee in Brazil, and there isn’t enough space to store it all, so producers will have to sell. I expect to see much more aggressive sales offers.”

Profit Margins
Colombia, the second-biggest grower of arabica beans, increased exports by 32 percent in the first five months of the year after the peso weakened 7.1 percent against the dollar, according to the nation’s Federation of Coffee Growers. Sales from Peru, the third-largest producer in South America, fell 31 percent in the period as buyers turn to supplies from Brazil.

Arabica, the most-consumed coffee, tumbled 61 percent on ICE Futures U.S. in New York since reaching a 14-year high in May 2011. Cheaper beans prompted J.M. Smucker Co. (SJM) to cut prices in February for Folgers, the top-selling U.S. brand, and widened second-quarter profit margins at Starbucks coffee houses.

This year’s 16 percent drop in futures to $1.214 compares with a 2.7 percent retreat in the Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of 24 commodities. The MSCI All-Country World Index of equities rose 5.4 percent, and the U.S. Dollar Index advanced 5.1 percent against a basket of six currencies. Treasuries lost 2.5 percent, a Bank of America Corp. (BAC) index shows.

Starbucks, the largest coffee-shop chain, will report a 21 percent gain in profit for its fiscal third-quarter that ended June 30, according to the mean of 13 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Shares of the Seattle-based company rose 25 percent in New York trading this year.

Biennial Cycle
Brazilian exports of green, or unroasted, coffee will expand 5.8 percent to 29 million bags in the 2013-2014 crop year that started July 1, the second-highest total on record, according to Cecafe, the exporters’ council in Sao Paulo. Each bag weighs 60 kilograms (132 pounds)

While production will decline this crop year as trees enter the lower-yielding phase of a biennial cycle, shipments will keep rising as exporters tap inventories from last year’s record crop of 56.1 million bags, the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates. This season’s projected harvest of 53.7 million bags will be the third-largest ever and expand stockpiles 22 percent to 8.23 million bags, the USDA predicts.
The real will weaken to an average of 2.3 per dollar in the fourth quarter, compared with 2.25 today, according to Barclays Plc, the most-accurate forecaster of Latin American currencies tracked by Bloomberg in the four quarters ended March 31.

Subsidy Boost
Government intervention may curb the surge in exports and halt the slump in coffee prices, said Jack Scoville, a vice president at Price Futures Group Inc., a broker in Chicago. The government approved a record 3.16 billion reais ($1.4 billion) of subsidies last month to expand storage, buy beans and invest in plantations. It is also considering a proposal to compensate growers when prices drop below a certain level.

Heavier-than-average rainfall may reduce the quality of beans and limit the appeal of Brazilian exports, said Francisco Ourique, a manager at Cooparaiso, a growers’ cooperative in Sao Sebastiao do Paraiso in Minas Gerais, the largest arabica-producing state. Storms can knock cherries off trees and diminish the taste of beans dried outdoors.

Minas Gerais
Parts of the coffee-growing states of Parana, Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais got rainfall that was as much as three times the 30-year average from May 1 to June 25, according to Randy Karst, a meteorologist at World Weather Inc. in Overland Park, Kansas.

Lower coffee prices and a weaker real may mean a financial squeeze on Brazilian growers, forcing some to cut spending on products such as fertilizers that they buy in dollars, according to Ourique, whose cooperative produces about 3.2 million bags a year. That would curb output from the 2014-15 season.

Exporting coffee rather than stockpiling may be the best option for growers, according to Kona Haque, a London-based analyst at Macquarie Group Ltd. The average cost of production dropped to $1.15 a pound from $1.35 at the start of the year as the real weakened, the bank estimates.

The real may weaken a further 20 percent as Latin America’s largest economy slows and the government budget deficit widens, Themistoklis Fiotakis, an analyst at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in London, wrote in a June 20 report. More than a million people took to the streets in the past month to demonstrate against inflation, government corruption and public services.

During the last major devaluation of the real, a 30 percent drop in 2008, green-coffee exports rose 5 percent to a then-record 26.033 million bags even as the harvest declined 16 percent, Cecafe and USDA data show. Brazil also exports robusta, the second-most-consumed coffee variety.

Million Bags
Global coffee production, including robusta that accounts for 41 percent of supply, will exceed demand by 4.46 million bags in 2013-2014, from a 10 million-bag surplus a year earlier, according to the USDA. Inventories will reach a five-year high of 30.53 million bags, the USDA predicts.

J.M. Smucker, which sells Folgers and Dunkin’ Donuts brand coffees, announced price cuts averaging 6 percent in February. The Orrville, Ohio-based company reported a 25 percent gain in fourth-quarter net income to $130.3 million. Kraft (KRFT), based in Northfield, Illinois, said May 3 it would cut the price of 12-ounce cans of Gevalia coffee by 6 percent.

Starbucks said April 25 that its operating profit margin in the quarter ended March 31 widened to 15.3 percent from 13.5 percent a year earlier, partly because of cheaper beans. The company cut its packaged-coffee prices by 10 percent that month.

Hedge funds and other large speculators are almost the most bearish they’ve ever been, with a net-short position of 27,560 futures and options, according to U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data that begins in 2006.

“Continued bearish fundamentals and the weaker real could take coffee down to $1,” said Ashmead Pringle, the president of Atlanta-based GreenHaven Commodity Services, whose $460 million GreenHaven Continuous Commodity Index Fund tracks a basket of commodities. “I wouldn’t buy it right now.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Marvin G. Perez in New York at mperez71@bloomberg.net; Isis Almeida in London at ialmeida3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Steve Stroth at sstroth@bloomberg.net; Claudia Carpenter at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net
Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/

Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Analyst Report on Food Empire - 21 May 2013


Share price of Food Empire increased from S$0.685 to S$0.725 today, a rise of almost 6 % in a day. Volume is high too, at about 10 x higher volume than average. Naturally, I was happy since I feel that the stock has good prospects and I am vested.

I tried to search online to see if there are any news, and came across an analyst coverage in the NextInsight that came out today. Coincidentally, I wrote about Food Empire a few days ago.

Link here: The NextInsight

Excerpt of the report below:


OSK-DMG maintains 'BUY" with 84 cents target for Food Empire.


Food Empire reported an 11% growth in 1Q13 earnings of USD5.6m. Results are in-line with expectations, accounting for 25% of our full year estimates. 


Sales in Russia grew at a stronger pace of 18% y-o-y vs our forecast of 15% due to a change in business model.

...


Sales for the quarter were also boosted by a raising of average selling prices (ASPs) for products last year. We also note an expansion in gross margins by 5ppt for the quarter. 

We maintain our estimates and BUY call with TP of SGD0.84, pegged to 16x FY13F P/E. 

Food Empire trades at a sharply lower valuation than Super Group (PE ratio of 13.9 for Food Empire vs 32 for Super Group).



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Disclaimer: The ideas expressed in this blog should not be construed as an enticement to buy or sell the securities, commodities or assets mentioned. The accuracy or completeness of the information provided cannot be guaranteed. Readers should carry out independent verification of information provided. No warranty whatsoever is given and no liability whatsoever is accepted for any loss howsoever arising whether directly or indirectly as a result of actions taken based on ideas and information found in this blog.

Sunday, 19 May 2013

Food Empire Holdings - 11.3% rise in net profit to $7mil in Q1-FY2013

Having bought and sold Food Empire a few times since October 2012 when it was still S$0.45, to take profit (amidst uncertainty in the global economy), I have again taken a position on Food Empire in April this year. After its XD date, it was trading at about 0.655-0.67 range. As of last Friday 17 May 2013, it was trading at S$0.685.

Since my last post in January 2013, prices of commodities such as sugar, crude palm oil (where it is used to make non-dairy creamer of 3-in-1 beverages) and coffee, are in a downward trend or are depressed. Being a direct user of these commodities to make the 3-in-1 beverages, this surely means good news for Food Empire since raw material costs are lower.

Sugar Prices (source: http://www.indexmundi.com/)

Crude palm oil prices (Source: palmoilhq.com)

Coffee prices (source: nasdaq.com)

Furthermore, group revenue grew by 13.5% from last year due to strong revenue growth in Russia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia (Russia and Eastern Europe being their largest market).

This is definitely one stock that I will continue to keep in my portfolio.

If you are reading this, you may be interested in:-



Disclaimer: The ideas expressed in this blog should not be construed as an enticement to buy or sell the securities, commodities or assets mentioned. The accuracy or completeness of the information provided cannot be guaranteed. Readers should carry out independent verification of information provided. No warranty whatsoever is given and no liability whatsoever is accepted for any loss howsoever arising whether directly or indirectly as a result of actions taken based on ideas and information found in this blog.

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

My holdings - January 2013

January 2013 has been a good month for the stock market. Stocks have been rallying, after fears of US and Europe crisis are quelled by cheery reports from the two economies.

For my holdings, on the REITs side, MCT has gone up by 12% during January from S$1.22 to reach a high of S$1.37 today. Sabana has also performed well, and increased 7% from S$1.14 to reach S$1.22 today. After doing some research, I noted that Saizen Reit is trading at S$0.19 which is a significant discount to its NAV value of S$0.30. Making use of the correction today, I bought some lots at its day low of S$0.188.

I sold my Singtel lots during this time for a profit of about 6%. Even though on hindsight, I should have hold onto the shares, however, as it is rather expensive at $3+, this gives it a lot of room to fall in price + tying up my limited $ resources, therefore I decided to sell it. If Temasek goes on a selling frenzy again, I can always buy it then :)

I still have my Second Chance. In fact, I bought a few more lots when it went XD recently and price dropped to S$0.40. Price movements are rather flat for this counter, but with a yield of 8.9%, I treat this stock like a fixed deposit. I am also holding on to my  Global Premium Hotel lots. Prices have gone up 8% during January from S$0.25 to S$0.27.

Other stocks that I hold include Food Empire (good prospects with expansion of business in China and India), KSH Holdings (booming construction in Singapore, good order outlook, and company is performing well), Vizbranz (bought on impulse recently on the basis that Lam Soon may privatise the company), and Biosensors (which I have been holding for close to a year, very low PE ratio of 5x). Of these, I am most inclined to sell Vizbranz to release the funds I have tied up in this counter.

Disclaimer: The ideas expressed in this blog should not be construed as an enticement to buy or sell the securities, commodities or assets mentioned. The accuracy or completeness of the information provided cannot be guaranteed. Readers should carry out independent verification of information provided. No warranty whatsoever is given and no liability whatsoever is accepted for any loss howsoever arising whether directly or indirectly as a result of actions taken based on ideas and information found in this blog.

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Food Empire Holdings Limited

Food related stock counters have been the new darlings of the Singapore Stock Exchange due to the F&N saga. Food Empire is one of the food related stock counters that have been in the news limelight in recent months.

It is currently trading at S$0.60, with PE ratio at 17.5 and NAV of S$0.364.

The reasons I find this counter attractive is different from those of Global Premium Hotels, which I believe is trading at an attractive price and a substantial discount to its NAV.


Food Empire is a food and beverage company, which manufactures and sells instant beverage products (e.g. instant coffee beverages), frozen convenience food (e.g. tail-on shrimp dumplings, butterfly seafood wantons), and snack food (e.g. potato crisps). Its main markets are in Russia, followed by Eastern Europe and Central Asia. 

12 December 2012: OSK-DMG says Food Empire is the cheapest Singapore-listed 3-in-1 beverage player at 14X P/E vs Super (S10.SG) at 21X and Viz Branz (L5J.SG) at 15X. 

More importantly, Food Empire is setting its eyes on the Chinese and India market which, historically, have always been tea drinkers. However, in recent years, there has been an increase in coffee drinkers in these big markets. So much so that Starbucks has also jumped on the bandwagon and set up operations in these countries.   

Starbucks established cafes in the region have maintained double-digit sales growth over the past couple of months (report in Wall Street Journal on 6 December 2012)

Starbucks opened its first cafe in India in October 2012 (report in Wall Street Journal in October 2012)

Food Empire has incorporated subsidiaries in China and India to bring its products into China and to manufacture instant coffee in India.

I am really excited by these news, and believe that there is tremendous growth opportunities for this company. And, of course I am vested :)

If you are reading this, you may be interested in:-



Disclaimer: The ideas expressed in this blog should not be construed as an enticement to buy or sell the securities, commodities or assets mentioned. The accuracy or completeness of the information provided cannot be guaranteed. Readers should carry out independent verification of information provided. No warranty whatsoever is given and no liability whatsoever is accepted for any loss howsoever arising whether directly or indirectly as a result of actions taken based on ideas and information found in this blog.