India Mini Conference - London 2007
31 August 2007
Citigroup Global Markets | Equity
Research
DLF (DLF.BO)
Big
Player, Opportunity, Ambition
Tier-one developer — DLF is India's
largest developer with an emerging pan-India presence. The company has a large diversified landbank of ~ 615m sqft
spread across more than 10,255 acres and a development mix that is leveraged
toward commercial and retail development.
What differentiates DLF? —
1)
Focus on scale with a portfolio mix of ~615m sq. ft spread across top-tier
cities;
2) strong cash reserves in this liquidity srained
environment,
3 a de-risked business model, with JVs in construction
and hotels aiding growth, and
4) a robust earnings CAGR of 81% for FY07-10E.
Relatively good proxy to
play yield compression —
DLF's large pipeline of IT SEZ projects and strategy to sell assets to DLF
Assets or others at lower cap rates of 9% vs.10% earlier should boost cash
flows. However, this remains contingent on capital. We expect more such
structures for its retail/hotel assets.
Development
mix geared toward commercial and retail space — DLF has 49m sq ft under construction, which is largely
geared toward commercial and retail projects — less sensitive to interest rates. In residential, the focus is super luxury-premium projects, most of
which are pre-sold. While residential
remains a core area, growth will likely be
more back-ended. We believe this to an
extent insulates DLF from the current slowdown in the residential space.
Key
risks —
1) Concentration risk in NCR (40% of
portfolio),
2) high exposure to DLF Assets and its ability
to raise capital;
3)
price, demand and execution risks.
Company
description
DLF is one of India's oldest real estate
developers. Established in Delhi in 1946,it has
continued to expand and diversify its real estate businesses, and is among the
largest developers in India.
It has historically built its businesses in Delhi and adjoining areas, known as the
National Capital Region (NCR). While, Gurgaon in the NCR continues to be the
hub of its business, DLF has meaningfully diversified into other geographic
locations over the past few years.These expansions are spread across India,
with a particular focus on the
Northern India Belt, Calcutta, Mumbai, Chennai, and a number of
other large and rapidly growing cities. DLF's initial real estate development
was focused on residential colonies and townships, and remained so until a
decade ago. It further diversified into the development of commercial office
space in the early
1990s, and with significant success, has
substantially scaled up these developments. DLF also entered retail mall
developments in the early 2000s, and is pursuing this business aggressively. DLF also has a very strong brand, with a
reputation as one of the foremost and most credible developers in the
country. The company recently made a primary
offering of 175m shares at Rs525 per share. DLF is a family owned and controlled business with promoters holding 90% stake
(post the recent IPO).
Recent developments
Industry trends: The Indian real estate
development opportunity is structural, large and will last for long, in our
view. However, we believe the sector is in for some cyclical pain in the
near-term — sustained high interest
rates are damaging affordability; there is significant slowdown in volumes;
property prices are cooling off, particularly in the residential segment; and
supply risks exist.
In
this scenario, we see markets increasingly distinguishing between tier-one developers
and the surfeit of small developers.
Results: DLF's standalone 1Q FY08 revenues
were Rs11,219m. Standalone EBITDA increased 26% yoy to Rs8,8710m and net profit
increased 42% to Rs5,793m. Standalone EBITDA
margin increased from 61% in 1Q FY07 to 78% in 1Q FY08. 1Q FY08 consolidated
revenues, EBITDA and net profit were Rs30,738m, Rs22,039m and Rs15,155m,
respectively.
News
flow & developments
DLF purchased 38 acres of prime land in Delhi at a cost of
Rs16bn, making it the largest private sector land deal in the country.
Awarded an esteemed project worth Rs60bn
to develop and operate an international convention centre at Dwarka in Delhi.
Announced a 95-acre township at Durgapur in West Bengal.
Signed an MOU with American realty firm
Hines to develop a landmark commercial
complex covering more than 2.5m sq ft in Gurgaon.
Investment
thesis
We rate DLF Buy/Medium Risk (1M), with a
target price of Rs725. DLF's focus on scale, integrated development with
execution record, and a large land holding spread across top-tier growth cities
differentiates it from its peers. Its diversified portfolio of ~615m sq.ft is
relatively leveraged toward
commercial/IT Parks/Retail mall (35% of total development) assets, which should
provide a good hedge particularly in the near-term, when the residential
segment is seeing some slowdown. Strong cash flows (Rs94.7bn) and a
de-leveraged balance sheet give it a competitive advantage in the current
liquidity-strained environment. We expect its new joint ventures in
construction and hotels to complement the core business, aid growth and offer
valuation upside.
Valuation
Our target price of Rs725 is based on a
25% premium to an estimated core NAV of Rs530, and Rs62 for other asset
holdings and new JV businesses (Rs45/share for the existing 4.6m sq.ft leased
assets and 7.2m sq.ft plot, and Rs17/share for DLF's share in construction and
hotel JVs). We believe an NAV based valuation methodology is most appropriate
for developers, as it factors the varied development projects and spread out
time frame. Our NAV estimate of Rs530 is based on the following assumptions:
1)
current market prices will persist, without any price inflation;
2) development volume will be 606m sq.ft (as
~9m is already recognized as revenue in FY07);
3)
a cap rate of 9% for commercial/IT Park, IT SEZs in Super Metros and Metros,
and 10% for other
locations;
4)
all projects undertaken by DLF will be completed largely on schedule; though
given the scale of the roll-out, we expect risk of delays;
5)
an average cost of capital of 14%; and
6)
a tax rate of 25%.
Risks
We rate DLF Medium Risk. This is different from the Speculative Risk rating assigned
by our quantitative risk-rating system
(which measures the stock's volatility over a 260-day period) to stocks that
have less than one year's trading history. The key reasons for assigning a
Medium Risk rating include:
1)
the company's robust business model;
2)
pan-India land bank with initiatives to derisk the business model through new business
JVs; and
3)
relatively healthy cash flows, at a time when most developers are facing
funding constraints.
The
main downside risks to our investment thesis and target price include:
1) Concentration in the NCR region,
particularly Gurgaon (33% of development), where risk of excess supply over the
next 2-3 years is high;
2)
Related party transaction and conflict of interest risks with DLF Assets;
3)
Delays in execution of projects and planned developments would impact the
company's reputation
and
our NAV assumptions; and
4)
A rapidly changing property market environment could lead to property
price-demand risks, regulatory risks and potential supply risks.
Disclaimer- I hold DLF and I
only use research reports to validate certain facts and do not follow Buy/Sell
recommendations by them without doing my homework.
Edited by India_Bull - 05/Sep/2007 at 4:44am