Bharti Infratel (BIL) is raising over Rs 4,000 crore from the primary equity market to build new towers, to
upgrade existing infrastructure and to set up environmentally friendly energy
sources at tower sites. Of the 18.9 crore shares to be offered to the public,
14.6 crore will be fresh equity and the remaining will be offloaded by private equity firms which currently
hold a stake in Bharti Infratel.
The IPO will open for subscription on December 11 and will close on December 14. The company has fixed a price band of Rs 210-240 for the offer
The IPO will open for subscription on December 11 and will close on December 14. The company has fixed a price band of Rs 210-240 for the offer
Nirmal
Bang, among the top brokerage and research firms in India recommends investors to
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Here
is summary of the report...
A
Cash Flow Story...
BIL is
a cash flow story, in our view. We expect rising tenancy to boost profitability
going forward and subsequently FCF as well. The likely rise in tenancy ratio
(from 1.85x in FY12 to 3.00x in FY22E) will boost EBITDA margin (excluding
energy costs) from 58.3% in FY12 to 74.4% in FY22E. As regards capex, we expect
a steady decline in capex intensity owing to slowing tower rollout and greater
focus on tenancy, with capex as a percentage of revenue likely to decline to 5%
in FY22E from 13.1% in FY12. This is likely to lead to strong growth in FCF,
from Rs12.7bn in FY12 to nearly Rs80bn in FY22E.
Based on our DCF calculations, fair value of BIL is Rs278,
implying a 32% upside from the lower end and a 16% upside from the upper end of the
IPO price band.
Blue-chip client base drives confidence on revenue,
cash flow predictability: BIL has a blue-chip client base, with Bharti Airtel (directly), Vodafone
India and Idea Cellular (indirectly) accounting for a major portion of tenancy
and revenue.
For 1HFY13,
Bharti Airtel accounted for 62.1% of BIL’s standalone revenue, while for associate
company Indus Towers, Bharti, Vodafone and Idea accounted for a lion’s share of
revenue. Going forward, given that Bharti is the
majority shareholder in BIL and with
Bharti, Vodafone and Idea being majority shareholders in Indus, it is more likely that these operators will route their
expansion plans through BIL and Indus rather than
through rival tower companies. This is a key factor that drives confidence on
revenue and cash flow predictability for BIL.
RoE to get a boost from lower interest costs, higher
profitability: In FY12, BIL’s RoE stood at a low 5.3%. This was on
account of low interest burden ratio (81.2%) and lower EBIT margin (14.7%).
Going forward, we expect RoE to inch up, aided by falling interest costs
(leading to higher PBT/PBIT ratio) and rising EBIT margin due to higher tenancy
ratio.
We expect interest burden ratio (PBT divided by
PBIT) to rise from 81.2% in FY12 to
99.1% on FY22E, and EBIT margin to touch 44.3% in FY22E (14.7% in FY12), thereby leading RoE to rise to
19.0% in FY22E.
Outlook and valuation: We have valued BIL via the DCF method. Given good revenue
predictability owing to the long-term nature of MSAs, improving margins due to
higher tenancy ratio, falling capex intensity and rising FCF, we believe DCF is
the best way to value a tower company like BIL. Our WACC is 12.7% owing to low
debt-equity ratio of 0.2x, with post-tax cost of debt at 7%. We assume 0.8x beta, which is the average of the betas of
global peers American Tower, SBA Communications and Crown Castle. We take 8% as
risk-free rate and 8% as equity risk premium. Thus, cost of equity (CoE) works
out to 14.4%. We assume 3%
terminal growth.
Thus,
present value (PV) of FCF until FY22E works out to Rs270.7bn, while PV of the
terminal value is Rs254.6bn, implying total EV of Rs525.4bn. Adjusted for net debt, total equity value is Rs556.4bn,
implying a fair value of Rs278. This implies a 32% upside from the lower end and a 16%
upside from the upper end of the IPO price band.
Therefore, we recommend investors to subscribe to the IPO.
Company
Background
Bharti Infratel is a
provider of tower and related infrastructure and on a consolidated basis, it is
one of the largest tower infrastructure providers in India, based on the number
of towers that Bharti Infratel owns and operates and the number of towers owned
or operated by Indus, that are represented by Bharti Infratel’s 42% equity
interest in Indus. The business of Bharti Infratel and Indus is to acquire,
build, own and operate tower and related infrastructure. Bharti Infratel and
Indus currently provide access to their towers primarily to wireless
telecommunications service providers on a shared basis, under long-term
contracts and we believe that there exists the possibility of providing
additional services such as signal transmission and first level maintenance
services in relation to customer equipment at towers. Bharti Infratel’s and
Indus’ three largest customers are Bharti Airtel (together with Bharti
Hexacom), Vodafone India and Idea Cellular, which are the three leading
wireless telecommunications service providers in India by wireless revenue. (Source: TRAI)
Bharti Infratel has a
nationwide presence with operations in all 22 telecommunications Circles in
India, with Bharti Infratel’s and Indus’ operations overlapping in four
telecommunications Circles. As of September 30, 2012, Bharti Infratel owned and
operated 34,220 towers in 11 telecommunications Circles while Indus operated
1,10,651 towers in 15 telecommunications Circles. With Bharti Infratel’s towers
and Bharti Infratel’s 42% interest in Indus, it has an economic interest in the
equivalent of 80,656 towers in India as of September 30, 2012.
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