Summary: YTLP announced a rather ordinary set of result with a 60M drop in profit due to a rather mystifying bunch of impairment. 43M impairment in receivable and 24M impairment in investment in associate. There is no detail on these impairment.
YTLP announced its
Q1 result on 21 Nov 2013.
I still LOVE the strength of its operating cashflow and free cashflow! Instead of spending it on on dividend, they have been buying back their shares - ceteris paribus, this is awesome for its warrant holder.
Ok, back to the current result.
Overall the group result is down by about 60M compared quarter to quarter. This is mainly due to the decline in the merchant and investment holding segment offset by an improvement in the water & sewerage segment. The IPP and mobile broadband segment shows marginal improvement in its result.
Power Generation
Improvement is due to increase volume. IPP contract will expire soon, hence expect contribution to tail off in 2017.
Merchant
The merchant segment experienced a decrease in revenue and a corresponding drop in profit. With the intensifying of competition in the Singapore electricity market the margin is also suffering.
Water & Sewerage
Rate was allowed to increase by 6% from April 2012, but I believe the recent strength could also be due to the appreciation in GBP to 5.2 from about 4.8.
Mobile
More customer, less losses. LTE implementation is rather simple for its network, its rollout could be a major boost.
Investment holding
This is the most interesting part of the result, with a 100M loss for the quarter.
Impairment in associate is only 24M. However there's a 43M in receivable impairment and 14M in inventory obsolescence. There's no further detail on this impairment of receivable.
These are YTLP's associate per their annual report. The mobile division is considered a subsidiary.
I don't know what's the detail relating to the impairment and the lack of transparency on this rather material figure is not great.
The valuation for the company is still rather undemanding, sentiment for the company may improve if they successfully bid for the IPP contract but its contribution is likely to be minimal given the size of the current YTLP's offshore business.