BHP Billiton: Surge in performance
About the author:
- Author name:
- By Adrian Prendergast
- Job title:
- Senior Analyst
- Date posted:
- 22 February 2017, 8:21 AM
- Sectors Covered:
- Mining, Energy
Strong first half
BHP posted a robust 1H17 result, with underlying NPAT of US$3.24bn (vs Morgans
US$3.14bn) and underlying EBITDA of US$9.9bn (vs Morgans US$9.7bn).
The
exceptional result, ahead of our estimates (and consensus), was carried by BHP's raw
material divisions where the big miner capitalised on higher coal and iron ore prices to
boost its cash flow performance.
Meanwhile BHP’s petroleum and copper divisions
came in modestly below our estimates. With higher margin divisions outperforming, BHP
posted FCF of US$12bn, over three times as much FCF as a year ago.
Prioritising balance sheet (for now)
Harnessing much of its cash flow performance to strengthen its balance sheet, BHP paid
out US$748m in an interim dividend of US40cps, while building its cash reserves by
US$3.67bn (lowering net debt to US$20.1bn).
With some of its key metals trading at
levels above BHP’s forecast long-term (sustainable) forecast, and the current global
macro uncertainty, BHP decided to hold fire on rolling out larger shareholder returns this
half.
However, BHP made it clear that increased dividends and potential share buybacks
were a near-term answer for capital deployment should metal prices stay elevated.
Samarco further away than assumed
In the result BHP commented that while a restart of Samarco during CY17 was
technically possible, it was unlikely given BHP still needed to form an agreement with
Vale (to use some of Vale's open pits to store tailings), followed by a raft of approvals
needed to restart the operation, while Samarco itself needed to reach an agreement with
its banks and bondholders to restructure its debt.
We had assumed Samarco would
come back online after 18 months, but have now pushed this back to mid CY-18.
Waiting for a better opportunity
While BHP remains one of our preferred exposures to the resources sector, we believe
the strength of the recovery in coal and iron ore prices has carried the big miner’s share
price into fair value territory.
With coal prices already moderating, we expect an end to
the upward move in spot iron ore prices could yield a fresh opportunity for investors to
add to positions.
With a revised valuation-derived price target (Morgans clients only) we maintain our Hold recommendation. The key risk is commodity prices.
More information
Morgans clients can login to view our detailed report and share price target for BHP Billiton (BHP). Alternatively, please contact your nearest Morgans office for access.
Disclaimer: Analyst owns shares.
The information contained in this report is provided to you by Morgans Financial Limited as general advice only, and is made without consideration of an individual's relevant personal circumstances. Morgans Financial Limited ABN 49 010 669 726, its related bodies corporate, directors and officers, employees, authorised representatives and agents (“Morgans”) do not accept any liability for any loss or damage arising from or in connection with any action taken or not taken on the basis of information contained in this report, or for any errors or omissions contained within. It is recommended that any persons who wish to act upon this report consult with their Morgans investment adviser before doing so.