Not vested. From CIMB:-
Assets are attractive in parts. Over 80% of F&N’s consumer-related businesses rest in its stakes in APB and F&N Berhad. Its brewery business, largely operated through APB, has built up a regional presence over the years but is running into cost pressures from its expansion into Vietnam. Price caps for dairy products in Malaysia are also straining profit margins.
We believe their values have been captured in F&N’s share price. Properties, which make up over 70% of F&N’s assets, appear undervalued in the conglomerate structure, in our opinion. We value its property arm at S$4.20-4.50/share.
• Breaking up is hard to do. F&N’s management is unlikely to break up the group’s current structure in the near term, in our opinion. We believe there are few benefits from privatising F&N Berhad at current valuations while Heineken and F&N unlikely to relinquish their stakes in APB easily.
While much value in its property assets appears trapped within the conglomerate structure, a re-listing of Fraser Centrepoint might not be timely, given current uncertain markets. There is also no need for the group to raise funds through a separate listing of the property arm. We also rule out the possibility of straight sales of the F&B and property divisions.
• Resume coverage with Underperform and target price of S$4.91. Our target price is pegged at a 20% conglomerate discount to our sum-of-the-parts valuation of S$6.14. A narrowing of the discount in the near term could come from evidence of streamlining initiatives such as the divestment of non-core assets (e.g. printing business) and the redeployment of capital to revamp the F&B brand name.


