DeA Capital — Update 13 May 2016

DeA Capital (MI: DEA)

Last close As at 22/04/2024

1.32

0.01 (0.61%)

Market capitalisation

352m

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Research: Financials

DeA Capital — Update 13 May 2016

DeA Capital

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Financials

DeA Capital

High yield and discount to our SOP estimate

Full year 2015 results

Investment companies

13 May 2016

Price

€1.30

Market cap

€342m

Net cash (€m) at 31 March 2016, of which €93.3m was in the holding company

137.1

Shares in issue

263.1m

Free float

25.6%

Code

DEA

Primary exchange

BIT

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

1.8

8.5

(18.5)

Rel (local)

0.8

1.0

4.2

52-week high/low

€1.6

€1.2

Business description

DeA Capital, a De Agostini group company, is one of Italy’s leading players in alternative investments. It is active in private equity investments and asset management. As of 31 December 2015, it had an investment portfolio of €455m and €9.5bn of assets under management.

Next event

Q216

8 September 2016

Analyst

Peter Thorne

+44 (0)20 3077 5765

DeA Capital is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

DeA Capital is an alternative asset manager of private equity and real estate funds and co-investor of managed funds. It made some progress in 2015 with the partial sale of a stake in a large direct private equity investment and in raising funds for specialist private equity funds, but adverse market conditions forced it to cancel a planned REIT listing in H215/H116. The company announced a €0.12 per share dividend for 2015 as part of its programme of returning excess capital to shareholders. DeA Capital shares are trading at a c 32% discount to our sum-of-the-parts valuation of €1.93/share and offer a high yield of c 9%.

Year end

AUM
(€bn)

Fees from AAM*
(€m)

NAV/share
(€)

DPS
(€)

P/NAV
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/14

10.5

68.5

2.41

0.30

0.54

23.1

12/15

9.5

64.7

2.07

0.12

0.63

9.2

12/16e

9.0

59.6

2.05

0.12

0.63

9.2

12/17e

9.6

60.3

2.03

0.12

0.64

9.2

Note: NAV is stated NAV, including goodwill. *Before intercompany eliminations

Reduction in direct private equity investments

In 2015 DeA Capital successfully sold half of its holding in Migros, its remaining large direct private equity investment. Direct private equity holdings accounted for 19% of its investment portfolio at the end of 2015, from 35% at the start of the year. The disposal produced a gain of €46.3m.

Alternative asset management setback

Alternative asset management (AAM) AUM fell to €9.5bn at end 2015, from €10.5bn at end 2014, from expected redemptions in the real estate asset manager. AAM recorded an after tax loss for the period of €37.3m (2014: €9.5m profit) because of large goodwill and other intangible impairments as the company reassessed the carrying value of its asset management businesses in light of diminished expectations. Adjusting for these factors there was a 21% fall in attributable profits, largely due to exceptional factors at its real estate asset manager, including costs for its abortive REIT issue and redundancy costs. We expect a rebound in adjusted profits of c 21% in 2016, with lower negative exceptional factors offset by reduced fees from lower AuMs.

Valuation: High yield and discount to SOP

DeA Capital offers investors a high yield and a c 32% discount to our estimated sum-of-the-parts (SOP) valuation of €1.93 per share (from €2.10/share), although around 36% of that value is based on the company’s own estimate of the fair value of its private equity investments, so is subjective. Its dividend is not covered by our forecast earnings, but it will sell its remaining direct PE investments (€88m at end FY15), its real estate maintenance business (IRE) and it has €133.8m of cash resources. If the company makes progress in developing its asset management activities and further reduces the significance of its private equity investments, we believe that it is possible that the yield and discount to SOP may decline.

Investment summary

Transformation to an alternative asset manager

DeA Capital an alternative asset manager with a specialisation in real estate and private equity. It has been selling its holdings of private equity investments and in 2015 distributed a large portion of the cash received as a special dividend. Private equity amounted to 62% of its investment portfolio at the end of 2015, down from 73% at the end of 2013. It will continue to make further disposals from its direct portfolio of private equity investments. It will reinvest the redemptions from its fund investments into new fund investments so that the total invested in funds remains broadly consistent. It is not undertaking a fire sale and will take a measured approach to reducing its private equity investments as market conditions allow.

Progress at developing its asset management business has been hindered by adverse conditions, especially at its real estate manager, FIMIT, which managed €7.9bn of assets at the end of 2015, down from €9.0bn at the end of 2014. Many of its funds have a limited life and are maturing, while its main customer base, Italian institutions, is heavily overweight real estate and is not currently investing in the asset class, partly because of new regulations requiring more diversification. FIMIT’s attempt to launch a REIT targeted towards international investors at the turn of the year was thwarted by adverse market conditions and the issue was cancelled, incurring some cancellation costs, which were almost fully booked in 2015.

Its private equity manager, IDeA Capital Funds, has been more successful, and has launched new direct funds as its fund of fund offerings, which have fallen out of favour with investors, are redeemed.

Valuation: A c 32% discount to our SOP and a high yield

DeA Capital has valued its private equity investments, both direct and indirect, at its estimate of their fair value. This is a subjective exercise and so subject to uncertainty, but DeA Capital takes some comfort from its experience that those disposals that it has completed were made in line with their valuations. We have estimated the value of its alternative asset management businesses based on a P/E multiple of project earnings for 2016, with the peers being the large asset managers in UK, US and Italy. Together, these fair values produce a SOP valuation of c €1.93 per share. Its shares are currently trading at a c 32% discount to this, but the valuation is subjective.

DeA Capital has announced a €0.12 dividend for 2015. While this is not covered by earnings from its asset management business, it does have further direct PE investments to sell (€88m at end FY15), as well as IRE, is real estate advisory business and it has €133.8m of cash resources If DeA Capital could monetise more of its private equity investments and succeeds in developing its asset management business, the discount to our SOP could narrow, and its dividend yield fall.

Sensitivities: Favourable market conditions are important

DeA Capital is sensitive to financial markets and investors changing asset class preferences.

Exiting investments: Exiting DeA Capital’s private equity investments are highly dependent on conditions in financial markets, with negative trends potentially making divestments more difficult or not as profitable.

Fund-raising: DeA Capital seeks to launch new funds to replace maturing funds and increase AUM. Its attempt to launch a REIT was thwarted by adverse market conditions, though it has achieved more success in launching thematic private equity funds.

Company description: Italian alternative asset manager

DeA Capital is one of Italy’s largest alternative investment operators with activities in private equity and real estate. At the end of 2015 it owned a private equity portfolio, which was valued in its accounts at €282m and comprised direct investments valued at €88m and funds of €194m. It also owns three alternative asset management companies, which are:

IDeA Capital Funds SGR – management of private equity funds with assets under management (AUM) of €1.6bn at the end of 2015.

IDeA FIMIT SGR – management of real estate funds with AuM of €7.9bn at the end of 2015.

IRE/IRE Advisory – provides asset management services to real estate owners (including IDeA FIMIT), such a rent collection and maintenance supervision.

DeA Capital was set up in its current form in early 2007 and was at first only active in private equity, building up the bulk of its portfolio in 2007 and 2008. It believed that by investing its own “permanent” capital it would have an advantage relative to traditional private equity funds (which typically have predetermined durations of around 10 years) in timing the entry and the exit of its investments, thus enabling it to create greater value over the medium and long term. DeA Capital extended its activities to alternative asset management by acquiring a stake in an alternative asset manager in 2007, as well as a stake in First Atlantic Real Estate, a real estate management company, in 2008, which it merged into another real estate manager, FIMIT, in 2011 to form the current IDeA FIMIT, in which it holds a 64.3% stake. The strategy behind the expansion into alternative asset management was to gain exposure to more regular income flows from management fees as returns from private equity tend to be infrequent.

Strategic change initiated in 2013

When DeA Capital was launched, listed private equity vehicles traded at a premium to net asset value, but this premium collapsed with the financial crisis. Discounts on listed private equity funds reached an average of more than 60% at the low point in 2009 with a significant recovery subsequently, although the average fund still stood at a discount of c 30% in early April 2016 (source: Morningstar). DeA Capital’s discount followed a similar move during the crisis, but has not recovered as much since.

Management was unhappy with this situation and decided in early 2013 to overhaul its strategy and do the following in order to reduce the discount:

1.

Sell its direct private equity investments, pay down debt and return a large part of the excess cash to shareholders.

2.

Increase its alternative asset management activities, which have more earnings visibility and stable cash flows than its direct private equity activities.

Management believed that part of the reason for the large discount to its NAV was investor uncertainty over the valuation of its direct holdings, and that by reducing these holdings that uncertainty would reduce and the discount narrow. While this may be the case, it should be noted that there is still uncertainty over the valuation of other assets in its investment portfolio. Its holdings of private equity funds are stated in its accounts at an estimate of fair value, which is a subjective measure as the funds are not listed on an exchange. The funds are valued by their managers and DeA Capital’s own management then considers the appropriateness of those valuations. Management has said that there are secondary transactions in many of these funds and they are carried out around the fair values that it uses in its accounts, which provides some comfort about the valuations used. It should also be noted that redemptions from the funds amounted to around €50m in 2014 and 2015. The holdings of the asset management companies are stated in the accounts at their equity value, subject to impairments, and this accounting measure may not reflect the economic value of the assets. Consequently, reducing direct private equity investments reduces some of the problems of using the published NAV as a measure of value, but does not eliminate it. In our valuation section, we use a sum-of-the-parts (SOP) approach to estimate the fair value of DeA Capital.

Progress in 2015

In 2015 DeA Capital completed the sale of half of its stake in Migros, a Turkish retailer, which gave it €107.7m of cash and a capital gain of €46.3m. This follows the disposal of another large holding in 2014, in GDS, which gave it cash of €169m, though a negative value adjustment of €59m in that year. Direct private equity investments were reduced to 19% of the investment portfolio at the end of 2015, from 48% at the end of 2013.

DeA Capital made further progress in strengthening its net financial position in 2015, which amounted to €133.8m at the end of 2015, from €57.8m at the end of 2014. Net financial position is defined as cash and cash equivalents, available for sale financial assets, financial receivables less non-current liabilities and current financial liabilities. This improvement was achieved after paying a €82m dividend to DeA Capital shareholders in 2015 in line with its strategic aim to return cash to shareholders from the disposal of its private equity interests.

Direct PE investment portfolio

DeA Capital’s direct investments at the end 2015 were composed of three companies, as shown in Exhibit 1, below. Migros is a large Turkish food retailer and in 2015 achieved revenues of TRY9.4bn and EBITDA of TRY602m. DeA Capital is reducing its holding in Migros, having reduced its stake by half in 2015 for €107.7m, which was received in July 2015. Migros is a listed company in Turkey and DeA Capital’s holding is valued at its market value. In 2015 the share price of Migros on the Istanbul exchange fell 23.1% in Turkish lira terms and 31.8% in euros.

Exhibit 1: DeA Capital direct PE investments

Company

Value at 31 December 2015, €m

Ownership

Migros*

76.3

6.9%

Sigla Luxembourg

11.5

41.4%

Harvip

0.2

100%

88.0

Source: DeA Capital. Note: *Held via holding of 17% of Kenan Investments, which owns 40.25% of Migros.

Sigla Credit provides salary-backed loans and personal loans throughout Italy. At the end of 2015 it had €35m of loans outstanding and earned net profit of €1.2m for the year. In Q415 DeA Capital launched a process to sell its holding, which is currently classified in “assets held for sale” and valued at the lower of initial carrying value and estimated realisable value.

DeA Capital’s management has stated that it will not make further direct PE investments, while smaller (€10m to €30m) co-investments will be made on an opportunistic basis along with its managed funds.

Investment in PE funds

DeA Capital owns holdings in private equity fund of funds and funds, which amounted to €194.1m at the end of December 2015, down from €203m at the end of 2014. Some 95% of the funds are managed by IDeA Capital Funds SGR, its own private equity fund manager. The funds were acquired to provide DeA Capital shareholders with a good return and to act as seed money for the funds. Over 90% of the funds were started before 2009 and just three funds (IDeA I FoF, ICFII and IDeA Opportunity Fund I) account for 86% of the total value of the investments. Exhibit 2 provides details on the funds.

DeA Capital has found that investor appetite for its PE fund of funds in Italy (61% of its total at end 2015) has fallen in the last few years, as interest for this asset class has diminished and international PE fund of fund specialists, such as Partners Group from Switzerland, have entered the Italian market. It has responded to this market development by launching specialist PE funds investing directly in companies. The most notable of these is IDeA Taste of Italy fund, which invests in specialist Italian food companies that are seeking capital to expand their production and/or distribution and was launched in December 2014.

In 2015 capital calls to DeA Capital from the funds, at €19.9m, were below reimbursements of €55.2m, with the vast majority of the reimbursements being paid out by the three largest and older funds as DeA Capital reduces its exposure to private equity funds. In our balance sheet forecasts we have assumed that reimbursements exceed capital calls by around €20m per year.

One measure of the success of a PE fund is its total value to paid in ratio (TVPI), which compares the returns made with the investment. It is calculated as the sum of realised investments and the net asset value of unrealised investments divided by the total investment cost. According to management, IDeA I Fund of Funds has a TVPI ratio of 1.3x, ICF II a ratio of 1.5x, but IDeA Opportunity 1 Fund a ratio of 1.0x, indicating mixed success for its funds. It has not disclosed similar information for its other funds as they are in too early a stage of development for the ratio to be meaningful.

The majority of DeA Capital’s PE (and venture) funds are classified in DeA Capital’s financial statements as available for sale financials assets and measured at fair value, with changes in fair value posted directly to shareholders’ equity until realised when they are put through the profit and loss account. There are two exceptions: AVA, which is 27.27% owned and is classified as an associate and equity accounted; and the IDeA Opportunity Fund I, which is 46.99% owned and fully consolidated, with changes in its fair value put through the profit and loss account regardless of whether they are realised.

Exhibit 2: DeA Capital PE fund investments

€m

Year of commitment

Description

DeA commitments

Total assets

Value 31/12/14

Capital calls

Capital reimbursements

Gain/inc. in fair value

Value
31/12/15

Total

Residual

6 venture capital funds

2000 to 2004

Various venture capital funds

9.6

-0.6

0.7

9.7

IDeA I Fund of Funds*

Jan 2007

Fund of 41 funds with 369 positions with overweighting towards medium and small scale transactions and distressed debt/equity and turnaround situations

173.5

26.6

681.0

93.5

6.0

-31.3

9.0

77.2

IDeA Opportunity Fund I*

May 2008

Acquisition of minority interests

101.8

19.1

217.0

56.0

1.8

-17.0

7.7

48.5

ICF II*

Feb 2009

Fund of 27 funds with 348 positions in various countries

51.0

15.9

281.0

35.3

2.5

-4.7

8.6

41.7

IDeA EESS

Aug 2011

SMEs in Italy and abroad active in energy saving and efficient use of natural resources

15.3

5.1

100.0

4.3

4.0

-1.6

0.6

7.3

AVA

Dec 2011

Real estate (office and residential)

5.0

0.2

55.0

2.6

1.5

-0.3

3.8

ICF III

April 2014

Fund investing in PE funds in core (eg buy out), credit & distressed and emerging markets

12.5

8.0

57.0

1.7

2.7

0.4

4.8

IDeA Taste of Italy

Dec 2014

SMEs specialising in foodstuffs

14.3

12.7

140.0

1.4

-0.3

1.1

Total

373.4

87.6

1,531.0

203.0

19.9

-55.2

26.4

194.1

Largest 3*

326.3

61.6

1,179.0

184.8

10.3

-53.0

25.3

167.4

Source: DeA Capital, Edison Investment Research. Note: *Three largest.

There is not a listed market for any of DeA Capital’s PE (and venture) funds and fair values are determined by the directors, based on their best judgment and estimation and after having received the fund managers’ valuation reports. In estimating the fair values they look at recent transactions, transactions involving similar instruments and valuation models, but the values they assign to the assets could differ significantly from those obtained when the assets are eventually sold. Management has said that there is an OTC secondary market for some of their funds, which tends to support the values used in the financial statements.

Alternative asset management

DeA Capital is developing its asset management activities to service both Italian and international investors. Its current activities comprise the following:

IDeA FIMIT (real estate, 64.3% owned)

IDeA FIMIT is the largest independent real estate asset management company in Italy, with a c 20% market share at end June 2015 of AUM of Italian real estate funds, according to Assogestioni. It has €7.9bn of AUM and 37 managed funds (including five listed ones), 80 institutional investors and 70,000 retail investors. Retail investors account for around 18% of the total AUM. The key statistics of its portfolio of funds is shown in the following exhibit.

Exhibit 3: IDeA FIMIT AUM end December 2015

AUM, €m

NAV, €m

Gearing

Dividend yield

Price/NAV

31/12/2015

31/12/2015

%

%

%

Listed funds (Retail)

Atlantic 1

604

249

142

5.72

68

Atlantic 2 Berenice

168

94

78

9.12

74

Alpha

376

346

9

5.10

33

Beta

84

60

41

8.12

62

Delta

215

193

11

N/A

47

Total/average

1,447

56

7.02

57

Reserved funds (institutional)

6,437

Total

7,884

Source: DeA Capital, Edison Investment Research

IDeA FIMIT has not achieved growth in its AUM in recent years and its AUM is likely to decline further in 2016 and 2017, despite the increase in interest from international investors in Italian real estate. According to property consultancy CBRE, international investors have been responsible for 75% of purchases in the last year. IDeA Fimit has had some success in selling funds to international investors such as Colony, Blackstone and York but traditionally these investors have not been a core market for IDeA FIMIT and sales so far have been small; but have started. Demand from its traditional Italian institutional investors has been weak for two main reasons:

Many of IDeA FIMIT’s real estate funds were created with fixed terms, normally around seven to 10 years, and several of its funds are nearing their liquidation phase. Our review of its institutional funds showed that some 10% of them were set to be liquidated in 2016 and 2017, which is quite a headway against which to grow AUM.

Many Italian pension funds are reducing their holdings of real estate as a result of legislation that has required funds to reduce their exposure. According to management, some, such as the bank foundation and public sector funds, had over 50% of their assets in real estate, compared with a European average of around 15% for similar funds. This has further hindered IDeA FIMIT’s AUM growth.

IDeA Capital Funds (PE and PE fund of funds, 100% owned)

IDeA Capital Funds manages €1.6bn of private equity funds, in eight funds: four single manager and four multi-manager (fund of funds). The multi-manager funds accounted for around 65% of the total at the end of 2015.

Exhibit 4: IDeA Capital Funds

€m

2014

2015

Average

Fees 2015

Fee rate, bps

Single manager

Investitori Associati IV

112

112

1.3

116

Taste of Italy

86

140

113

3.2

283

IDeA EESS

100

100

100

2

200

IDeA OF I

217

217

217

2.3

106

403

569

486

8.8

181

Multi manager

ICF III

57

57

57

0.4

70

IDeA Crescita Globale

55

55

55

1.4

255

ICF II

281

281

281

2.2

78

IDeA I FoF

681

681

681

4.1

60

1,074

1,074

1,074

8.1

75

Total

1,477

1,643

1,560

17

107

Source: IDeA Capital, Edison Investment Research

Funds of funds have suffered decreasing investor interest and pressure on pricing, with fees roughly halving since the financial crisis. IDeA Capital Funds has shifted its focus to direct funds, notably thematic funds that can attract interest also outside Italy, since fund-raising in Italy has proved rather difficult in recent years. These funds also have a strong focus on Italian investments, notably in smaller companies where DeA is likely to have more expertise. IDeA Capital Funds launched the €100m Energy Efficiency and Sustainable Growth (EESS) fund in 2011, followed by the Taste of Italy fund, which focuses on Italian food and beverage companies that require development capital to expand outside Italy.. Overall, despite the pressure on fees on funds of funds, the total revenue margin should remain relatively stable given the shift in mix in favour of the higher fee direct funds.

IRE/IRE advisory (real estate services, 96.3% owned)

Innovation Real Estate (IRE) is active in property management, facility and building management, project and construction management, as well as asset management (ie improving the rental condition of buildings, optimising management costs to maximise the return on property investment). Its managed property portfolio comprises 50% office buildings, with the remainder split between other segments. IRE is also for sale, or at least DeA Capital is looking for a partner to manage it and develop it independently. It reported €4.4m profits for FY15; at a multiple of 12.7x (see valuation section below), DeA Capital’s share of its value would be around €54m.

Asset management results and forecasts

At the end of 2015 AUM at DeA Capital asset management companies had declined to €9.5bn, from €10.5bn at the end of the previous year, mainly because of the liquidation of funds at IDeA FIMIT as discussed previously. We expect a further decline in 2016 as more funds are liquidated and the REIT issue, which would have added to the funds, has been cancelled. We tentatively expect a rise in AUM at IDeA FIMIT in 2017, with possibly the launch of a new REIT. IDeA Capital Funds AUM rose 11% in 2015 as a result of its launch of thematic funds and the acquisition of rights to manage a €112m fund (Investitori Associati) and we expect further growth in 2016 and 2017.

Exhibit 5: Alternative asset management segment (€000 unless stated otherwise)

Percentage change

 

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

2015/14

2016e/15

2017e/16

AUM (€bn) – end period

 

 

 

 

IDeA Capital Funds

1.5

1.6

1.7

1.8

11%

6%

6%

IDeA FIMIT

9.0

7.9

7.3

7.8

-12%

-5%

4%

 

10.5

9.5

9.0

9.6

-9%

-3%

4%

AUM (€bn) – average

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IDeA Capital Funds

1.4

1.6

1.7

1.8

13%

7%

6%

IDeA FIMIT

9.1

8.6

7.6

7.6

-5%

-10%

-1%

 

10.5

10.2

9.4

9.4

-3%

-8%

0%

Management fees/AUM bps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IDeA Capital Funds

103

107

105

105

4%

-2%

0%

IDeA FIMIT

59

55

55

55

-7%

-1%

0%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alternative asset management fees

 

 

 

FIMIT

54,116

47,725

41,800

41,525

-12%

-12%

-1%

Cap Funds

14,432

16,947

17,761

18,795

17%

5%

6%

68,549

64,672

59,561

60,320

-6%

-8%

1%

Income from services - gross

20,654

19,879

19,200

19,000

-4%

-3%

-1%

Less intersegment services

(2,297)

(1,330)

(1,330)

(1,330)

-42%

0%

0%

Income from services

18,357

18,549

17,870

17,670

1%

-4%

-1%

Income from equity investments

(524)

(359)

Other inv income/expense

663

(88)

Revenue

87,045

82,774

77,431

77,990

-5%

-6%

1%

PPA amortisation

(7,500)

(2,900)

(2,900)

(2,900)

-61%

0%

0%

SFP impairment

(4,900)

(20,500)

0

0

Write-down of receivables

(2,700)

(700)

(500)

(500)

-74%

-29%

0%

Goodwill impairment

(36,700)

Operating expenses

(56,052)

(59,485)

(57,000)

(57,000)

6%

-4%

0%

Total expenses

(71,152)

(120,285)

(60,400)

(60,400)

69%

-50%

0%

Finance income/expense

155

616

500

500

Profit before tax

16,048

(36,895)

17,531

18,090

Taxation

(6,584)

(409)

(5,785)

(5,970)

Profit after tax

9,464

(37,304)

11,746

12,120

Minority interests

(172)

16,631

(2,404)

(2,335)

Attributable profits

9,292

(20,673)

9,342

9,785

Adjusted

Profit after tax

9,464

(37,304)

11,746

12,120

PPA amortisation (net)

5,000

1,900

1,900

1,900

SFP impairment (net)

5,100

14,300

0

0

Goodwill impairment

36,700

Adjusted profit

19,564

15,596

13,646

14,020

-20%

-13%

3%

Minority interests

(5,172)

(3,068)

(3,082)

(3,014)

Adjusted profits after MI

14,393

12,527

10,563

11,007

-13%

-16%

4%

 

 

 

Op expenses/revenue

64%

72%

74%

73%

 

 

 

Source: DeA Capital, Edison Investment Research. Note: PPA is purchase price adjustment and relates to amortisation of an intangible for customer relationships set up on the acquisition of the company.

In 2015 management fees declined in aggregate by 6%, with a 17% increase in fees earned by IDeA Capital Funds not offsetting the 12% decline at IDeA FIMIT. The fee rate at IDeA Capital Funds increased 4% to 107bps due to the higher rates on the new thematic funds. In contrast, IDeA FIMIT’s fee rate declined by 7%, reflecting increased competition in the market. We expect that fee rates will remain at comparable levels in 2016 and 2017 and with the movements in assets discussed above we expect management fees will fall 8% in 2016 and rise 1% in 2017. Income from services is earned by the IRE property management business and declined 4% in 2015, with less property being managed, particularly that from IDeA FIMIT. We expect further small declines in 2016 and 2017. After adjusting for other items and intersegment services, revenue declined 5% in 2015. We expect a decline of a similar amount in 2016 and flat performance in 2017.

Total expenses increase from €71.2m in 2014 to €120.3m in 2015, leading to a fall in profits after tax, from €9.5m in 2014 to a loss of €37.3m in 2015. A large part of the expense increase arose from additional intangible amortisation and impairment charges, as DeA Capital reassessed the carrying value of these assets on its balance sheet in light of reduced revenue and profit expectations for these businesses. There were also a number of significant negative items in 2015, mainly at IDeA FIMIT, including €2.8m in costs for the aborted REIT, redundancy charges of €1.2m and contract penalties of €0.6m.

The intangible amortisation and impairment charges arose as follows:

A €2.9m annual amortisation charge related to an intangible for customer relationships. When IDeA FIMIT was acquired by DeA Capital in 2011, an intangible asset for customer relationships of €38.6m was created and is subject to annual amortisation, which in 2015 amounted to €2.9m, down from €7.5m in 2014 when an additional amortisation charge was recorded following the loss of some customers.

A €20.5m impairment against capitalised performance fees. An intangible asset of €68.7m was created in 2011 to account for potential performance fees.1 Lower expectations for these resulted in a €20.5m impairment charge against this asset in 2015, with DeA Capital’s share amounting to €7.2m and the rest belonging to minority interests.

  Most of these fees belonged to the previous owners according to the terms of the SPA. In DeA Capital’s accounts this was recognised by the creation of an asset “strumenti finanziari partecipativi” (SFP), with the related liability being booked in minority interests.

A €36.7m goodwill write-down due to lower revenue and profit expectations.

After adding back PPA amortisation, SFP and goodwill impairment, adjusted profits after tax fell by 20% to €15.6m. We expect a further decline in 2016 with lower fees only slightly offset by a reduction in the negative significant items that affected the 2015 results. We expect a small rise in 2017, but this is tentative and depends crucially on higher AUM.

Valuation

Our preferred valuation measure for DeA Capital is a sum-of-the-parts (SOTP), which we show in Exhibit 6. Most of DeA Capital’s private equity investments are valued at fair value in its accounts, but it should be remembered that this is the management’s subjective valuation. Its alternative asset management subsidiaries are valued at their equity value. We have replaced the equity value of these companies with our estimate of their fair value, which we have calculated as our estimate of their 2016 earnings multiplied by a P/E ratio of 12.7x, which is an average multiple of US, UK and Italian asset managers less a 12% discount to account for the early stage of development of the DeA Capital asset management activities. With a forecast of adjusted profits of €10.6m in 2016 (after deducting minority interests) for DeA Capital’s asset management businesses, we now value them at €134.6m. This is lower than our previous valuation of €182.2m on 23 November 2015, due to a fall in earnings expectations for DeA Capital’s asset management activities and a slightly higher P/E multiple of 12.7x vs 12.4x previously. The net result is a SOP of €1.93 per share, from €2.10 previously.

Exhibit 6: Sum-of-the-parts valuation

Value (€m)

Valuation method

Migros

76.3

Market prices

Other PE direct investments

11.7

Net equity

PE Funds

194.1

Company-derived fair value

Private Equity

282.1

Alternative Asset Management

134.6

Edison valuation of asset management at 12.7x 2016e earnings

Total value

416.7

Other net assets/liabilities

2.2

Net financial (debt)/cash

90.0

Sum-of-the-parts

508.9 

Shares outstanding end Q415

263.9

 

SOTP per share (€)

1.93

Source: DeA Capital, Edison Investment Research. Note: Based on December 2015 accounts.

Financials

Exhibit 7 shows the consolidated DeA Capital financial statements, prepared in accordance with IFRS, which are implemented as follows:

DeA Capital’s minority held private equity investments (direct and through funds) are valued by management at estimated fair value in the balance sheet, with changes in fair valued recorded directly in shareholders’ funds until the investment is sold or impaired, when the gain or loss is posted to the income statement.

The majority owned alternative asset management businesses are fully consolidated on a line-by-line basis and their carrying value in the balance sheet is net equity plus goodwill, which is subject to an annual impairment test.

Its 46.99% owned IDeA OFI Fund is fully consolidated in accordance with IRFS10 as it is considered that DeA Capital controls it and changes in its fair value were posted to the income statement.

As a consequence of the varying accounting treatments of its activities, we believe investors should focus mainly on the segmental profit and loss accounts in assessing the performance of the asset management businesses and the changes in fair value of its investment funds and its direct PE investments. These are discussed in the following sections: Direct PE investment portfolio (page 4), Investment in PE funds (page 5) and Alternative asset management (page 8).

On 12 May 2016 DeA Capital announced Q116 results. The net asset value was €2.08 per share up from €2.07 at year end 2015. Assets under management at end Q116 was €9.5bn, the same as at end 2015.

Dividends

DeA Capital announced a dividend of €0.12 per share for 2015, which results in a payment of around €32m based on 265m shares outstanding. With net income for 2016 of €24m, there is a shortfall of €8m, but we expect that for the next two years DeA Capital will receive net reimbursements from its fund investments of around €20m per year, considerably more than the shortfall and it has €133.8m of cash resources.


Exhibit 7: Financial summary

€000

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

Alternative Asset Management fees

66,045

62,416

57,261

58,020

Income (loss) from equity investments

(786)

(539)

(200)

(200)

Other investment income/expense

(56,149)

72,464

10,000

10,000

Income from services

19,176

21,700

20,370

20,170

Other income

Revenue

28,286

156,041

87,431

87,990

Expenses

(87,957)

(128,514)

(66,900)

(66,900)

Net Interest

2,905

4,982

4,000

4,000

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

(56,766)

32,509

24,531

25,090

Tax

1,720

6,452

(1,705)

(1,890)

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

(55,046)

38,961

22,826

23,200

Profit from discontinued operations

(887)

286

0

0

Profit after tax (inc. discontinued operations)

(55,933)

39,247

22,826

23,200

Minority interests

(1,668)

1,825

(3,464)

(3,395)

Net income (FRS 3)

(57,601)

41,072

19,362

19,805

Profit after tax breakdown

Private equity

(60,739)

78,322

13,800

13,800

Alternative asset management

9,464

(37,304)

11,746

12,120

Holdings/Eliminations

(4,658)

(1,771)

(2,720)

(2,720)

Total

(55,933)

39,247

22,826

23,200

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

273.8

266.6

263.9

263.9

EPS (FRS 3) (c)

(21.0)

15.4

7.3

7.5

Dividend per share (c)

30.0

12.0

12.0

12.0

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

786,141

558,086

532,086

506,086

Intangible Assets (inc. goodwill)

229,711

167,134

161,134

155,134

Other assets

39,988

38,590

38,590

38,590

Investments

516,442

352,362

332,362

312,362

Current Assets

117,585

173,882

185,540

197,572

Debtors

50,711

25,261

25,261

25,261

Cash

55,583

123,468

135,126

147,158

Other

11,291

25,153

25,153

25,153

Current Liabilities

(36,193)

(31,294)

(31,294)

(31,294)

Creditors

(35,833)

(30,643)

(30,643)

(30,643)

Short term borrowings

(360)

(651)

(651)

(651)

Long Term Liabilities

(40,911)

(15,514)

(15,514)

(15,514)

Long term borrowings

(5,201)

0

0

0

Other long term liabilities

(35,710)

(15,514)

(15,514)

(15,514)

Net Assets

826,622

685,160

670,818

656,850

Minorities

(173,109)

(138,172)

(129,208)

(120,313)

Shareholders' equity

653,513

546,988

541,610

536,537

Year-end number of shares m

271.6

263.9

263.9

263.9

NAV per share

2.41

2.07

2.05

2.03

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

188,419

188,492

48,826

49,200

Acquisitions/disposals

(1,476)

70

0

0

Financing

(157,756)

(38,148)

(5,500)

(5,500)

Dividends

0

(82,432)

(31,668)

(31,668)

Other

Cash flow

29,187

67,982

11,658

12,032

Other items

0

(97)

0

0

Opening net debt/(cash)

163,220

(50,022)

(122,817)

(134,475)

Movement in debt

(184,055)

(4,910)

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

(50,022)

(122,817)

(134,475)

(146,507)

Source: DeA Capital, Edison Investment Research

Contact details

Revenue by geography

Via Brera 21
Milan 20121
Italy
www.deacapital.it

N/A

Contact details

Via Brera 21
Milan 20121
Italy
www.deacapital.it

Revenue by geography

N/A

Management team

CEO: Paolo Ceretti

CFO: Manolo Santilli

Paolo Ceretti held various positions inside the Agnelli Group holding from 1979 (notably at Fiat). Since 2004, he has been general manager of De Agostini SpA, the holding of the De Agostini Group where he is also CEO of De Agostini Editore.

Manolo Santilli became CFO of DeA Capital in 2007. Since 2004, he has been the administration and reporting manager for De Agostini SpA. He is in charge of administrative activity and manages the preparation of the financial statements.

Executive chairman: Lorenzo Pellicioli

Lorenzo Pellicioli is CEO of the De Agostini Group and chairman of the board of DeA Capital.

Management team

CEO: Paolo Ceretti

Paolo Ceretti held various positions inside the Agnelli Group holding from 1979 (notably at Fiat). Since 2004, he has been general manager of De Agostini SpA, the holding of the De Agostini Group where he is also CEO of De Agostini Editore.

CFO: Manolo Santilli

Manolo Santilli became CFO of DeA Capital in 2007. Since 2004, he has been the administration and reporting manager for De Agostini SpA. He is in charge of administrative activity and manages the preparation of the financial statements.

Executive chairman: Lorenzo Pellicioli

Lorenzo Pellicioli is CEO of the De Agostini Group and chairman of the board of DeA Capital.

Principal shareholders

(%)

De Agostini SpA

58.3%

Highclere International Investors LLP

2.0%

Treasury stock

13.9%

Free float

25.8%

Companies named in this report

N/A

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

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60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

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Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

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