Rolls-Royce Holdings — Update 11 April 2016

Rolls-Royce Holdings — Update 11 April 2016

Rolls-Royce Holdings

Andy Chambers

Written by

Andy Chambers

Director, Industrials

Rolls-Royce Holdings

Derby trials

Updated forecasts

Aerospace & defence

11 April 2016

Price

667p

Market cap

£12bn

Net debt (£m) at 31 December 2015

111

Shares in issue

1,838.7m

Free float

100%

Code

RR.

Primary exchange

LSE

Secondary exchange

NYSE

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

(5.6)

19.2

(27.4)

Rel (local)

(6.8)

14.6

(21.1)

52-week high/low

1039.7p

512.5p

Business description

Rolls-Royce designs, develops, manufactures and services power systems for air, land and sea use. It is one of the world’s leading aero engines suppliers for large civil aircraft and business jets, and second in military engines and services. It also operates in diesel engines, marine and nuclear power markets.

Next events

AGM and Q1 IMS

6 May

H116 results

28 July

Analysts

Andy Chambers

+44 (0)20 3681 2525

Roger Johnston

+44 (0)20 3077 5722

Rolls-Royce Holdings is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

Rolls-Royce continues to work through its current investment phase and external economic turbulence has not further damaged the prospects. The current shortfall in cash flow performance is being addressed. We believe the strength of the core civil engine model should ultimately reassert itself, lifting equity value towards significantly higher cash valuations.

Year end

Revenue (£m)

PBT*
(£m)

EPS*
(p)

DPS
(p)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/14

13,864

1,617

65.3

23.1

10.2

3.5

12/15

13,354

1,432

58.7

16.4

11.4

2.5

12/16e

13,175

607

24.5

11.7

27.2

1.8

12/17e

13,464

833

33.7

15.0

19.8

2.3

Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments.

2015 a bit better than expected

The much downgraded expectation for FY15 was at least met, and indeed two unflagged one-offs actually led to a moderate beat of expectations at the underlying earnings level. As anticipated, the company has chosen to cut the dividend payment to shareholders, although a 50% reduction to the final amount was less than we expected. The FY16 interim is to be cut by a similar amount, with a further assessment at next year’s prelims. The main shortfall came in Marine due to the severely depressed offshore market. Civil was also weaker for the previously indicated reasons of lower legacy engine revenues and declines in regional and bizjet engine markets.

Current-year headwinds unchanged

In the absence of a sixth profit warning in two years, one would hope that management is finally able to draw a line in the sand. FY16 headwinds remain in place, depressing group underlying profit before financing by £650m, with the finance charge returning to a more normal £103m and the group likely to turn FCF negative this year. In our view prospects beyond that look more favourable. However, the market is unlikely to rehabilitate the shares until renewed cash flow growth is demonstrable. As such, we see the current year as one of consolidation as the company prepares for further volume original equipment (OE) ramp ups in Civil, including the additional cost-down initiatives. We envisage a modest FCF improvement in FY17, with continued growth in the cash generative aftermarket and profitable recovery in other end markets providing much brighter prospects thereafter. Rolls-Royce should then be much better positioned.

Valuation: Restoring cash based confidence

The valuation of RollsRoyce continues to look attractive on a long-term basis, but the near-term earnings declines continue to leave short-term multiples extended, with a lower yield support. We have revisited our capped DCF, which now returns a value of around 807p per share despite the dip in near-term cash performance. If management successfully implements the improvement plan, that should prove to be a minimum fair value.

Investment thesis: Civil model is not broken

It has been apparent for some time that the bull case in Rolls-Royce has been built around the cash-generative potential of the civil engine business. This arises as the installed base grows with an annuity of high-margin recurring revenues from the required servicing of the operational fleet to meet regulatory safety standards and maximise airline operating capability. While this did not always meet with the accounting wrapper applied to the division in terms of timing of recognition of revenues and profits, the general perception was that the underlying cash flow development was predictable and expected to grow. The mismatch of profits and cash was seen largely as an issue relating to the quality of declared earnings rather than cash valuation.

To a degree this factor is unaltered today despite the recent share price turbulence, which is in our view largely explained by a squeeze on both earnings and cash flow of both the Civil division and the overall group. However, we do not believe the overall core model for civil engines is broken at Rolls-Royce or in the wider engine market generally. Long term, we believe the company’s strengthened market position in the high thrust, widebody aircraft engine market served by its Trent product family will prove highly cash generative and grow strongly for many years to come.

These assumptions underlie our cash flow-derived valuations which indicate that the shares at present retain significant potential for the longer term.

So, what has happened to this bull case investment thesis in the recent past? Simply put there has been a confluence of cash flow reducing factors that generated the series of profit warnings, which consequently undermined sentiment for the equity. We feel many of these factors are likely to prove transient rather than structural, but they have highlighted two main issues at Rolls-Royce:

the differential between accounting outcomes and economic cash reality; and

the structure of the group.

The new management team is now challenged with the task of addressing these issues and restoring confidence in the investment proposition.

After a shaky start with the incremental profit warnings in July and November, the full year 2015 results provided the first glimpses of the path to redemption. There was no additional warning, although the market continues to adjust mid-term expectations to the factors that are affecting earnings as the accounting treatments are altered to reflect the changed contractual arrangements affecting the new engine programmes. That is to say more unlinked long-term engine supply and support contracts compared to the linked accounting contracts that have been dominant in recent years. It should be noted that these treatments differ in how they deliver earnings into the P&L, but have no effect on the cash flow from the contracts. However, it is clearly a factor favoured by management as it should more closely relate earnings performance to economic cash performance.

As for the structure of the group, the CEO has been quite straightforward in saying that his review to date has been operational, highlighting operational inertia, inflexibility and excess fixed cost that the company continues to address. In the process there has been some overlap with strategic fit issues, which the company may start to address. However, this is not a new feature as the portfolio has seen significant alterations over the last 30 years, culminating in the exit of the narrowbody engine market and the disposal of the aero-derived compressor and power generation business.

The introduction of ValueAct to the board is seen by many as a catalyst for significant change to the strategy. Our view remains that alongside the Civil business it is important that the group retains other revenue streams that provide different cyclical cash flows to support the long-term investment cycle in civil engines. Without Marine, Defence and Power Systems over the last decade, and the receipts from Pratt & Whitney for IAE and Siemens for the power generation business, it is likely Rolls-Royce would be in far more difficulty today than appears to us to be the case.

Still travelling and yet to arrive

As an investment, Rolls-Royce is long term in nature. The aeroengine model is structured to derive the cash value from the servicing element (aftermarket) of competitively supplied initial fit engines (OE). Investment returns from high front loaded expenditures are generated by these aftermarket revenue flows over decades. In the Civil division most of the expenses (and thus risk) are borne by the company, with returns from the aftermarket set much higher to generate a healthy overall rate of return. As discussed in our last note, this is reflected in the cash curves of the various engine programmes which we feel remain largely intact despite current headwinds. The level of risk for Defence is reduced by customer funding and involvement, with margins more balanced between OE and aftermarket. Marine, Power Systems and Nuclear are more product driven but retain significant service elements, and centre on long-term relationships with customers.

The success of Rolls-Royce’s Civil business is contingent on generating sufficient cash generative aftermarket revenues to fully fund the heavy investment and new product introduction cycles it will face as the markets and aircraft power requirements develop. This will be driven by a combination of platform opportunities and economic or environmental considerations.

In this regard, the civil business could still be considered relatively immature. Rolls-Royce’s success in achieving a 50% market share in its chosen market has yet to be translated into installed thrust and thus aftermarket revenues that would reverse the adverse cash dynamics. It would also lead to sustainable margin development comparable to its main peer GE.

However, it appears Rolls-Royce is travelling in the right direction. Installed thrust on current programmes has risen to 405m/lbs at the end of 2015 from 320m/lbs in 2010, a CAGR of 5.2% despite the dilutive impact of declining legacy programmes. As Trent deliveries more than double over the next three years driven mainly by the A350 programme, five-year CAGR should improve to at least 5.8% by 2020 despite our aggressive retirement assumptions for the rest of the engine fleet.

Exhibit 1: Rolls-Royce installed thrust development

Source: Rolls-Royce, Edison Investment Research

As new product introduction cash outflows reduce by the end of the decade Rolls-Royce’s Civil operations should arrive in a more stable market position. Higher margins and cash flows should then enable the division to self-sustain, as future projects such as a further Airbus A350 stretch or A380 re-engining programme are evaluated and possibly pursued.

Our view remains that new engine programmes equate to acquisitions for Rolls-Royce’s Civil business, with extended investment cycles but ultimately significant value creating potentials. Therefore, investors should be comfortable with Rolls-Royce continuing to invest in R&D and new programmes that arise. Thus while it may appear contrarian given the current situation, we would tend to regard recent share price declines as a potential opportunity for longer-term investors, once the current pockets of turbulence have been left behind.

Allowances for baggage

However, it is clear that both the civil model and the group overall are carrying a lot of cash flow baggage in the near term. So where has the cash gone? In our view it is a coincidence of adverse factors in the civil division as well as cyclical declines elsewhere in the group, specifically Marine.

Civil cash consumption is largely investment related

A number of factors are serving to consume cash in the Civil Aerospace division that manufactures and supports aircraft engines. In almost all cases these relate to the new product introductions or new engine developments that are in process or are coming to an aircraft near you soon, although some are regarded as legacy issues. There are a variety of issues in this category:

New product development expenses in the form of R&D expenditure; the Trent XWB-84, Trent XWB-97, Trent7000 for the A330neo and the Trent 1000TEN upgrade for the Boeing B787 programme. XWB expenditure should peak by 2017 as development costs and capex peak, although working capital will continue to rise as volume ramps.

Negative cash flows from heavily discounted new engine deliveries to launch customers on the A350-900 programme. Some of these relate back to customers who ordered the original aircraft proposal before the design was radically altered to the XWB that has now entered service. The discounts diminish on later deliveries as the launch phase is passed, and should be less marked on the Trent XWB-97 for the A350-1000. We expect there to be lower launch discounts on the Trent 7000 for the A330neo due to the efficiency premium.

Reduced cash flows from the A330 programme as both volumes and prices fall during the run off of the classic A330ceo line with existing Trent 700 engines. These have been generating strong profits and cash flow, but are now being sold at cash losses. Thus, even the increase in production rate to seven per month next year recently announced by Airbus is not immediately a benefit, although longer term it should benefit aftermarket cash flows.

Weaker legacy engine market performance, particularly in the aftermarket. In part this is due to lower utilisation as widebodies hit the ground. In some cases this is aircraft that have had extended campaign lives due to the absence of available replacement aircraft, including RB211 powered widebodies. As the small fleets decline, these engines now generate limited, but highly profitable aftermarket revenues. In addition, the earlier big twins like the B777 and less fuel efficient A340-500/600 fleets are also being swapped out of initial fleets at a faster rate as deliveries of B787 and A350 increase. These are expected to be remarketed and while limited as a proportion of the installed base, the downtime leads to an absence of profitable aftermarket revenue and cash generation.

Product performance assurances are essentially warranty costs on engine performance that if incurred lead to compensatory value being given to the customer, normally in cash. It is believed the initial engines for the B787 have not met specifications by either engine supplier. It is also the primary reason for development of the Trent 1000TEN.

While the widebody aftermarket continues to grow, with improving cash flow implications, it is not a sufficiently large enough improvement to offset these adverse cash factors at present.

Other group cash flow impacts

Coinciding with these Civil requirements, other factors have reduced the overall group cash flow performance. This includes the cyclical reduction arising from the offshore market decline in Marine over the last few years. A recovery in the market and efficiencies should allow some improvement from FY17. Defence is also expected to generate less cash in the current year due to increased investment and the run out of costs on UK programmes where advance deposits have been received ahead of delivery. Longer-term cash generation for the division is expected to strengthen.

Trading update and outlook

At the group level the outturn for FY15 earnings actually proved to be slightly better than the much reduced outturn we had anticipated. Stripping out a £58m intellectual property settlement in Other and a £19m R&D tax credit in Nuclear, both of which were unexpected and one-off, would have left underlying profit before tax at £1,355m compared to our forecast of £1,349m.

In addition, the free cash inflow for the year was better than anticipated at £179m. Whilst the final dividend was cut by only 50%, the indication that the interim 2016 payment would be cut by a similar amount suggests to us that the FY16 total will be half the level for FY14. The net debt position at the year-end was thus £111m compared to net cash of £666m at December 2014.

Divisional performance in 2015

Civil divisional revenues of £6,933m (FY14 £6,837m) grew by an underlying 3% that was largely offset by a 2% currency impact. Underlying OE revenues fell by 3% (with a further 3% negative currency effect) and services revenue grew by 9% (FX added 1%) on an underlying basis, or 4% excluding the retrospective customer risk assessment benefit (see below).

There were significant benefits from retrospective contract accounting adjustments that are unlikely to recur. A total boost of £222m (FY14 £150m) to UPBFCT arose from:

A one-off refinement to customer risk assessment on future revenues process that released £189m to service revenues that drops straight into profitability, but will not recur.

A benefit of £140m (FY14 £60m) that related to improved lifecycle costs.

A charge of £107m (2014 - £90m benefit) to reflect lower fleet utilisation, mainly relating to B777 and A340-500/600 fleets, as well as other commercial and technical factors.

A £65m profit was also recognised as the result of an impairment reversal of CARS relating to an improved in service experience for a customer on the Trent 1000 engine for the Boeing 787. The improvement largely related to the outlook for future maintenance costs. It also led to the capitalisation of £22m of CARS within the year that would otherwise have been impaired.

Divisional gross margin was 22.0% (24.5% in 2014), or 17.9% stripping out the £287m of non-recurring elements mentioned above.

Restructuring costs were some £75m lower at just £7m but this benefit was more than offset by an increase in expensed R&D of £65m and a £13m increase in commercial and administrative costs. Joint ventures and associates contributed £11m to divisional underlying profit before financing.

In Defence profits benefited from a £107m uplift to long-term contracts including a non-recurring £40m. Excluding the non-recurring element gross margin fell to 26.5%, slightly lower than the prior year. While the order book fell by 5% to £4.3bn it still represents over two years of sales and with over 60% of sales in service and support of the fleet, prospects look robust. Issues surrounding the A400M still need to be fully addressed, but do not look likely to undermine the long-term outlook.

Power Systems performance was resilient despite weaker volumes in some sectors such as oil & gas (-5% on constant currency) and government. Sales fell by 12% to £2.39bn although 75% of the drop was currency related. Gross margin fell to 26.6% from 27.3%, reflecting the 3% organic declines in sales combined with some adverse mix. Order intake of £2.5bn almost matched the £2.6bn achieved in 2014, and the year-end order book was just 2% lower at £1.93bn.

A 26% decline in Marine’s order book reflected the sharp declines in offshore markets. Merchant markets were also subdued and naval remains relatively robust. The year-end backlog was £1.1bn, and order intake at £997m was down 45%, Revenues fell by 23% to £1.3bn, of which around a third was FX related. OE revenues fell by 28% while more resilient services sales fell by 14%, reflecting lower activity and deferrals of overhauls. Gross margin fell to 19.6% from 24.9% as a result of the weaker revenues, pricing pressure and cost under recovery. Whilst operating costs fell, the contribution to underlying profit before tax still fell to £15m from £138m.

Underlying performance at Nuclear was resilient although it benefited from a £19m R&D tax credit. Submarine work and good demand for instrumentation and controls drove a 9% revenue increase, but gross margin fell to 16.2% (from 18.7%) due to increased costs on certain low margin contracts.

Exhibit 2: FY15 results summary by division

Civil

Defence

Power Systems

Marine

2014

2015

% change

2014

2015

% change

2014

2015

% change

2014

2015

% change

Order book

63,229

67,029

6

4,564

4,316

-5

1,971

1,928

-2

1,567

1,164

-26

OE revenues

3,463

3,258

-6

816

801

-2

1,893

1,618

-15

1,070

773

-28

Service revenues

3,374

3,675

9

1,253

1,234

-2

827

767

-7

639

551

-14

Total underlying revenues

6,837

6,933

1

2,069

2,035

-2

2,720

2,385

-12

1,709

1,324

-23

Underlying gross profit

1,675

1,526

-9

567

579

2

742

635

-14

425

260

-39

Commercial & Admin costs

-283

-296

5

-112

-124

11

-296

-275

-7

-254

-201

-21

Restructuring costs

-82

-7

-91

-55

-8

-85

-7

-4

-43

-4

-16

300

R&D expensed

-461

-515

12

-50

-73

46

-183

-162

-11

-29

-28

-3

JV's and associates

93

104

12

16

19

19

-3

0

-100

UPBFCT

942

812

-14

366

393

7

253

194

-23

138

15

-89

Underlying gross margin %

24.5

22.0

27.4

28.5

27.3

26.6

24.9

19.6

UPBFCT margin %

13.8

11.7

17.7

19.3

9.3

8.1

8.1

1.1

Nuclear

Other & HQ

Group

2014

2015

% change

2014

2015

% change

2014

2015

% change

Order book

2,499

2,168

-13

-156

-266

73,674

76,339

4

OE revenues

230

251

9

-54

23

-143

7,418

6,724

-9

Service revenues

408

436

7

-55

-33

-40

6,446

6,630

3

Total underlying revenues

638

687

8

-109

-10

-91

13,864

13,354

-4

Underlying gross profit

119

111

-7

-5

71

3,523

3,182

-10

Commercial & Admin costs

-61

-53

-13

-63

-55

-13

-1,069

-1,004

-6

Restructuring costs

-1

-2

100

0

-2

-149

-39

-74

R&D expensed

-7

14

-300

0

-1

-730

-765

5

JV's and associates

0

-5

106

118

11

UPBFCT

50

70

40

-68

8

-112

1,681

1,492

-11

Underlying gross margin %

18.7

16.2

25.4

23.8

UPBFCT margin %

7.8

10.2

12.1

11.2

Source: Company reports

Outlook for 2016 remains challenging

While the long-term investment case remains intact, in our view, near-term profit headwinds persist and adverse impacts on earnings in FY16 and to a lesser extent in FY17. While the growth of profitable and cash generative aftermarket revenues continues, in the next couple of years the negative original equipment (OE) effects will outweigh that positive.

Civil: Commencing descent

As Rolls-Royce enters its latest period of new civil engine product introduction on the Airbus A350 with the Trent XWB, returns face a period of dilution. Early launch customers receive additional discounts to mitigate risk of underperformance during the initial operational phase.

The increase in unlinked accounting of the OE sales and the long-term service agreements means that losses incurred on the initial supply of these engines are capitalised as contractual aftermarket rights (CARs – formerly recoverable engine costs), and amortised over a15-year period. The change arises because on the A350 programmes the contractual arrangement is that Rolls-Royce is supplying the engines to Airbus rather than direct to the airlines, with the long-term service agreements still negotiated with the airlines. These early unlinked OE revenues are thus booked with zero profitability. In contrast, the linked contracts that currently dominate the Trent OE revenues have a positive margin applied as part of the overall airline contract profit even if an initial cash loss is incurred on delivery. The loss is effectively spread over the life of the linked service agreement.

This factor will depress profit margins as both variants of the Trent XWB move through launch phase with dilution rising in 2016 and 2017. As volumes increase the mix of unlinked deliveries will rise from c.35% of OE deliveries in 2015 to just over 70% in 2020 before stabilising. It is exacerbated by additional investment in the new Trent 7000 to power the Airbus A330neo and to improve the performance for the Boeing 787 with the Trent1000TEN. It should be noted that the underlying cash generation remains the same regardless of the accounting treatment.

However, the new product disruption also depresses pricing for product that is likely to be replaced but for which an element of demand is still required to mitigate overall supply chain inefficiencies in a run out phase, specifically the Trent 700 on the current A330ceo. What were very profitable engines under the linked accounting on a successful and mature programme now suffer from both a drop in volume and pricing as transition to the newer aircraft (A330neo) is implemented.

Together with weaker legacy widebody (RB211 engines on the Boeing 747, 767 and Trent engines on the B777 and A340-500/600), regional and bizjet market factors, it was these headwinds that Rolls-Royce had previously warned about through 2015. While the drag will increase in FY16, the initial effect was apparent in FY15 results.

In the longer term the challenge for Rolls-Royce remains unchanged; to execute delivery of the healthy order book that stood at £67.0bn (up 6% y-o-y), converting it into high margin aftermarket revenues and cash flow. Representing almost 10x current divisional sales, with almost half attributable to the Trent XWB programmes, the opportunity is self-evident.

Exhibit 3: Rolls-Royce projected Trent engine deliveries to 2025

Source: Company reports; Edison research estimates

Defence: Living up to its name

The long-term prospects for Defence remain positive, with healthy positions in military aircraft engine markets for transport, trainers and combat platforms. It also generates over 60% of sales from services which tend to be recurring and very long term. The global defence spending environment is improving, but cycles for military engines are very long term so we see little change to current programme new delivery expectations over the remainder of the decade. However, while 2016 should be stable, profits will not benefit from the £40m non-recurring uplift taken in 2015. As a result profitability is expected to be somewhat lower on stable revenues.

Power Systems: Surprising resilience

The Power Systems division has remained more robust than many expected, and this is aided by the quite diverse range of markets served by its diesel engines and the resilience of the service revenues. While some markets are under pressure none of them are of a significant scale, and it retains healthy order books in other key segments. The outlook for the timebeing remains one of consistency rather than growth, with modest growth in sales and profits expected in 2016.

Marine: Choppy waters

Despite the declines, oil & gas related offshore markets still accounted for 56% of divisional sales in FY15. The combination of continued weakness in this market and the cost of the rationalisation initiatives intended to mitigate its impact, will lead to a £75-100m decline in divisional profits in 2016. We would expect to see a significant improvement as the net benefits of restructuring appear in 2017. Naval and merchant vessel exposures are expected to remain relatively stable.

Nuclear: More stable than volatile

The nuclear division is expected to be relatively stable in the coming year, although the £19m tax credit should not recur. The large naval content for Royal Navy submarines, which generates substantial support revenues, should underpin profitability and cash flow at current levels until the continuing investment in civil nuclear projects starts to bear fruit and grow. The unsolicited proposal of mini reactors for civil power generation purposes utilising knowledge and experience from the submarine programmes is an example of continued innovative thinking throughout RollsRoyce.

Strategic focus and operational streamlining

Strategic focus priorities in 2016 have been set as:

Engineering excellence delivered through investment and innovative development

Operational excellence driving a manufacturing and supply chain transformation which will embed operational excellence in lean, lower-cost facilities and processes; and

Capturing aftermarket value by leveraging the installed base, utilising product knowledge and engineering capabilities to provide customers with outstanding service

Restructuring programmes therefore continue to initiate substantial cost reductions in Aerospace (£80m net benefit expected in 2016) and Marine. The net benefits of these programmes should be fully realised by the end of 2017 and total £120m. Defence will be helped by the significant investment in a new facility with a footprint reduction in Indianapolis.

The new transformational programme initiated by the new CEO, Warren East, has already seen around half of the expected £150-200m of targeted savings identified. Aimed at increasing operational flexibility, simplification of structures and reducing fixed costs, the enduring cost saving should be fully realisable in 2018. There may be more to come, but our view remains that a more positive confluence of market, self-help and mix will significantly improve returns by 2018.

Valuation

Fundamentally the reduction in near-term cash flows from Marine due to cyclical decline, and at Civil due predominantly to new product introductions are producing an additional reduction in cash based valuations. After rebasing our forecasts post the FY15 results, our valuation has declined to 808p/share. However, we do expect this to increase as the current investment phase in the Trent XWB, Trent 1000TEN and Trent 7000 engine programmes progresses and Marine recovers.

Our DCF methodology caps growth in cash flow development in six years. In our view, it remains inherently conservative as aftermarket revenue and cash flow growth in Civil should last for decades after OE deliveries end on any specific engine programme. Therefore, we have curtailed the long-term growth annuities of aftermarket streams that form the crux of the investment case. As the DCF rolls forward the currently depressed cash flows should be replaced by growth in the incoming years, enabling fair value to expand once more.

Exhibit 4: Rolls-Royce capped DCF (WACC 8.27%, terminal growth rate 0%)

Year to December (£m)

2016E

2017E

2018E

2019E

2020E

2021E

Terminal

EBIT

585

807

979

1,310

1,652

2,026

Depreciation & Amortisation

756

785

809

826

832

831

Working Capital

-149

-84

-115

-143

-156

-193

Operating cash flow

1,192

1,507

1,673

1,993

2,328

2,663

Capex

-1,119

-1,095

-1,029

-995

-888

-838

Taxation

-76

-158

-217

-263

-351

-442

Provisions

-93

-78

-66

-55

-46

-38

Cash flow pre dividends & interest

-96

177

361

679

1,044

1,346

19,158

Discount factor

0.94

0.87

0.80

0.74

0.69

0.63

0.63

Discounted cash flows

-90

154

291

505

717

853

12,151

Cumulative DCF

-90

64

355

860

1,577

2,430

Enterprise DCF

14,582

Net cash/(debt)

-111

Pension deficit

-1,140

Add joint ventures

1,534

Less: Minorities

-13

Estimated equity value (£m)

14,852

Shares issued (m)

1,839

Estimated equity value/share (p)

808

Source: Edison Investment Research estimates

Financials

Exhibit 5: Rolls-Royce Holdings earnings estimates revisions

Year to December (£m)

2015E

2015A

 

2016E

2016E

 

 

Prior

Actual

% change

Prior

New

% change

Civil

7,042

6,933

-1.5

7,113

6,876

-3.3

Defence

2,048

2,035

-0.6

2,089

2,020

-3.3

Power Systems

2,530

2,385

-5.7

2,277

2,457

7.9

Marine

1,453

1,324

-8.9

1,307

1,192

-8.9

Nuclear & Energy

718

687

-4.3

733

694

-5.3

 

96

 

 

46

 

Intra Group and other

-151

-106

-29.9

-136

-109

-19.8

Sales

13,640

13,354

-2.1

13,382

13,175

-1.6

 

 

 

 

 

 

EBITDA

2,101

2,108

0.3

1,517

1,341

-11.6

 

 

 

 

 

 

Civil

834

812

-2.7

304

241

-20.7

Defence

358

393

9.6

366

343

-6.1

Power Systems

235

194

-17.5

205

205

0.1

Marine

3

15

458.6

-48

-64

34.7

Nuclear & Energy

50

70

39.2

51

51

0.1

Other

 

52

 

 

-6

 

Intra segment

-13

7

 

-13

-10

 

Central costs

-53

-51

-3.8

-53

-51

-3.8

UPBFT

1,415

1,492

5.4

812

709

-12.6

 

 

 

 

 

 

Underlying PBT

1,349

1,432

6.1

738

607

-17.8

 

 

 

 

 

 

EPS - underlying continuing (p)

56.0

58.7

4.8

30.8

24.4

-20.8

DPS (p)

15.0

16.4

9.4

18.5

11.7

-36.5

Net debt/(cash)

-81

-111

37.9

-220

-607

176.2

Source: Company reports; Edison Investment Research estimates

The performance in FY15 did not alleviate the pressures coming to bear on FY16. However, in the absence of a widely anticipated warning about Power Systems, our underlying outlook for the current year is broadly unchanged.

With similar headwinds persisting in 2017 we do not expect any substantial recovery in profitability, although we do expect moderate growth from the Civil aftermarket and cumulative restructuring benefits in both Aerospace and Marine. We would expect free cash flow to turn modestly positive although there is likely to be modest increase in net debt due to the reduced dividend payments.

Exhibit 6: Financial summary

£m

2013

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

Year end 31 December

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

Revenue

 

14,634

13,864

13,354

13,175

13,464

Cost of Sales

(10,525)

(10,341)

(10,172)

(10,035)

(10,256)

Gross Profit

4,109

3,523

3,182

3,139

3,208

EBITDA

 

2,448

2,312

2,108

1,341

1,592

EBITA (before amort. and except.)

 

2,076

1,938

1,735

970

1,220

Intangible Amortisation

(404)

(366)

(361)

(385)

(413)

Associates & Other

159

106

118

124

130

Operating Profit (before exceptionals)

1,831

1,678

1,492

709

937

Exceptionals

(59)

(1,550)

(1,272)

0

0

Net Interest

(72)

(61)

(60)

(103)

(104)

Profit Before Tax (norm)

 

1,759

1,617

1,432

607

833

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

 

1,700

67

160

607

833

Tax

(377)

(151)

(76)

(158)

(217)

Profit After Tax (norm)

1,236

1,213

1,081

449

616

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

1,323

(84)

84

449

616

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

1,866

1,874

1,839

1,828

1,828

EPS - normalised fully diluted (p)

 

65.6

65.3

58.7

24.5

33.7

EPS - (IFRS) (p)

 

70.3

(-3.9)

4.5

24.5

33.7

Dividend per share (p)

22.0

23.1

16.4

11.7

15.0

Gross Margin (%)

28.1

25.4

23.8

23.8

23.8

EBITDA Margin (%)

16.7

16.7

15.8

10.2

11.8

Operating Margin (before GW and except.) (%)

14.2

14.0

13.0

7.4

9.1

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

 

9,997

9,296

9,145

9,546

9,896

Intangible Assets

4,987

4,804

4,645

4,852

5,006

Tangible Assets

3,392

3,446

3,490

3,646

3,801

Investments

1,618

1,046

1,010

1,048

1,089

Current Assets

 

11,224

9,897

11,048

10,707

10,758

Stocks

1,725

1,477

1,569

1,581

1,637

Debtors

3,840

4,215

4,140

4,216

4,308

Cash

4,311

2,869

3,178

2,778

2,633

Other

1,348

1,336

2,161

2,132

2,179

Current Liabilities

 

(7,838)

(5,961)

(6,769)

(6,273)

(6,384)

Creditors

(7,630)

(5,951)

(6,363)

(6,273)

(6,384)

Short term borrowings

(208)

(10)

(406)

0

0

Long Term Liabilities

 

(7,080)

(6,845)

(8,408)

(8,817)

(8,704)

Long term borrowings

(2,164)

(2,193)

(2,883)

(3,385)

(3,353)

Other long term liabilities

(4,916)

(4,652)

(5,525)

(5,432)

(5,353)

Net Assets

 

6,303

6,387

5,016

5,164

5,564

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

 

2,278

1,577

1,174

1,151

1,486

Net Interest

(43)

(45)

(59)

(70)

(71)

Tax

(238)

(276)

(76)

(158)

(217)

Capex

(1,172)

(1,125)

(895)

(1,119)

(1,095)

Acquisitions/disposals

404

(906)

(139)

0

0

Financing

(190)

(16)

(361)

0

0

Dividends

(417)

(482)

(421)

(301)

(216)

Net Cash Flow

622

(1,273)

(777)

(496)

(113)

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

(1,317)

(1,939)

(666)

111

607

HP finance leases initiated

0

0

0

0

0

Other

0

0

0

0

(0)

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

(1,939)

(666)

111

607

720

Source: Company reports, Edison Investment Research estimates

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

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

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Level 25, Aurora Place

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Research: TMT

XP Power — Update 11 April 2016

XP Power

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