Stratec Biomedical — Update 4 April 2016

Stratec Biomedical — Update 4 April 2016

Stratec Biomedical

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Stratec Biomedical

Hungary Haematology offsets Chinese famine

FY15 trading, acquisition

Healthcare equipment & services

4 April 2016

Price

€42.5

Market cap

€502m

Net cash (€m) at 30 September 2015

49.5

Shares in issue

11.8m

Free float

58%

Code

SBS

Primary exchange

Xetra

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

(18.6)

(30.2)

(5.6)

Rel (local)

(19.2)

(23.4)

15.7

52-week high/low

€62.31

€42.05

Business description

Stratec Biomedical designs and manufactures OEM diagnostic systems. Assembly is in central Germany and Switzerland. A US subsidiary designs advanced optics and there is a UK software company and Berlin DNA business. A blood analyser company, Diatron, was acquired in 2016. 2016.

Next events

FY15 report

14 April 2016

Q1 results

26 April 2016

H2 results

21 July 2016

Q3 results

27 October 2016

Analyst

John Savin PhD

+44 (0)20 3077 5735

Stratec Biomedical is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

Stratec, a German designer and builder of automated OEM diagnostic systems, has revised its core business guidance for 2016 and 2017 due to volatile client forecasts arising from sales uncertainty and local competition in China. Preliminary 2015 results showed revenues up 1.4% to €146.9m and an improved EBIT margin of 18.3% due to higher service part sales. The about €67m Diatron acquisition adds about €25m revenue in FY16 and €37m in FY17, taking our 2016 consolidated revenue forecast to a revised €176m, with 2017 revenues potentially at €198m. Diatron’s EBIT margin is assumed to be 17%, similar to Stratec’s core business.

Year
end

Revenue
(€m)

EBIT
(€m)

EPS*
(€)

DPS
(€)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/14

144.9

24.1

2.16

0.70

19.7

1.6

12/15e

146.9

26.9

2.28

0.75

18.6

1.8

12/16e

176.2

31.8

2.57

0.80

16.5

1.9

12/17e

198.1

35.4

2.81

0.85

15.1

2.0

Note: EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments. 2015 revenues and EBIT as disclosed

FY15 preliminary results

Unaudited revenues of €146.9m were slightly lower than our forecast €148.4m, but EBIT, at about €26.9m, was as expected due to a higher margin at 18.3% vs 18% forecast. The rise was largely due to higher than expected service part sales at 24%+ of revenue, implying €35m+. Service part sales are much higher margin than manufactured systems and recognised development revenues have zero EBIT. Management disclosed that 2015 sales shifted towards higher-value systems.

Clients nervously look east; Diatron boosts revenues

Previous guidance of 8-12% CAGR (2013-17e) indicated 2017 core revenues of between €174m and €201m. Management guidance is now 6% core CAGR, implying €161.5m in 2017, with growth largely from two major launches based on developments from 2014. Client caution about the Chinese market has caused volatile forecasts. The March 2016 Diatron acquisition adds about €34m per year of blood cell analyser sales in the low-volume and developing market sectors. We model Diatron at 17% EBIT margin with 7.5% growth for FY17 and assume the cost is 50% debt funded.

Valuation: Diatron not boring

Stratec revenues comprise sales of diverse systems, unpredictable service part sales and recognition of development based on complex accounting; the annual report is due on 14 April. Diatron from April 2016 gives OEM and some direct sales to smaller laboratories. The 18.3% EBIT margin is expected to be slightly diluted by Diatron and to decline slightly as construction and development take a higher share of the revenue mix. Both Stratec and Diatron rely on a few major clients operating with long product cycles; two are in common. The shares trade on a historic FY14 P/E of 20x and a prospective 2016 forecast P/E of 17x, relative to a core 2016 growth rate of 2.5% and slightly higher Diatron growth prospects of 7.5%. The proposed dividend increase to €0.75/share from €0.70 lifts the yield to 1.9%.

Strong brand in a niche market

Stratec has excellent technologies and deep expertise in engineering design, optics and software, with an efficient assembly and testing operation in Germany and Switzerland, where systems are constructed from modules according the client orders. The supply chain from module producers, usually in Asia, takes about six weeks and is tightly managed. There are two subsidiaries that have their combined sales noted in the annual report: one in middleware – laboratory management software based in the UK; and the other in nucleic acid purification based in Berlin. A US subsidiary has optical expertise, essential for precision measurements in diagnostics. Most system design occurs in central Germany in the Black Forest. The menu of diagnostic tests is provided by clients. Some issues were reported with clients having an incomplete launch menu, which therefore reduces the initial commercial appeal to their customers. Diatron, acquired in at the end of March 2016, has OEM and some direct sales of blood cell analysis instruments and chemicals. It is based in Hungary with a US sales operation located in Florida.

2015 unaudited partial results

Stratec had previously guided that revenues in 2015 were likely to be relatively flat relative to 2014, but with increased profitability. The revised Edison forecast by revenue stream, including initial Diatron forecasts, is shown in Exhibit 1.

Exhibit 1: Edison forecasts

2014

2015e

2016e

2017e

Systems shipped (units)

2,719

2,700

2,750

3,040

Price/unit (€k)

32.76

33.20

33.20

33.20

Construction (manufacturing) (€k)

89,083

89,640

91,300

100,928

Subsidiary sales (estimated) (€k)

7,026

7,500

8,000

8,500

Total products (€k)

96,109

97,140

99,300

109,428

Diatron

25,500

36,550

Maintenance and service parts (€k)

33,839

35,403

36,000

36,750

Development services (at reimbursed cost) (€k)

14,564

14,000

15,000

15,000

Sundry (shipping charges) (€k)

348

350

350

350

Total revenues (€k)

144,860

146,893

176,150

198,078

Revenue growth

13.2%

1.4%

19.9%

12.4%

EBIT(€k)

24,052

26,860

31,808

35,440

EBIT margin

16.6%

18.3%

18.1%

17.9%

Source: Stratec reported accounts, Edison Investment Research forecasts, Diatron disclosures

Unaudited FY15 revenues of €146.9m were slightly lower than our November 2015 forecast of €148.4m, but EBIT at about €26.9m was as expected due to a higher EBIT margin at 18.3% vs 18% forecast. The increase in EBIT seems to have been due to service part sales comprising 24%+ of the revenue mix. Service part sales are much higher margin than manufactured systems. It seems probable that the number of systems shipped fell slightly in 2015; management has disclosed that sales shifted towards higher-value systems with a fall in older systems shipped.

There was no disclosure of the level of recognised development revenues. We estimated these at €14m, but they contribute nothing to EBIT as they are exactly offset by amortised costs; the costs recognised equal the client payments received. Development revenues often do not cover the cost of development as Stratec uses its own IP. These recognised development revenues and costs may be slightly higher in 2016 and 2017. This is because of the high level of ongoing development work and the number of development contracts that will move into the client market launch and construction ramp-up phases. Margins on systems are generally lower in the initial ramp-up phase as production is optimised. However, this is impossible to assess numerically. Unrecovered development costs are amortised against profits from system construction. A further factor affecting EBIT margins is the extent to which development work is capitalised as incurred, although Diatron revenues will damp down these arithmetic fluctuations. A higher capitalisation rate will improve EBIT, but it is not possible to forecast this accurately as it is contract dependant.

The bulk of the core EBIT margin comes from service part sales, disclosed as just over 24% of the 2015 revenues and estimated at about €35.4m in Exhibit 1. This was substantially higher than the reported 2014 value of €33.8m (our 2015 forecast was €34.5m) and it led to a much higher EBIT margin, particularly as product sales were slightly lower at an estimated €96m vs €97m forecast.

It seems possible that the number of system units shipped in FY15 decreased as management indicated that the average sale price increased due to currency effects and a move towards more complex systems in the mix. The number of units will be disclosed in the annual report on 14 April.

Exhibit 2: Shipments of constructed systems (core only)

Source: Stratec Biomedical reports, Edison Investment Research forecasts. Note: Axis starts at 2,400 for clarity. Diatron shipments are not disclosed as yet.

Product sales include the two operating subsidiaries. The UK middleware company gained a substantial contract from Roche in 2015, which enabled it to produce a maiden EBIT contribution.

Looking forward to 2016 and 2017, the increased volume due to the two scheduled major launches is still apparent, but at a lower level and much more weighted towards 2017 – and so potentially volatile though hopefully upwards. Although we expect the EBIT margin to remain above 18%, it is possible that it will slip down slightly as the growth has to come from system sales, which are lower margin than service part sales. Exhibit 3 shows a scenario for overall revenues and Exhibit 4 shows EBIT. This does indicate that Stratec should continue to have robust cash flows, which will underpin the proposal to raise the dividend from €0.70 to €0.75 in respect of 2015, despite the limited sales growth, and enable rapid repayment of the bridging loan for Diatron.

Exhibit 3: Sales forecast including Diatron

Exhibit 4: EBIT forecast including Diatron

Source: Stratec reports, Edison Investment Research forecasts

Source: Stratec reports, Edison Investment Research forecasts

Exhibit 3: Sales forecast including Diatron

Source: Stratec reports, Edison Investment Research forecasts

Exhibit 4: EBIT forecast including Diatron

Source: Stratec reports, Edison Investment Research forecasts

At this stage, there is no visibility about the likely sales trajectory from 2018, although it could accelerate markedly if clients resolve their China conundrums and as current development projects reach the launch phases. Management has indicated that a more cautious and short-term guidance will be given. Revised guidance, including Diatron, will be given with H1 results on 21 July.

Diatron – the “not boring” haematology acquisition

Diatron, a Hungarian company, was founded in 1989. The first US sales were in 2012 with FDA approval of the Abacus 5 and Abacus 3CP haematology analysers. Diatron has a range of differential haematology analysers (Exhibit 5) selling at about 25% of the typical Stratec system (about €8k); Stratec states that it is a leading OEM manufacturer, with unit sales of €21m a year targeting smaller laboratories at lower test per hour rates. The Diatron website states it has sales in more than 110 countries through its distributor partner network and US subsidiary. Most sales are OEM but this is undisclosed.

Each analyser requires some bulk chemicals to run tests with 2015 sales of about €9.5m; these are standardised products available from multiple suppliers. There is also a small range of clinical chemistry systems generating about €3.7m sales per year, about 11% of total revenues.

Exhibit 5: Haematology analysis

Feature

Comment

Whole blood count

White blood cells are large, red blood cells mid-sized (with no nucleus) and platelets (essential for clotting) are small. The standard method of counting these different types is electrical impedance. Cells pass at 10,000 per second though a small hole and affect an electric field. The change in electrical impedance is related to cell volume. Typical sample processing rates are up to 60 per hour.

Three-part test

Adding a lysis buffer destroys red cells. The remaining white cells and platelets pass through a second impedance detector and the difference gives the red blood cell count. The size difference between platelets and white cells is large.
Further characterisation of white cells is done by adding a nucleating agent. This causes the different white blood cell types to shrink to different extents; lymphoyctes shrink the most. This allows the white blood cells to be split into three by size boundaries: lymphocytes, neutrophils and granulocytes. In a normal person, the ratio will be about 30%, 60% and 10% but there is a wide range. If there is a bacterial infection, the neutrophil count will rise: these cells attack bacteria. Lymphocytes attack viral infection. Diatron sells several three-part analysers, of which the
Abacus 380 is stated to be the flagship product.

Five-part test

After determination of red cells and platelets, this method separates the white cells into five types: lymphocytes and neutrophils with the granulocytes separated into monocytes, eosinophils and basophils. Eosinophils are involved in allergic reactions and in repelling parasitic infections – Diatron sells specific veterinary analysers where this will be very useful. To do this, the white cells are protected when the red cells are lysed. The intact white cells are then analysed by optical techniques to differentiate between the five classes: because they have naturally different levels of granularity, they scatter light to different extents. Five-part screening is more elaborate and the system are potentially twice as expensive. Whether the extra data are clinically useful will depend on the situation. Diatron sells the Abacus 5 utilising patented laser-based optical measurement as the most advanced model.

Feature

Whole blood count

Three-part test

Five-part test

Comment

White blood cells are large, red blood cells mid-sized (with no nucleus) and platelets (essential for clotting) are small. The standard method of counting these different types is electrical impedance. Cells pass at 10,000 per second though a small hole and affect an electric field. The change in electrical impedance is related to cell volume. Typical sample processing rates are up to 60 per hour.

Adding a lysis buffer destroys red cells. The remaining white cells and platelets pass through a second impedance detector and the difference gives the red blood cell count. The size difference between platelets and white cells is large.
Further characterisation of white cells is done by adding a nucleating agent. This causes the different white blood cell types to shrink to different extents; lymphoyctes shrink the most. This allows the white blood cells to be split into three by size boundaries: lymphocytes, neutrophils and granulocytes. In a normal person, the ratio will be about 30%, 60% and 10% but there is a wide range. If there is a bacterial infection, the neutrophil count will rise: these cells attack bacteria. Lymphocytes attack viral infection. Diatron sells several three-part analysers, of which the
Abacus 380 is stated to be the flagship product.

After determination of red cells and platelets, this method separates the white cells into five types: lymphocytes and neutrophils with the granulocytes separated into monocytes, eosinophils and basophils. Eosinophils are involved in allergic reactions and in repelling parasitic infections – Diatron sells specific veterinary analysers where this will be very useful. To do this, the white cells are protected when the red cells are lysed. The intact white cells are then analysed by optical techniques to differentiate between the five classes: because they have naturally different levels of granularity, they scatter light to different extents. Five-part screening is more elaborate and the system are potentially twice as expensive. Whether the extra data are clinically useful will depend on the situation. Diatron sells the Abacus 5 utilising patented laser-based optical measurement as the most advanced model.

Source: Edison Investment Research

Haematology analysers are a competitive and mature market. MarketsandMarkets, a research company, forecasts a $3.1bn market by 2019 with a CAGR of 5.2%. There are a wide range of systems and innovations in improving speed and accuracy. Examples of Japanese suppliers are Sysmex, Nihon Kohden and HORIBA. In the US, Beckman Coulter, Bio-Rad and Abbott are dominant and, in Europe, Siemens, Boule and Roche Diagnostics. In China, there is Mindray Medical. The units are used in diagnostics laboratories and general practice and in clinical settings when a result is required within minutes, as for blood transfusions.

Financial aspects

Stratec has disclosed approximate Diatron sales of €34m for the last financial year. Diatron, was sold to Stratec for “less than” two times sales, €67m assumed, by a US private equity company (Riverside) in March 2016; Riverside acquired Diatron in 2005. The EBIT margin is stated to be double digit and similar to Stratec. In our initial modelling of the acquisition impact, we have assumed a €67m purchase price which is half debt funded (a short-term bridging loan), increasing interest to over €1m per year, an interest rate of 2.5% is assumed based on management statements. The growth rate is stated to be just above Stratec’s so we assume 7.5% and the EBIT margin as 17%. The acquisition price may include a significant debt repayment as US private equity tends to be rather fond of leverage but details are not disclosed. There are 194 employees. No other financial details are available other than the cost structure is similar to Stratec’s.

Strategic musing

Stratec management indicated its intent to acquire a business that will enable it to broaden its offering to its client base (requiring a strong IP portfolio) without being EPS dilutive, implying a profitable target business at a reasonable price (implying overlooked or early). Diatron is the first to complete of several acquisitions being considered by Stratec management (as disclosed on the 24 March conference call). The other might complete over the next few months.

The Diatron acquisition adds to EPS by use of cash and short-term debt, but might be slightly EBIT margin dilutive. Stratec intends to use Diatron to diversify into new markets and gain synergies in development, manufacturing and sales. The two companies share two major OEM customers so there may be some cross-selling synergies and Stratec might use Diatron to enter volume, lower priced markets with additional development options for current clients. In the US, Stratec will now also sell some systems direct to end-customers. Diatron has the big advantage of not competing directly with Stratec’s current clients, since although some (like Abbott and Siemens) are in haematology, they sell high-volume, upmarket systems.

The broader strategic dilemma faced by Stratec remains that most margin comes from service part sales, which are at the longer-term end of the value chain and have proved to be inherently volatile over the last few years. Diatron bulks out revenues and so adds diversity and reduces volatility, but adds exposure to a lower-margin, mature technology sector, not Stratec’s traditional focus. Nonetheless Stratec was keen to observe that Diatron was not boring relative to its current high technology, high-throughput systems.

Given that most core manufactured systems are built to a custom client specification, Stratec has relatively weak construction OEM pricing power. The immediate impact of negotiating a new development contract is often cash negative; such contracts are at best cash neutral over the one- to three-year project. Yet Stratec has 50% of its staff, and fixed costs, in development. Once “launched”, volumes ramp up over a few years. During this ramp-up period, margins can be lower and the client ramp-up can be slower than expected. This is impossible to quantify externally.

Further broadening the base into new, value-added diagnostic markets, such as cell-free DNA or cancer cells used as tumour prognostic markers (2014 annual report), would give a springboard to develop new core products and markets. New technologies might be a focus for further acquisitions that management states are anticipated by early July. Stratec seems willing to increase the debt level to perhaps €70-90m to fund these acquisitions; this is about two times the cash flow.

Valuation uncertainties

It is difficult to provide a realistic valuation of Stratec because of the diverse and unpredictable nature of the revenue streams and long-term growth rates, as discussed above. Recognition of development revenues depends on undisclosed project progress and philosophically intricate accounting, leading to a complex balance sheet. Diatron adds extra sales, probably slightly reduces EBIT margin but, unless it can be developed by new technology and diversified products, may add little to growth. The reagent stream should be solid but these are commodity products, although cost of goods should be low. The Diatron tax rate is “slightly lower”.

Stratec’s shares are now on a historic P/E of 20x and a prospective 2016 forecast P/E of 17x, relative to a core revenue growth rate of 2.5%, possibly rising to 7% or more in 2017 if management expectations of a CAGR of 6% (based on 2013 revenues) are correct. The 2016 prospective revenue to capitalisation multiple post the acquisition is 2.9x, indicating strong long-term growth expectations – this now seems unlikely before 2018. The proposed dividend increase to €0.75/share from €0.70 lifts the yield to 1.8%. In our update note of November 2015, our forecasts, using the former 8-12% CAGR management guidance, assumed a 2016 P/E of 19.5x. In January 2016, at the share price of €62.50, the historic 2014 P/E was 29x.

The share price is sustained by the large founding family shareholding of 43% and by the low trading volumes. A share premium, in our view, is justified by the very strong core competencies and expertise of the business, its strong IP position and its core brand within the industry. The Diatron acquisition diversifies the business and provides a close fit to current operations.

Exhibit 6: Financial summary

€000's

2013

2014

2015e

2016e

2017e

Year end 31 December

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

 

 

 

 

 

Revenue

127,950

144,860

146,893

176,150

198,078

Cost of Sales

(86,186)

(99,924)

(92,738)

(108,491)

(120,619)

Gross Profit

41,764

44,936

54,155

67,660

77,459

EBITDA (EX)

28,031

31,130

34,360

39,308

42,940

Operating Profit (before amort. and except.)

25,469

29,656

32,860

37,808

41,440

Intangible Amortisation

(4,006)

(6,036)

(6,000)

(6,000)

(6,000)

Exceptionals

(935)

(624)

0

0

0

Other

(1,035)

1,056

0

0

0

EBIT

19,493

24,052

26,860

31,808

35,440

EBIT %

15.2%

16.6%

18.3%

18.1%

17.9%

Net Interest

(160)

2

(157)

(1,007)

(1,006)

Profit Before Tax (norm)

25,309

29,658

32,703

36,801

40,434

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

19,333

24,054

26,703

30,801

34,434

Tax

(3,855)

(4,287)

(5,875)

(6,468)

(7,231)

Profit After Tax (norm)

21,454

25,371

26,829

30,333

33,203

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

15,478

19,767

20,829

24,333

27,202

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

11.7

11.8

11.8

11.8

11.8

EPS - normalised (c)

182.6

215.6

227.9

257.1

281.4

EPS - (IFRS) (c)

131.8

167.9

177.0

206.2

230.5

Dividend per share (c)

60.00

70.00

75.00

80.00

85.00

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gross Margin (%)

33%

31%

37%

38%

39%

EBITDA Margin (%)

22%

21%

23%

22%

22%

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

20%

20%

22%

21%

21%

 

 

 

 

 

 

BALANCE SHEET

 

 

 

 

 

Fixed Assets

48,460

47,739

47,739

115,739

115,739

Intangible Assets

30,188

30,262

30,262

91,462

91,462

Tangible Assets

17,013

15,954

15,954

22,754

22,754

Investments

1,259

1,523

1,523

1,523

1,523

Current Assets

69,328

90,009

101,588

82,081

81,853

Stocks

18,091

18,066

17,800

18,250

18,712

Debtors

29,857

24,430

19,000

19,000

19,000

Cash

20,734

46,636

56,590

36,633

34,943

Other (inc ongoing services)

646

877

8,198

8,198

9,198

Current Liabilities

(12,564)

(15,586)

(18,985)

(18,987)

(18,987)

Creditors

(10,669)

(13,137)

(13,136)

(13,138)

(13,138)

Short term borrowings

(1,895)

(2,449)

(5,849)

(5,849)

(5,849)

Long Term Liabilities

(8,045)

(10,110)

(9,109)

(42,109)

(24,109)

Long term borrowings

(6,643)

(4,483)

(3,483)

(36,483)

(18,483)

Other long term liabilities (tax)

(1,402)

(5,627)

(5,626)

(5,626)

(5,626)

Net Assets

97,179

112,052

121,233

136,724

154,496

 

 

 

 

 

 

CASH FLOW

 

 

 

 

 

Operating Cash Flow

27,253

38,789

32,728

38,851

41,471

Net Interest

(138)

(36)

(150)

(1,000)

(999)

Tax

(3,278)

999

(5,875)

(6,468)

(7,231)

Capex

(2,575)

(1,474)

(1,500)

(1,500)

(1,500)

Intangible invetsment

(7,518)

(5,215)

(6,000)

(6,000)

(6,000)

Acquisitions/disposals

(126)

176

0

(67,000)

0

Financing

662

(1,263)

(400)

33,600

(17,400)

Dividends

(6,566)

(7,055)

(8,850)

(9,440)

(10,030)

Net Cash Flow

7,714

24,921

9,954

(18,957)

(1,690)

Opening net debt/(cash)

(4,567)

(12,196)

(39,704)

(47,258)

5,699

HP finance leases initiated

0

0

0

0

0

Loan movements

(85)

2,587

(2,400)

(34,000)

18,000

Closing net debt/(cash)

(12,196)

(39,704)

(47,258)

5,699

(10,611)

Source: Stratec Biomedical reports, Edison Investment Research forecasts. Note: 2015 partly reported, Annual Report 14 April.

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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

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

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Wellington 6011

New Zealand

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

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

Level 15, 171 Featherston St

Wellington 6011

New Zealand

Caledonia Mining — Update 4 April 2016

Caledonia Mining

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