Bit more media coverage :
http://www.investorschronicle.co.uk/
Spectacular results from China Shoto
Created: 29 April 2009 Written by: Nigel Bolitho
While the UK seems to have little money to spend on infrastructure schemes to pull the economy out of recession, China is pumping RMB4trillion of its mega cash reserves into infrastructure schemes. And of that, RMB400billion is earmarked for 3G networks over the next three years. This is all music to the ears of China Shoto, which is China's largest producer of back-up batteries with around a fifth of the market.
But that benefit is to come. Look first at last year's results. Twelve months ago, brokers were expecting 2008 turnover of around 137m and unchanged profits. Instead, China Shoto has reported stunning increases in sales and profits while net cash inflow from operating activities jumped to 38.57m against a 2007 outflow of 3.11m. So it's not surprising that over this trading period the company's net assets per share jumped by almost three-quarters.
Demand for back-up batteries from mainly Chinese mobile phone operators soared last year. Turnover rose 83 per cent to 117m with sales to China Telecom and China Netcom up 335 per cent and 193 per cent, respectively. Dollar revenues from non-China mobile operators jumped from 6.9m to almost 30m. Indeed, so great was demand for back-up phone batteries that production lines for bicycle batteries were commandeered to meet phone demand. Of course, the latest results also benefited from RMB and dollar strength against the pound while careful use of tax concessions meant that last year's 11 per cent tax charge of 1.26m was just 3,000 higher than the 2007 figure.
For 2009, broker Seymour Pierce's revised forecast is sales of 200m and profits of 12.5m, producing earnings of 47p.
SHARE TIP UPDATE
Buy - That puts the shares on a PE of under four coupled with net cash equivalent to more than half the company's market value. China seems to be coming out of recession fast. A year ago we upgraded the shares to a buy at 145.5p, and they remain so.
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http://www.investegate.co.uk/invarticle.aspx?id=98751
China Shoto shoots for green and BRICS
By Rob Mackinlay
Full-year results from an AIM-quoted Chinese battery manufacturer - China Soto - were amongst the most read announcements on Investegate.
On Wednesday, China Shoto’s shares stood at 181.5p, a rise of 1.68 per cent or 3p. The company's shares are maintaining an increase in value of more than 100 per cent from an 87.5p low-point at the beginning of December 2008.
Jim McCafferty, analyst at Seymour Pierce - which is the nominated adviser and broker for the company - retains a "Buy" recommendation saying: "Despite strong performance of the shares, they are trading on a 2009 price earnings ratio of just 3.8. We believe this rating does not reflect the company’s growth prospects."
During a press briefing on Tuesday, China Shoto’s chief financial officer (CFO), Weigang Zhou, and two company directors answered questions about the sustainability of the back-up battery business which is the company’s main source of income(China Shoto makes batteries that back-up mobile phone networks in case of power failures.
The response was that, even when networks are completed and batteries in place, there will be requirements for upgrades as technology improves. The company also that it has increased its business abroad with its export revenue increasing from 6 per cent in 2007 to 16 per cent in 2008.
Business in India makes up 85 per cent of its export revenue but it hopes to do business in other BRIC countries, as well as in Africa, where power supplies are also unreliable.
Efforts to develop new technology are also being made in other battery markets including electric bicycles. In its results statement the company said: "As China's largest producer of back up batteries and a China Environment Friendly Enterprise, the group intends to, ultimately, become a worldwide green energy solution provider. To that end, a new type of green energy storage product with high technology content is being developed."
Transparency, corporate governance, and allegiance to investors, have been among the concerns of professional investors in China and other emerging markets. Weigang Zhou said that being an AIM-listed company made it more transparent than many of its peers.
Also a survey of AIM-quoted Chinese stocks by Seymour Pierce showed that China Shoto’s largest shareholder, its president Y Shanji, holds a smaller stake in the company than the largest shareholders in other AIM-quoted Chinese companies. Y Shanji, who also founded the company, owns 47 per cent of its shares. Weigang Zhou said that Shanji did not have any other businesses.
According to its last available factsheet, the New Star Select Opportunities fund had 2.89 per cent of its assets invested in China Shoto, it fourth largest investment. The holding in China Shoto was made while the fund was being managed by Patrick Evershed who left New Star last year, and has recently joined Hargreave Hale. The New Star Select Opportunities fund is now managed by Trevor Green.