WOR 0.00% $13.86 worley limited

WOR needs to deliver on its promises. If it can, we see...

  1. 450 Posts.
    WOR needs to deliver on its promises. If it can, we see substantial
    upside. If it can't, downside looks limited in all but the bear case. We
    retain our Overweight rating.

    What's Changed? From To
    Price Target    A$7.17 A$6.35
    Time to step up. WOR's recent operating performance can only be described
    as poor. Over the last three years the business model has failed to work in a
    downturn (margins should rise as costs are cut ahead of the curve and cash
    flow should be countercyclical) despite rigorous restructuring. The business is
    capable, as we have seen with similarly structured peers, it is execution that
    has fallen short. Investor confidence is low, however, a recent change in CFO
    and unusually for WOR, specific guidance on further cost out and cash
    recovery, gives scope that WOR might finally deliver.

    Cutting hard. WOR is taking the right steps to get the business model to
    work. The problem looks to lie in WOR's overhead structure (staff have fallen
    by ~29% from peak, ahead of a ~17% fall in revenue and utilization is trending
    upward). WOR now plans to cut another A$180m of overhead. Eventually, this
    action should deliver a positive margin result, as peers have shown. Still, given
    WOR's track record, we don’t assume delivery in our base case. We cut
    underlying EPS forecasts across FY16-18 by 4-12% and assume WOR recovers
    ~A$260m of cash (versus A$300m targeted) over the next 18 months.

    What if it doesn’t work? With ND /EBITDA at 2.5x at 1H16, WOR's capital
    position now dominates any investment discussion. WOR believes it can
    recover A$300m of cash (capex cuts, working capital and non-core asset sales)
    which may be conservative given WOR's DSO reduction target alone could
    free ~A$400m. Investors however are likely to place little faith in this
    commentary and instead focus on what could go wrong. Our stress test (which
    assumes a covenant at 3.5x) suggests WOR could still absorb some
    combination of materially lower underlying earnings, further cash outflows
    and a lower AUD/USD over FY16-17e. However, if all of WOR's plans were to
    fail, an equity raising may be required (as captured in our bear case).

    Risks have increased. The risk profile of WOR stock has increased, but
    trading at a 43% one-year forward P/E discount to global peers, a failure to
    deliver is arguably already priced in. With aggressive cost and cash action now
    being taken, we still believe risk is skewed to the upside with any material
    recovery of cash in FY16-17e (as WOR plans) expected to close the valuation
    gap to peers and drive the stock toward our price target.

    Investment Thesis
    WOR is our preferred play on the E&C subsegment
    of the industry. It has the least exposure
    to the deteriorating Australian market, and we
    believe that hydrocarbons capex will recover before
    metals and mining capex.

    The current share price appears to be pricing in a
    bearish earnings scenario into perpetuity.

    WOR continues to undertake restructuring to
    right-size the business in response to capex cuts in
    the hydrocarbons sector.

    Key Value Drivers
    Hydrocarbons capex – WOR earns 70% of its EBIT
    from hydrocarbons.

    Working capital assumptions influence cash-based
    valuations (1% shift in terminal year lowers our
    DCF valuation by ~0.5%).

    Oil price – although there is no direct connection,
    WOR has shown some correlation to the oil price

    Potential Catalysts
    Contract wins – visibility of upcoming wins remains
    poor, but given underlying momentum any
    additional contract wins will be well received.

    International peer outlook commentary.
    WOR delivers targeted cash recoveries

    WOR's cost our program results in a positive
    inflection in margins

    Risks to Achieving Price Target
    Macro downturn.

    Shifts away from EPCM project model.

    Sustained fall in oil prices and capex cuts from
    customers.

    Continued project delays.

    WOR fails to improve underlying earnings and
    cashflow despite significant restructuring costs and
    asset sale initiatives

    … what if WOR can deliver on cash flow but not earnings - EBIT would need to fall ~37% below our
    base case in FY17e
    An alternative, but still negative scenario, would see WOR recovering the cash it is targeting but that its
    restructuring efforts are not enough to prevent a further fall in earnings below our forecasts. This scenario
    implies that WOR's underlying EBIT would have to decline to ~36% below our FY17e base case before reaching
    ND/ EBITDA of ~3.5x.

    It's also worth considering - could cash recovery exceed expectations?
    Equally, a scenario where WOR generates more than A$300m of cash by the end of FY17e is not implausible.
    Against a ~A$2.1bn receivables balance, WOR's targeted reduction in days sales outstanding (DSOs) from ~80
    days to ~65 days alone implies a ~A$400m cash inflow. Equally, the underlying business should generate cash.
    Even assuming much weaker earnings than our base case, poor cash conversion and more restructuring costs,
    the business should be capable of generating >A$100m of gross cash flow. Any asset sales would contribute
    cash above these levels. On a net basis, with dividends suspended, only underlying capex would need to be
    deducted from these figures.
 
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