Water Winners
Three-quarters of Earth’s surface is covered by water. But approximately
a third of the world’s population lives in areas where water supplies are
either stressed or scarce. The latter applies most to the
Unfortunately, the globe’s supply of fresh water is
relatively static. A fifth of water use is from ground sources that can’t be
replenished quickly. That’s particularly true in the big consumption countries–the
It all adds up to a colossal opportunity to invest in water.
And we’re well tapped into it in the VRI
Portfolio. If you haven’t yet picked up our favorites, now is the time.
Two-thirds of
Furthermore, per capita water consumption in
At a high-profile conference in late spring in
Cheng Xiaobing, Deputy Director-General of the Department of Water
Resources Management in the Ministry of Water Resources, outlined
the new approach adopted by the government at a high level to handle water
problems. The primary focus is on the people’s well-being, followed by an
emphasis on ecological soundness, sustainable use of water resources and water
conservancy, a balanced development of water resources and, lastly, forming a
sound legal framework through continued water reforms and innovations.
Source: Ministry of
Construction of the People’s Republic of
That adds up to a lot more money to be invested in the
country’s water sector. To that end,
Over the next several years, the investing opportunities in
water will increase tremendously, and farsighted investors will be rewarded
handsomely. Water is gradually becoming as important as oil in this world to
sustaining growth. All the companies along the business chain will benefit.
VRI’s Picks
Singapore-based Hyflux
(OTC: HYFXF) remains our favorite leveraged play on the sector. The company has
four core businesses.
Its water business includes seawater desalination, raw water
purification, wastewater cleaning, water recycling, water reclamation and
ultra-pure water production for municipal and industrial clients.
The industrial business includes separation, concentration
and purification treatments for manufacturing process streams. The structured
project division includes privately financed projects either as
build-own-operate (BOO) or build-own-transfer (BOT) schemes.
Finally, the consumer division includes air-to-water and
home filtration products, including faucet and under-sink filters for the
consumer. The company is well known for its membrane technologies. Its membrane
and materials research center in
A couple of weeks ago, Hyflux announced strong second
quarter earnings, with net profit of USD16 million, up 311 percent year over
year. The big increase was from the municipal sector, with
Hyflux’s share price has pulled back in the past couple of
months mainly because of worries regarding inflationary pressure due to higher
raw material costs. This is a material concern that management has until now
addressed successfully, keeping costs in check while gross margins improved to
48 percent.
Nevertheless, reality is that companies as well as their
customers will need to live with and adjust prices accordingly. Hence, we do
expect margin improvement to continue as the company will have some pricing
power, given the importance of its services to the economic growth of the
countries it does business in.
Looking into the second half of the year,
Its order book now stands at USD1 billion versus USD610
million at the end 2007. We expect that its recent contract wins in North
Africa (Algeria) will add to the company’s track record and will prove to be
very useful in future contact biddings. Buy
Hyflux at current prices.
The company was spun off from its parent
Suez Environment also has the strongest balance sheet in the
global water treatment sector, with relatively lower debt levels and a strong investment
program of EUR4.5 billion for the next three years. Annual earnings growth of
10 percent looks set, with considerable room on the upside as well.
The company has a great reputation in research and
development (R&D). Sector R&D is becoming ever-more important as the
water/waste sector advances and the global need for highly sophisticated
operation becomes paramount.
The international division of the company contributes 22
percent of Suez Environnement’s earnings and is split roughly 50/50 between
water and waste. In recent years, the company has been expanding its
international water and desalination operations in the
Its subsidiaries Degremont
and Safege specialize in water
treatment and operate in more than 70 countries, allowing Suez Environnement to
explore new market opportunities.
Degremont is often used as a way to enter new markets,
initially in a small, leveraged manner (i.e., the construction of a water
treatment or wastewater treatment plant). Once the local relationships have
been developed and the viability of bigger projects established, Suez
Environnement comes in for the much larger projects.
Although smaller operators can occasionally be extremely
competitive for certain of Suez Environnement’s business, the company’s
integrated business model and global presence often allows it to get the whole
contract, using the knowledge of the smaller competitor for a specific part of
the project.
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